Anonymous wrote:OP, it sounds like the problem in your marriage is actually the drugs. I'm not sure you can have a truly happy marriage with an addict. They love the high more than anything or anyone else.
Anonymous wrote:He sounds immature, unkind, and ungrateful and I'm guessing when you work it out in therapy, it will become clear he always had those character traits (even when grading him on a curve for age, since it seems like you got together when young).
Character counts. Hard eyeroll to the dimwit who thinks it's emasculating for a woman to bring more income to a household, yet it's not unmanly to walk out on a family and go be a kid again.
Anonymous wrote:I got married at age 23 to DH, 28. We have kids 7 and 5, and we had a very difficult time early on in our marriage. 11 years later we are very happy and in love because we just accept each other unconditionally, both good and bad. That’s literally it. We don’t have a lot in common or an amazing sex life or tons of money. We just like and love each other.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teens divorcing after 20 years of marriage...we had a good life and DH has blown it up with his mid-life crisis that raised its ugly head about six months ago. He doesn’t want to be tied to a schedule according to him....things like being home for the kids is apparently no longer something he wants to do.
This is OP, your situation sounds like mine. I just feel utter confusion. I also think I'm supposed to be more mad at him but I feel more of the emotion of confusion and sadness honestly.
For the poster on the family life he grew up with, I do think this is a part of our situation. His family was extremely dysfunctional and I thought he was the example of pulling yourself up by your bootstraps but now I feel like even after so many years on a different path, when it got too hard it was just easy to fall back to their type of lifestyle with all responsibility removed than to keep pushing through the not so fun part.
I guess the moral of that story is really its about who you choose from the beginning not how well you do during. I'm not perfect, I nag, I yell sometimes and can be bossy but I never thought we had problems that would mean he would just dump me and the life we built.
It's so depressing. I would also not quit, even now if he'd just go to counseling with me and work on it. I feel pathetic.
Pp here with four kids. What does your husband do for a living? I ended up reporting my husbands drug use to his employer, and he was forced into rehab. He came out with a very different perspective on what was important in life, what he was able to handle, and how to ask for help. Is that a possibility for you guys?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:LSD is kind of a big deal. I would fight pretty hard to keep my marriage in tact and not have to split custody with someone who is actively using (not to mention whoever he chooses to date).
Wouldn't she be able to get full custody if she could prove he is doing lsd?
Anonymous wrote:LSD is kind of a big deal. I would fight pretty hard to keep my marriage in tact and not have to split custody with someone who is actively using (not to mention whoever he chooses to date).