Anonymous wrote:Husband is okay. He was not the ideal partner for me but the biological clock was ticking and I’m so glad I have the kids. Had it not been for the kids, I would not still be with him by now, but economics and the logistics of coparenting make it better to be together, and I do not have a big hankering for another romantic relationship, so it doesn’t seem worth leaving him. Ironically, though I basically stayed with him because of the kids, the older they get the better my husband and I get along, and I think in the end the kids will leave, and we will have a pleasant companionate marriage.
Anonymous wrote:I am very much in love. I married a man who is a fairly high earner and good dad, but not someone I was super attracted to or had a deep connection with. We are 17 years and 4 kids in. He has turned out to be a wonderful father, which is very attractive, and he has been open and receptive to learning what I like in bed, so the sex is great and keeps getting better.
He did have trouble with addiction a few years into our marriage, and that was hard. We nearly got divorced. But he went to rehab and has been sober 12 years. It’s been good.
Anonymous wrote:Women always eventually conclude they "settled" even though they married the best guy they could catch at the time.
Anonymous wrote:Thirteen years and two kids in. Divorce is imminent, but I’m doing okay! The kids are great, which allows me to focus on them, my friends, fitness, work travel, and hobbies that bring me joy. I wouldn’t say I regret my choices, as I’m 99% sure I would still be single and childless if I hadn’t married him.[/quote]
Guys are you reading this? Choose wisely because you are being used for the kiddos and white dress fantasy.
Anonymous wrote:If you married someone you could have kids and settle down with but not someone you had a deep love connection with or deep attraction — what society seems to call “settling” — how’s it going for you 10+ years in?
Anonymous wrote:Life's just too busy with jobs and kids to have that deep connection stuff anyway. It was great in the beginning though. I've fallen into the trap of thinking this other person has given up or doesn't care, but it's just the reality of modern society and two working parents. Grass isn't greener with anyone else.
Anonymous wrote:Women always eventually conclude they "settled" even though they married the best guy they could catch at the time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These are so bleak. Feel sorry for the posters, the husbands, and the kids.
For society as well for making it necessary to have a wedding, a time consuming job, a mortgage and 2.5 kids to prove your worth.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Women always eventually conclude they "settled" even though they married the best guy they could catch at the time.
^ This one knows
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If I had waited for the deep connection person, I'd still be waiting. Same for most people I know.
Several us have kids, but lucky to get rid of the partners and not have to be in a marriage anymore or ever.
I'm 20+ years into “settling”, with 2 children in their early 20s. Earlier this year, I met someone who I deeply connected with - for the first time since my marriage.
What do you think you will do?
Anonymous wrote:Women always eventually conclude they "settled" even though they married the best guy they could catch at the time.