Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's a very common time for men to cheat. Often but not always, couples completely neglect their intimate life and after years of it, men start thinking with their little brains.
Did you notice thus is about kids under 3? So 1-2 years of marriage only. That’s very early to lose the thrill. And he’s an a@@hole if he can’t understand the recovery after pregnancy (no sex 6-8 weeks and complications).
You do know not everyone pops out kids the second they get married?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have 2 kids under 7 and things are not rosy with my DH, it is hard, I get it, but I would never have imagined divorce when kids were even younger. It seems like such a gamble, exhausting, you know you need to be a team, our couple was indeed not doing great but we didn’t have time to focus on one another so I would not have taken a radical decision at that moment.
Why do you think people (or why did you) decide to divorce when kids are still toddlers ? You thought you finally saw who your DW or DH really was? He/she was such a jerk than being on your own seemed easier ? Tell me?
Question is prompted by a friend who just texted me that she is going to divorce, I am a bit blindsided. I want to pickup phone and say “DONT it is tough now but it will get better, as a principle don’t get divorce during those tough early years, it WILL get better“. But I’d love more perspective before I call her. (Will check but I am 99% sure there is no abuse or serious behavior/financial reasons, probably newly discovered incompatibility)
You no longer have all kids under 3 and it hasn’t gotten better for you so why are you so sure it would get better for her? Maybe you are just delaying the inevitable and she isn’t? Maybe she’s actually doing the smarter thing for all involved.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The idea to do it early is to minimize the impact on the kids. If it's before 3 yo, it's very likely the kids will only remember their parents being divorced, and it's their normal.
+1 My dd is 12 as we’re going through this and she figured out that dad cheated without my saying a word. She’s made comments that show that she knows he’d rather spend time with his friends than his actual family, and that he needs to act more like a grown up. I never wanted her to know these things, but she’s lived it, and you can’t hide this stuff from a kid old enough to see and understand what’s going on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My husband cheated on me (again) and decided he preferred life with the affair partner and no kids to take care of.
I should note that even though I didn’t want the divorce, after about 6-9 months I realized my life was actually MUCH easier once divorced. Not as easy as it would have been with an involved, caring partner-but much easier than it was coping with 80% of the kid work AND managing the moods of a manchild.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's a very common time for men to cheat. Often but not always, couples completely neglect their intimate life and after years of it, men start thinking with their little brains.
Women cheat at almost the same rate as men. Which brain are they thinking with?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Gained weight
That's not true. A lot of married guys go for bbw. They say no fat chicks but it's a lie.
Anonymous wrote:I have 2 kids under 7 and things are not rosy with my DH, it is hard, I get it, but I would never have imagined divorce when kids were even younger. It seems like such a gamble, exhausting, you know you need to be a team, our couple was indeed not doing great but we didn’t have time to focus on one another so I would not have taken a radical decision at that moment.
Why do you think people (or why did you) decide to divorce when kids are still toddlers ? You thought you finally saw who your DW or DH really was? He/she was such a jerk than being on your own seemed easier ? Tell me?
Question is prompted by a friend who just texted me that she is going to divorce, I am a bit blindsided. I want to pickup phone and say “DONT it is tough now but it will get better, as a principle don’t get divorce during those tough early years, it WILL get better“. But I’d love more perspective before I call her. (Will check but I am 99% sure there is no abuse or serious behavior/financial reasons, probably newly discovered incompatibility)
Anonymous wrote:Some men can’t give up the frat boy life and don’t want to be a real father. Some women become nothing but a mother and forget about being a lover. Being a father/husband and a mother/wife takes a lot of adjustments and work and all of the learning is on the job.