Anonymous wrote:My sister recently obtained a divorce after being married for nineteen years.
Reason being:
Her husband was addicted to porn. He would never spend time w/his family, on his days off he always sat in another room + just watched his porn.
He kept insisting he would get help, and he would. For like a week, then go back to his addiction. He would also lie to my sister about not watching porn and eventually it destroyed their union.
It got to the point where she didn't even want him to touch her sexually, because she felt like he was comparing her to the women in the porn he watched. She also didn't want to cook for him either.
While she does miss him at times, ultimately she is learning self-love right now, meaning that she knows she is worth more and deserves more from a man.
I have been married a shorter time than your sister, but am ending my marriage in which there is a similar addiction. It is only recently that I've realized the depth of the addiction, and the depth of our dysfunction - meaning, how much of an enabler I am and have been, and how deeply damaging that will be if we continue on this way. We have a young child together, and it is very, very hard to separate. I still love my husband, and he is a loving father. But the addiction and enabling will destroy us all if we continue on this way, and my child will carry that dysfunction into his adult relationships. I have to do what I can to end the cycle now, as difficult and painful as it is.