Anonymous wrote:This is OP. First, thank you for some very caring and thoughtful responses. I have been crying all morning and I am trying to remain strong and positive for my children.
My DH would be devastated if I left him. However, I think he would agree to a temporary separation for the children’s benefit.
We conceived our children during times where he was flourishing with his job.
I can’t be the breadwinner as I am a teacher and that’s not gonna cut it. Our last child was born at 26 weeks and had a host of problems and I just needed to be home with her. She is thriving now and that’s one positive!! The medical debt we incurred as a result of a long NICU stay is also putting a lot of stress on us.
My parents lives on the west coast and I live on the East Coast. It’s a long move, but probably in the children’s best interest. My father said he would pay childcare so I can get my act together and save money living rent free.
My DH needs help. I’m so sad about all of this. But the children’s well being has to come first. They can not see me cry anymore.
I just want happiness. I guess we all do.
Anonymous wrote:This is OP. First, thank you for some very caring and thoughtful responses. I have been crying all morning and I am trying to remain strong and positive for my children.
My DH would be devastated if I left him. However, I think he would agree to a temporary separation for the children’s benefit.
We conceived our children during times where he was flourishing with his job.
I can’t be the breadwinner as I am a teacher and that’s not gonna cut it. Our last child was born at 26 weeks and had a host of problems and I just needed to be home with her. She is thriving now and that’s one positive!! The medical debt we incurred as a result of a long NICU stay is also putting a lot of stress on us.
My parents lives on the west coast and I live on the East Coast. It’s a long move, but probably in the children’s best interest. My father said he would pay childcare so I can get my act together and save money living rent free.
My DH needs help. I’m so sad about all of this. But the children’s well being has to come first. They can not see me cry anymore.
I just want happiness. I guess we all do.
Anonymous wrote:This is OP. First, thank you for some very caring and thoughtful responses. I have been crying all morning and I am trying to remain strong and positive for my children.
My DH would be devastated if I left him. However, I think he would agree to a temporary separation for the children’s benefit.
We conceived our children during times where he was flourishing with his job.
I can’t be the breadwinner as I am a teacher and that’s not gonna cut it. Our last child was born at 26 weeks and had a host of problems and I just needed to be home with her. She is thriving now and that’s one positive!! The medical debt we incurred as a result of a long NICU stay is also putting a lot of stress on us.
My parents lives on the west coast and I live on the East Coast. It’s a long move, but probably in the children’s best interest. My father said he would pay childcare so I can get my act together and save money living rent free.
My DH needs help. I’m so sad about all of this. But the children’s well being has to come first. They can not see me cry anymore.
I just want happiness. I guess we all do.
Anonymous wrote:This is OP. First, thank you for some very caring and thoughtful responses. I have been crying all morning and I am trying to remain strong and positive for my children.
My DH would be devastated if I left him. However, I think he would agree to a temporary separation for the children’s benefit.
We conceived our children during times where he was flourishing with his job.
I can’t be the breadwinner as I am a teacher and that’s not gonna cut it. Our last child was born at 26 weeks and had a host of problems and I just needed to be home with her. She is thriving now and that’s one positive!! The medical debt we incurred as a result of a long NICU stay is also putting a lot of stress on us.
My parents lives on the west coast and I live on the East Coast. It’s a long move, but probably in the children’s best interest. My father said he would pay childcare so I can get my act together and save money living rent free.
My DH needs help. I’m so sad about all of this. But the children’s well being has to come first. They can not see me cry anymore.
I just want happiness. I guess we all do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Obviously he would need to get the drinking under control, but if he’s great with the kids and you love him, why don’t you take over the primary breadwinner position and let him take over the primary childcare role? You are planning to set up a career for yourself if you leave anyway.
Do not do this! He will not take care of the kids and you will be doing everything while working full time. The same reasons he keeps getting fired are going to infuriate you about how he deals with kids. He’s going to miss deadlines for signing up for preschool and kindergarten. He’ll forget doctors appointments. The house will be a mess, the kids will be poorly cared for. You’re going to hate your life.
This just postponed the divorce by a year or two.
Anonymous wrote:OP, no one is going to want you after your sour divorce with two kids so you might as well stay put.
Anonymous wrote:Obviously he would need to get the drinking under control, but if he’s great with the kids and you love him, why don’t you take over the primary breadwinner position and let him take over the primary childcare role? You are planning to set up a career for yourself if you leave anyway.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Financial instability can certainly wreck a marriage, but I'm not sure the person who doesn't work at all has the right to look down on the person who keeps getting jobs but then losing them. Why not get a career now, and let him stay home with the kids? If you love him and the kids love him and you're going to end up getting a job anyway, why blow up the marriage as well?
If his ADHD is so bad that he keeps losing jobs he’s going to be a disaster with the kids. She’s going to work all day and do all the kid stuff while he does next to nothing.
Terrible idea.
Better to divorce while you’re both unemployed and you can build up your career with support from your family. It’s going to be super stressful if you try to build a career while caring for 2 children and having to also deal with a DH who acts like a third child.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Leave before you get a job. You don't want to end up paying alimony if he never does do anything to stabilize his career.
This. Also since your parents are helping you, get full custody. Get a divorce lawyer who can help you. This will be money well spent/