Anonymous wrote:Spouse literally lost their mind, petrified of dying, taking hormone supplements, hitting the gym, introducing another woman into the family as a "friend." Zero ability to have kindness and compassion and has full on Narcissistic Personality Disorder. Blames me for everything, not waiting around for to them drain down the bank account. Won't seek therapy. Camera full of selfies including a picture of HS girlfriend. Divorcing. It's horrible. My sympathy for anyone dealing with this nonsense.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:After 30 years of marriage, and turning 50, wife, in a mid-life crisis, had a few affairs. One long term, probably still occurring to this day. When pressed on the issue, she will not agree to a separation or divorce. Too much water under the bridge. I will always forgive her. I just cannot go down the road she's traveled. Never have believed that two wrongs make a right.
Example of cuckold.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:After 30 years of marriage, and turning 50, wife, in a mid-life crisis, had a few affairs. One long term, probably still occurring to this day. When pressed on the issue, she will not agree to a separation or divorce. Too much water under the bridge. I will always forgive her. I just cannot go down the road she's traveled. Never have believed that two wrongs make a right.
Want her out? Cut her off. No vacations, eating out, fancy cars. She'll agree when you mean business.
As someone who was subjected to this (not bc of infidelity), this will only push her further away. If he wants her to quit the extramarital stuff becoming controlling about money is not the way. IMO it is his continuous forgiveness and love that she cannot handle, and it is bc of attachment and self-esteem/maturity issues in herself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:After 30 years of marriage, and turning 50, wife, in a mid-life crisis, had a few affairs. One long term, probably still occurring to this day. When pressed on the issue, she will not agree to a separation or divorce. Too much water under the bridge. I will always forgive her. I just cannot go down the road she's traveled. Never have believed that two wrongs make a right.
Want her out? Cut her off. No vacations, eating out, fancy cars. She'll agree when you mean business.
Anonymous wrote:She was in her mid-40’s and overly concerned about her “waning” looks and loss of desirability which I said was ridiculous. She was ripe to be picked and she was by a neighbor so two families got blown up.
Anonymous wrote:After 30 years of marriage, and turning 50, wife, in a mid-life crisis, had a few affairs. One long term, probably still occurring to this day. When pressed on the issue, she will not agree to a separation or divorce. Too much water under the bridge. I will always forgive her. I just cannot go down the road she's traveled. Never have believed that two wrongs make a right.
Wife is a breast cancer survivor. Ten years now (knocks on wood). Just lettin' readers know that everyone's shoes travel different paths. I want my legacy to read, "he meant what he said, he said what he meant, 100%".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:30 year marriage. Still together
In mid to late 40s, he spent lots of time on fitness activities - 24 hour adventure/mountain bike/marathon type stuff. Left me with kids all weekend most weekends.
When that fizzled in early 50s and his career stalled, he started drinking more, gained weight, and reaching out to old HS girlfriends on social media to get attention/compliments. Crossed some boundaries, but always on line. I imagine he wanted to keep the façade of 18 year old self so in person wouldn't work. It hurt, led to many fights and promises to stop. In the end, I lost respect for him - told him once he was a cliché, and I meant it.
During the same time, I got my groove back - revamped career, more time for friends/interests/fitness.
There is still love, great sex and friendship, but it changed the relationship. I would walk away now if something happened again. My advice - work on yourself, not your spouse.
It's best you don't know what happened some of those weekends away.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:After 30 years of marriage, and turning 50, wife, in a mid-life crisis, had a few affairs. One long term, probably still occurring to this day. When pressed on the issue, she will not agree to a separation or divorce. Too much water under the bridge. I will always forgive her. I just cannot go down the road she's traveled. Never have believed that two wrongs make a right.
You guys have interesting psychology. No judgement. Just saying.