Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We do this, I guess. He can't take much leave, and I love to travel, so I go alone. He doesn't like the same trips I do, anyway. Do I wish we could share these experiences? Of course. But the military says otherwise for now, so I'll just enjoy not having to drag another person through the airport to make a connection.
You will be one of those women a few years from now filing for divorce because her DH is not sharing experiences with her etc. Poor guy has no idea what’s coming a few years from now. I tell every married man if your wife does activities away from you for a long time you are toasted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am thinking of a particular couple who I’ve known for years. They seem to get along well (at least on the surface) and have a nice and close family, but they (neither works anymore although they’re still relatively young) do a lot of stuff apart. Take long separate vacations, etc. And they’re not shy about it.
Don’t you think it’s kind of weird?
“Relatively young”….you have your answer right there. Modern marriages are very different from what some of us in more traditional marriages view as being normal or weird. Remember a lot of these young couples are marrying in an era that not only normalizes “hookups” but views it as totally healthy. So it is not surprising to me at all that they would have separate lives once married. And I don’t think it’s weird. Every generation has its own customs and habits.
OP here. By “relatively young“ I didn’t mean that young. They’re probably pushing 60. And they’ve been married forever. I just wonder what the real story is and why they don’t just get divorced. It seems so odd to me.
Anonymous wrote:I am thinking of a particular couple who I’ve known for years. They seem to get along well (at least on the surface) and have a nice and close family, but they (neither works anymore although they’re still relatively young) do a lot of stuff apart. Take long separate vacations, etc. And they’re not shy about it.
Don’t you think it’s kind of weird?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am thinking of a particular couple who I’ve known for years. They seem to get along well (at least on the surface) and have a nice and close family, but they (neither works anymore although they’re still relatively young) do a lot of stuff apart. Take long separate vacations, etc. And they’re not shy about it.
Don’t you think it’s kind of weird?
“Relatively young”….you have your answer right there. Modern marriages are very different from what some of us in more traditional marriages view as being normal or weird. Remember a lot of these young couples are marrying in an era that not only normalizes “hookups” but views it as totally healthy. So it is not surprising to me at all that they would have separate lives once married. And I don’t think it’s weird. Every generation has its own customs and habits.
That's an arrangement, not a marriage in the traditional sense.
A traditional marriage IS an arrangement.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am thinking of a particular couple who I’ve known for years. They seem to get along well (at least on the surface) and have a nice and close family, but they (neither works anymore although they’re still relatively young) do a lot of stuff apart. Take long separate vacations, etc. And they’re not shy about it.
Don’t you think it’s kind of weird?
“Relatively young”….you have your answer right there. Modern marriages are very different from what some of us in more traditional marriages view as being normal or weird. Remember a lot of these young couples are marrying in an era that not only normalizes “hookups” but views it as totally healthy. So it is not surprising to me at all that they would have separate lives once married. And I don’t think it’s weird. Every generation has its own customs and habits.
OP here. By “relatively young“ I didn’t mean that young. They’re probably pushing 60. And they’ve been married forever. I just wonder what the real story is and why they don’t just get divorced. It seems so odd to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I never understand couples who aren't friends. I've met a few, always with kids because I assume that's the only thing they have in common. When they're not working he's out golfing and she's doing something with girlfriends. They don't eat together because "the kids on a different schedule." They don't watch TV together. If they vacation together its to someplace where again he goes off golfing and she spends the entire time with the kids.
Just not how I want my married life to be.
This is actually a pretty "traditional" UMC/well-off white American marriage.
Anonymous wrote:I am thinking of a particular couple who I’ve known for years. They seem to get along well (at least on the surface) and have a nice and close family, but they (neither works anymore although they’re still relatively young) do a lot of stuff apart. Take long separate vacations, etc. And they’re not shy about it.
Don’t you think it’s kind of weird?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am thinking of a particular couple who I’ve known for years. They seem to get along well (at least on the surface) and have a nice and close family, but they (neither works anymore although they’re still relatively young) do a lot of stuff apart. Take long separate vacations, etc. And they’re not shy about it.
Don’t you think it’s kind of weird?
If one of them has mental disorders then it’s an excellent thing to do.
Are you saying they both do a ton of long girls or lads trips without each other? (Visiting elderly parents solo is different)
Does one take the kids too for joint family trips? Are kids even in the picture?
Do they both work and have a social outlet there? Going to industry events, etc.
Kids are fully grown and long out of college. A couple are even married with their own kids. Judging from social media they all go on nice vacations together from time and time and seem to be living it up. There’s no doubt both are involved parents and grandparents.
No, there are no mental disorders. Cmon. Also, if you actually read my post you’d see that I said neither works anymore.
How would you know there’s no mental disorders at play? You don’t and I don’t.
But therapists recommend parallel lives where there is. Save yourself.
You might want to look in the mirror. Anybody who immediately thinks “mental disorder” after hearing about something like what OP is talking about probably suffers from one herself. It’s quite the leap.