Anonymous wrote:What does he think will improve with his life if he separates? Does he plan to date or he just wants 50% of the time to himself? Can he have a separate basement or in law suite?
Anonymous wrote:He’s gay!
Anonymous wrote:I think your husband may be in the spectrum.
I personally would stay for the sake of the kids since there is not much connection but not abuse either. Hopefully things may get better with some help (therapy? More couple time when kids grow up?). I have seen in my own family that a ‘not picture perfect but stable family’ is much better than a grumpy divorce
Ps. Not sure what is your ethnic background but in many cultures (mine included) marriage is more about shared responsibilities and commitment rather than lovely feelings
Anonymous wrote:My husband has told me that he’s not in love with me and that he doesn’t see that changing with therapy or anything else. He’s civil to me most of the time (occasionally rude/condescending, but nothing too terrible). About a year ago, he told me he wants to move out and I convinced him to stay for the sake of the kids. Today he told me again that he doesn’t see our relationship changing and that he feels that we both deserve to be happier.
Should I try to convince him to stay again? The idea of breaking my kids’ hearts and destroying their stability kills me. I can not imagine not seeing them everyday and splitting every vacation, every visit from college, etc.
We don’t have a lot of conflict, and we get along around the kids. We do lots of stuff together as a family and I genuinely enjoy those times. I think our kids would truly be shocked if we split, as would our friends—we appear to be a solid, caring couple. But the second we are alone, we just do our own things and completely disconnect form one an other. We don’t have sx, don’t cuddle, etc. We do share info about our work, our days, etc. our household isn’t tense or angry. It’s just that there’s no connection between us except for the kids.
Putting the financial hit aside, would you fight to stay in this marriage. Thinking of splitting time with my kids is breaking my heart!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op here. Kids are finishing up 3rd and 5th.
It’s not an affair. We both work from home, share our locations on our phone and he has no shady behavior around the computer or phone—leaves things open and visible. He hands me his phone frequently to do various things and never seems concerned.
He is an introvert and his outings are really just family stuff on weekends.
I know everyone’s first guess is an affair but I really don’t think that’s it—I can’t think of a time in the past year when he’s not at the house and I don’t know exactly where he is.
My take is - can you realistically convince him to stay for 10 more years? If so, do it! You seem pretty happy, and this sounds pretty solid from your end. But if not - I would let him go now. 5th grade is basically the oldest a kid will adjust well to this. Splitting up in middle school, high school, or college are all worse than during elementary school. So if this is untenable, shake it up now.
Anonymous wrote:Op here. I think the underlying reason is that he probably never really wanted this marriage. He’s an extreme introvert and kinda tried me on for a while thinking it would be good for him. But 15 years in, he wants to read his books, hike and pursue his hobbies. He has very few needs for people—we have “couple friends” who we see frequently and he has a few of his own friends who he sees occasionally…but social interaction is not high on his list of priorities.
He is a very good father—quiet, but attentive and interested. I think he spends all of the emotional energy he has on being connected with the kids and has nothing left for me, friends or other relationships. He is truly good with the kids—we hike together a lot as a family, he comes to all sporting events, he talks to them about their days, he plans vacations with their interests in mind, etc. I handle all kid logistics but he handles lots of other logistics—e.g. vacation planning, home repairs, more than 50% of the cooking, etc.
Anonymous wrote:I think your husband may be in the spectrum.
I personally would stay for the sake of the kids since there is not much connection but not abuse either. Hopefully things may get better with some help (therapy? More couple time when kids grow up?). I have seen in my own family that a ‘not picture perfect but stable family’ is much better than a grumpy divorce
Ps. Not sure what is your ethnic background but in many cultures (mine included) marriage is more about shared responsibilities and commitment rather than lovely feelings
Anonymous wrote:Op here. Kids are finishing up 3rd and 5th.
It’s not an affair. We both work from home, share our locations on our phone and he has no shady behavior around the computer or phone—leaves things open and visible. He hands me his phone frequently to do various things and never seems concerned.
He is an introvert and his outings are really just family stuff on weekends.
I know everyone’s first guess is an affair but I really don’t think that’s it—I can’t think of a time in the past year when he’s not at the house and I don’t know exactly where he is.