Anonymous wrote:Well OP, no one is perfect but your complaints sound minor in nature given you have a kid together. Yes it would have been better if you found someone more compatible in the first place, but here you are. Trust me I can relate, DH and I are similarly mismatched in interest. Most days we have 0 to talk about other than our child. But that's OK, I appreciate the positives about him: his a loyal spouse and a loving father and if the crap hits the fan in life I know he will be there for me. Try to create a new common interest to reconnect. We like to travel for instanse. You need to try and work it out for your child.
Anonymous wrote:With respect, this sounds immature. You say your husband does not appreciate your professional field about which you are passionate? Why does it matter if a spouse is excited about your work? And you say he is professionally lost, but he has a job and a master's degree. Is this one of those "my husband is a failure because he only makes $150k" posts? Because there are many, many families in my circle with 2 or more kids making less than 100k and getting by and enjoying life. If you want a second child you two can make it work. But it sounds like you aren't in love, and would be able to tolerate that for more money, but not for the current amount.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If he is a caring dad with minimal professional ambitions, and you are an ambitious career lady, why isn't that the perfect situation? He can focus on the kids and the home front, and you can focus on your career and making more money without having to be the primary caregiver for your LO.
However, this will require you to respect and value the work he does as a parent. Can you do that?
I didn't necessarily read this to mean 'minimal professional ambitions' but more unrealistic ambitions. OP said he was unhappy with his job.
Anonymous wrote:Is he a good man? Decent, faithful? Do you think you could replace him with better?
You sound bored. That's a you problem.
Anonymous wrote:If he is a caring dad with minimal professional ambitions, and you are an ambitious career lady, why isn't that the perfect situation? He can focus on the kids and the home front, and you can focus on your career and making more money without having to be the primary caregiver for your LO.
However, this will require you to respect and value the work he does as a parent. Can you do that?
Anonymous wrote:If he is a caring dad with minimal professional ambitions, and you are an ambitious career lady, why isn't that the perfect situation? He can focus on the kids and the home front, and you can focus on your career and making more money without having to be the primary caregiver for your LO.
However, this will require you to respect and value the work he does as a parent. Can you do that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is he a good man? Decent, faithful? Do you think you could replace him with better?
You sound bored. That's a you problem.
She doesn't sound bored.
And why would she need to replace him? It's not about jumping from one relationship to the next. She's recognizing that they are not on the same path and wondering where to go from here.