Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you were selfish to write that.
ITA. I'm sure you weren't trying to be mean but damn... you broke his heart, why peel the scab off the wounds? You were feeling generous when you wrote it... it probably made him feel bitter and angry, which are most likely the feelings he's worked his ass off to get past.
I'm a recently divorced ex wife whose DH probably feels like yours- broken hearted etc. You have to remember- This isn't about you.
Why do women keep leaving guys? No wonder none of my friends want to get married. Who wants to be in a situation where the risk is so high?
I'm the PP. I didn't leave my DH and he contributed to our divorce at least as much as much as I did, but he still probably feels devastated in the way OP and other men in this thread have stated that they felt. I say this based on knowing him, not based on the particulars of the demise of our marriage.
I agree with this. I'm one of the pp's going through marriage counseling because of me saying to dh that it was that or we split. His biggest reaction has been hurt feelings due to rejection. He's said nothing about me, that he loves me, he cares about me, he would miss seeing me every day, talking to me. Only that he feels hurt, that he feels rejected.
I'm not saying he doesn't have the right to feel that way, but that feeling is just about him. It's not about wanting to be married to me, it's just hurt like you are when you get fired from a job.
For the woman, for me, that feels like I'm right when I feel that he doesn't really love me or care about me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you were selfish to write that.
ITA. I'm sure you weren't trying to be mean but damn... you broke his heart, why peel the scab off the wounds? You were feeling generous when you wrote it... it probably made him feel bitter and angry, which are most likely the feelings he's worked his ass off to get past.
I'm a recently divorced ex wife whose DH probably feels like yours- broken hearted etc. You have to remember- This isn't about you.
Why do women keep leaving guys? No wonder none of my friends want to get married. Who wants to be in a situation where the risk is so high?
I'm the PP. I didn't leave my DH and he contributed to our divorce at least as much as much as I did, but he still probably feels devastated in the way OP and other men in this thread have stated that they felt. I say this based on knowing him, not based on the particulars of the demise of our marriage.
Anonymous wrote:So what exactly is closure anyway. Is that one of those heart-to-heart sit downs where both parties offer feigned apologies and exchange artificial well-wishes? Is that how closure works?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you were selfish to write that.
ITA. I'm sure you weren't trying to be mean but damn... you broke his heart, why peel the scab off the wounds? You were feeling generous when you wrote it... it probably made him feel bitter and angry, which are most likely the feelings he's worked his ass off to get past.
I'm a recently divorced ex wife whose DH probably feels like yours- broken hearted etc. You have to remember- This isn't about you.
Why do women keep leaving guys? No wonder none of my friends want to get married. Who wants to be in a situation where the risk is so high?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you were selfish to write that.
ITA. I'm sure you weren't trying to be mean but damn... you broke his heart, why peel the scab off the wounds? You were feeling generous when you wrote it... it probably made him feel bitter and angry, which are most likely the feelings he's worked his ass off to get past.
I'm a recently divorced ex wife whose DH probably feels like yours- broken hearted etc. You have to remember- This isn't about you.
Anonymous wrote:I think you were selfish to write that.
Anonymous wrote:I'm sorry but the OP sounds like a real self-centered bitch.
She leaves him despite his wishes to try and reconcile their marriage which evidently tore him up a great deal because he was "acting crazy for a while"
And now 8mths after he "finally calmed down" and they're all amicable as co-parents she has an attitude because he doesn't want to revisit something that was obviously difficult for him to accept and move past.
What the...
The man has finally got his mind right and you want to f*ck that all up just because you want exoneration - or as you like to say, "closure"
Gimmie a break.
You should thank your lucky stars that he isn't acting crazy anymore and leave it at that.
You left him lady so your days of imposing expectations on him are over.
Anonymous wrote:I think you were selfish to write that.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most of us have been in love and been dumped. I don't see how this means the other person has a right to be mean to the dumper. I have never felt I had a right to be mean, unless the relationship was handled or ended maliciously. Maybe OP's husband has a right to be hurt and a right not to engage in conversations about the relationship. But a right to be mean is going a bit far. There is nothing wrong with OP seeking closure on a relationship that was as much hers as his. He has a right to protect himself and decline to participate in that closure, and to not want to be friends. But it doesn't make her a jerk for reaching out. He send her a kind message, she responded. Fine for him to leave it there. Fine for her to wish she could get more closure. Fine for her not to get it.
Closure...what the heck is closure?
Is it me or do only women want closure?
I can't recall ever hearing a guy saying he wants closure.
Men should seek closure, but they often don't. And that's why there are a lot of men out there who have no clue how to behave in subsequent relationships.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most of us have been in love and been dumped. I don't see how this means the other person has a right to be mean to the dumper. I have never felt I had a right to be mean, unless the relationship was handled or ended maliciously. Maybe OP's husband has a right to be hurt and a right not to engage in conversations about the relationship. But a right to be mean is going a bit far. There is nothing wrong with OP seeking closure on a relationship that was as much hers as his. He has a right to protect himself and decline to participate in that closure, and to not want to be friends. But it doesn't make her a jerk for reaching out. He send her a kind message, she responded. Fine for him to leave it there. Fine for her to wish she could get more closure. Fine for her not to get it.
Closure...what the heck is closure?
Is it me or do only women want closure?
I can't recall ever hearing a guy saying he wants closure.
Men should seek closure, but they often don't. And that's why there are a lot of men out there who have no clue how to behave in subsequent relationships.