Anonymous wrote:I am not married, but getting married in a year. How do you not know that you two are so different before marriage?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well sure. It's hard to fail at something so major in life.
Most therapists will try to tell you that a divorce is not a failure.
Anonymous wrote:I am not married, but getting married in a year. How do you not know that you two are so different before marriage?
Anonymous wrote:Yes. I loved my husband. There was a lot great about us. He cheated. The lies and betrayal hurt. He decided he could not be faithful and did not want to be married. I am often sad for the marriage we had before the cheating and the marriage we might have had without it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
now that whole world is gone, like it never happened. We are never going to open Christmas presents again, take a vacation, plan our kid's wedding together...
Friends and family tell me I will get over it, move on, but you cannot carve away knowing someone 17 years of your life as if it never happened. What do you do?
I share your melancholy, it's deep. I could not live with my ex any longer because though we had a good time when we weren't at odds, the fights were unbearable and six years of counseling solved absolutely nothing. Now, 14 months after he moved out, I am pining for the life we had with the kids, and feel utterly bereft. He was my best friend and confidant when times were good, and I will never find that again. I rely on antidepressants to get past this, but it doesn't seem to go away. If only we could talk to each other about what's going on in our jobs, who he's dating, etc.. I'm not jealous at all and would not go back to the bitterness, but I just miss him.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:50% of divorce people regret divorcing.
20% of those reconcile.
So, you feelings are normal. Breaking a bond with another person is not easy and it should not be.
Your spouse has seemed to move on though, it would be good for you to move forward also.
Imagine finding a loving partner that helps you plan your children's weddings. Imagine vacations with your children and your grandchildren.
It can be a great life, just not the one you envisioned so replace your vision with a new one.
Where did you get that crazy statistic? Free at last, Free at last! Many are thrilled to be done with their ex!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am not married, but getting married in a year. How do you not know that you two are so different before marriage?
It's not that you don't know. You know. You just can't realize how those differences can create rifts as you get older and have been together longer. Kids also throw a huge wrench into things because everyone approaches that differently and it can really cause conflict in a marriage. You would do best to read and take to heart what you read here and not pretend you've got it all figured out when you aren't married yet. You will be amazed how different your relationship will be even 5 years into marriage once so many other factors come into play.
This.
Anonymous wrote:
now that whole world is gone, like it never happened. We are never going to open Christmas presents again, take a vacation, plan our kid's wedding together...
Friends and family tell me I will get over it, move on, but you cannot carve away knowing someone 17 years of your life as if it never happened. What do you do?