Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Logistics of divorcing or logistics of living /custody schedules?
Logistics meaning housing. Figuring out how one person could keep the house and the other person finding a nearby house. Custody scheduling not a big deal. The tight housing market and being limited to a certain radius to minimize change was hard and took a long time. Everything else was easy. People act like divorce is super hard. It is really not. Logistics of where to live with kids though in a tight housing market...that is hard.
Logistics like how you will do the school commute alone on your custody days. With one kid it's easy but what if you have three or four?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nobody ever admits that they regret it. If the impact on children is bad, they are in denial about it.
No regrets at all. My kids are fine. Minimal impact of divorce. It is not really a big deal unless people are immature and have a disaster of a divorce. If finances are maintained and parents are civil and coparent fine, divorce is not a big deal. Regret not doing it sooner.
If it’s all so good then probably they can also work together to fix their marriage. No?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They love their children, but are too selfish to place their children’s best interests ahead of their own.
That's a good way to put it. But, I question how much you can love someone when you are that self-centered. And stop with this delusional mental gymnastics 'the affair saves my marriage' BS.
A parent's sex life has nothing to do with kids. An affair is prolonging the marriage. If it were not for kids, he would be gone. Why people don't get this is beyond me. OP--would you rather waste more time or leave now? That is your choice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Logistics of divorcing or logistics of living /custody schedules?
Logistics meaning housing. Figuring out how one person could keep the house and the other person finding a nearby house. Custody scheduling not a big deal. The tight housing market and being limited to a certain radius to minimize change was hard and took a long time. Everything else was easy. People act like divorce is super hard. It is really not. Logistics of where to live with kids though in a tight housing market...that is hard.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Logistics of divorcing or logistics of living /custody schedules?
Logistics meaning housing. Figuring out how one person could keep the house and the other person finding a nearby house. Custody scheduling not a big deal. The tight housing market and being limited to a certain radius to minimize change was hard and took a long time. Everything else was easy. People act like divorce is super hard. It is really not. Logistics of where to live with kids though in a tight housing market...that is hard.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nobody ever admits that they regret it. If the impact on children is bad, they are in denial about it.
Agree. It would take a great deal of humility, the likes of which are not frequently found on DCUM
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nobody ever admits that they regret it. If the impact on children is bad, they are in denial about it.
No regrets at all. My kids are fine. Minimal impact of divorce. It is not really a big deal unless people are immature and have a disaster of a divorce. If finances are maintained and parents are civil and coparent fine, divorce is not a big deal. Regret not doing it sooner.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Logistics of divorcing or logistics of living /custody schedules?
Logistics meaning housing. Figuring out how one person could keep the house and the other person finding a nearby house. Custody scheduling not a big deal. The tight housing market and being limited to a certain radius to minimize change was hard and took a long time. Everything else was easy. People act like divorce is super hard. It is really not. Logistics of where to live with kids though in a tight housing market...that is hard.
Anonymous wrote:Logistics of divorcing or logistics of living /custody schedules?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I do not regret it, but I also do not regret trying very, very hard to save the marriage. My conscience is clear and I can tell the children I really tried. I am an ACOD and understand the difficulties it will pose for my kids throughout their lives, so I could never be cavalier about my own divorce.
I also do not regret that I waited until the kids were older and I had my ducks in a row financially. With little kids it would be really, really hard, harder than my specific marriage was at the time.
OP here -- I guess that's where I'm going with the question. If divorce is in the cards, the balance of how much i'm willing to compromise on my happiness with what my kids need and can comprehend. I hear of women who "wait until kids out of the house" -- but I don't know that I could sign up for that. That said, like you, I have been and will continue to try very hard to save the marriage. The problem is that is a two person job and I don't think my husband realizes we are circling the drain.
Well, you know, everyone's situation is unique. I definitely know people who stayed together until the kids were out of the house, and I think that can be a practical choice. Then you're both free to move without regard to school districts and day-to-day custody-sharing logistics.
Some people just really don't want to miss out on time with their kids, other people don't mind or know they would get enough time. Or they're waiting until at least one kid can handle their own school commute. Don't underestimate the logistical questions when you're dealing solo with your kids and have to take them to two different schools. Don't be over-optimistic about how long all of this stuff is going to take you, OP. It's easy to say "I want a divorce." It's not so easy to work it through the legal process, nor to prep your house to sell, actually sell it, and find a new home that you like. It really just depends on your own situation, but in my experience it's a slow process. You may not want to pull the trigger, in terms of telling the kids etc., until you and your STBX have these matters under control and teed up for resolution. I've definitely known people who didn't think they could stand to wait for X amount of time, but it turned out to take that long, so they had to.
Anonymous wrote:Nobody ever admits that they regret it. If the impact on children is bad, they are in denial about it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They love their children, but are too selfish to place their children’s best interests ahead of their own.
That's a good way to put it. But, I question how much you can love someone when you are that self-centered. And stop with this delusional mental gymnastics 'the affair saves my marriage' BS.