Anonymous wrote:Hm. I think my DH might feel this way.
I get a lot of negative attention from other people. I grew up just outside of the city. We tried living in my hometown when we first got married but got driven out by pernicious gossip from people who knew my parents and were jealous of us for random reasons. They threatened us and our child. I didn’t realize who was threatening us right away and we moved 30 miles to get away from them. Come to find out, a few people there knew people that knew my family and got to know my son through school. They also gossiped, made assumptions, and are trying to drive us out of our home now due to their own insecurities and nasty gossip. I get threats regularly about this. I found some on this site recently and that is why I started reading it.
My DH is trying to find a new job in a new city. We find that it takes a while for the threats to start and think there might be fewer threats if we move somewhere where no one knows my mother. It breaks her heart. She is a good person and very private. People can be so greedy and cruel and not realize how much they hurt people.
If it was not for that, then I think he would marry me all over again. He says he would anyway just to make me feel better. That’s what a good spouse does. After 20 years, I think there must always be something difficult.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DH passed away unexpectedly in April but I would have married him again. I’ll never remarry. It would never be the same.
I'm sorry for your loss. I'm glad you found happiness with him though.
Anonymous wrote:My DH passed away unexpectedly in April but I would have married him again. I’ll never remarry. It would never be the same.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm also in the same boat, but I think it's me. In other words, I think I would feel the same regardless of my spouse. The particular reasons I wouldn't remarry my spouse would have been apparent to me if I had spent more time with his family when we were dating. What I struggle with now is how to advise my children (assuming they ask me) when they are considering marriage without expressing that I wouldn't remarry their father.
My mom told me in middle school. She hasn’t gone to therapy, so it was both damaging and helpful. Definitely talk this through with a therapist, and wait until the kids are older. My MIL is divine, but I got married years after most of my friends. Sibling never married. Expect that sharing this story will make your kids cautious daters.
Anonymous wrote:We have been married for 29 years, together 35 years. In our 50s.
Anonymous wrote:I think I'm the same, OP. I love my husband and don't want to divorce. We are generally happy and have enough in common to make it work. We are decent co-parents and have fun times together. But when people talk about "soulmates" or how in love they are and how they can't imagine being with anyone else or anyone better they lose me.
He doesn't get me. Like the core of who I really am. He likes me, loves me, sometimes enjoys me, respects me, but I don't think he understands me.
I'm not sure how he would answer this question.
I could have done much worse. I'm not sure that any other marriage would have been better. I certainly do not think that I would be happier divorced and remarried to someone else, even if they understood me better.
My hope is that as our kids get older I will have more time to invest in meaningful friendships again. I always got a lot of satisfaction from friendships in the past, but for various reasons I am not close to many friends anymore. It makes some of the less than awesome parts of my marriage relationship more difficult since I'm relying on him as a partner and a friend right now.