Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you single?
Yes, I am single, never married.
Also, I'm 35 and ready to settle down. She's 33 and from what she tells me, really unsure about how to be out in the world after 10 years as an SAH mom
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op you're gonna want to tread carefully here. This is a woman who, if your timeline is right, went from serious relationship with you to marriage and kids with this guy, and as soon as that was over, bounced back to you. That means she's never taken ANY time to be alone on her own two feet and do any kind of personal growth or practice self sufficiency. I hate to tell you this but she is viewing you as a hologram- she's not specifically pining for YOU- she just sees you as a representative of who she was back in that easier, simpler time in her life. Chances you are highly compatible now with 10 years, kids, and a divorce in the mix- slim.
You're a safety net basically. She's looking at doing life alone and can't or won't. She's scared. She's casting about for someone/thing that will be there so she doesn't have to be single mom and do the whole hustle of working and supporting the kids and coming home alone at night when they're with dad. The impulse is understandable but you need to be the good guy here and let her know that she needs time to settle into her new life without you gumming up the works. She needs to know she can do it and take the time to do it so she can figure out what she really wants in her post-divorce life. Don't enable her avoidance of that by jumping into this.
This requires decency of you because it's very likely she will move on (either because she will realize she CAN do it on her own or she will find another guy who is happy to take on her shit for her) but it's the right thing to do. And ONLY when she takes that time for herself, focuses on her and the kids and rebuilding, will she and you know that if then she still wants to give things another go with you that it was legit and not just a "I'm divorced and scared and know that guy is a port in the storm" thing.
This is great advice. OP, please take what this person is saying into consideration. I say that as someone who used to not be able to be without a man in my life.
Just be careful and don't let yourself get pulled into the love haze. Keep your head clear.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you single?
Yes, I am single, never married.
Also, I'm 35 and ready to settle down. She's 33 and from what she tells me, really unsure about how to be out in the world after 10 years as an SAH mom
Anonymous wrote:
Okay then, I'd say ask her if she wants to meet up for lunch or coffee while the kids are at school. Progress to dinner and help figure out creative ways to find babysitters (you could pay for the babysitter or find a cousin who'll sit for her for free for a favor - whatever floats your boat) - just show her you're interested in her and understand that her kids come first & you're willing to work with that. Move on to attending the kid's games or having a 'family' picnic in the park.
Bottom line - talk to her face-to-face, see what she's looking for in life, explain where you're going, see if you're still a match, and make it clear you're not just looking for her ass but care about her kids as well.
Anonymous wrote:Op you're gonna want to tread carefully here. This is a woman who, if your timeline is right, went from serious relationship with you to marriage and kids with this guy, and as soon as that was over, bounced back to you. That means she's never taken ANY time to be alone on her own two feet and do any kind of personal growth or practice self sufficiency. I hate to tell you this but she is viewing you as a hologram- she's not specifically pining for YOU- she just sees you as a representative of who she was back in that easier, simpler time in her life. Chances you are highly compatible now with 10 years, kids, and a divorce in the mix- slim.
You're a safety net basically. She's looking at doing life alone and can't or won't. She's scared. She's casting about for someone/thing that will be there so she doesn't have to be single mom and do the whole hustle of working and supporting the kids and coming home alone at night when they're with dad. The impulse is understandable but you need to be the good guy here and let her know that she needs time to settle into her new life without you gumming up the works. She needs to know she can do it and take the time to do it so she can figure out what she really wants in her post-divorce life. Don't enable her avoidance of that by jumping into this.
This requires decency of you because it's very likely she will move on (either because she will realize she CAN do it on her own or she will find another guy who is happy to take on her shit for her) but it's the right thing to do. And ONLY when she takes that time for herself, focuses on her and the kids and rebuilding, will she and you know that if then she still wants to give things another go with you that it was legit and not just a "I'm divorced and scared and know that guy is a port in the storm" thing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dude WTF? You are PATHETIC. There are thousands upon thousands of 30-something attractive single women in this area who do NOT have baggage or kids. Go find one.
Remember: she dumped you the first time and went and had kids with someone else. THIS WAS NOT MEANT TO BE.
I'm planning to take it slow, no idea what the future will hold. What I'm looking guidance on is how to set the ground work so she'll consider me.
Also, it's been more than 10 years, I rounded down. There was no chance the first child was conceived "on my watch".
Okay then, I'd say ask her if she wants to meet up for lunch or coffee while the kids are at school. Progress to dinner and help figure out creative ways to find babysitters (you could pay for the babysitter or find a cousin who'll sit for her for free for a favor - whatever floats your boat) - just show her you're interested in her and understand that her kids come first & you're willing to work with that. Move on to attending the kid's games or having a 'family' picnic in the park.
Bottom line - talk to her face-to-face, see what she's looking for in life, explain where you're going, see if you're still a match, and make it clear you're not just looking for her ass but care about her kids as well.
If you can get a booty call out of this why not, for old time's sake