Anonymous wrote:All these people marrying without wanting to marry the person were selfish, dishonest and weak then and nothing has changed, they are still selfish, dishonest and weak. They resent, cheat and leave because that's what in their interest now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't think my parents loved each other. They had four kids. My mom got pregnant, and so they got married. Then life just happened, and they had more kids.
I'm in my 50s, and I can see how some people might stay in a marriage for the kids even if you don't love the spouse. As long as you don't hate that person and can get along, you may stay together for the kids.
As their child, do you think they should’ve stayed together or divorced?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My ex and I never loved each other. It happens. We married due to expectations and in his words: I “looked good on paper.” I had a lot of family pressure to marry.
This far more common than people want to acknowledge.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:See I"m not so sure about all this. I mean it is possible to marry some one and not love them. You could marry someone because you want a family, or because you have been together for a while and your (or his/her) family expects you to. I know my mother didn't love my dad, but just felt it was time in her life for her to get married.
People marry for reasons other than love, so maybe this guys is telling the truth and maybe he never really did love his wife. I would ask him why he decided to marry her OP.
Why did they marry?
Why did they supposedly divorce?
Anonymous wrote:My ex and I never loved each other. It happens. We married due to expectations and in his words: I “looked good on paper.” I had a lot of family pressure to marry.
Anonymous wrote:I don't think my parents loved each other. They had four kids. My mom got pregnant, and so they got married. Then life just happened, and they had more kids.
I'm in my 50s, and I can see how some people might stay in a marriage for the kids even if you don't love the spouse. As long as you don't hate that person and can get along, you may stay together for the kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I honestly don't see how this is a red flag. We all know about people who get married too young and don't know what they're getting into. We probably all have boyfriends/girlfriends from high school/college that we thought we were super in love with but it turns out we really weren't. All kinds of people stay in unhappy marriages for decades, especially if they're confused about why they're unhappy.
Someone said above this indicates OP's boyfriend is not "taking responsibility" for his part in the end of his marriage. I don't see that at all. It looks like he did some self reflection and realized his feelings weren't what he thought they were.
This. This is why people give such terrible advice on this forum. They read everything through their own distorted lens, they diagnose personality disorders from 3 sentences of an anonymous post, they assume all sorts of facts that aren’t true. It’s so ridiculous. OP, you know a lot more than anyone responding here. If you don’t know what it means, just keep talking and get to know him better. DCUM is good for what color should I paint the hallway, not things that really matter.
Anonymous wrote:I knew when I got married that I didn't love her. I was trying to save her from a bad arranged marriage. Best lesson in life: never sacrifice yourself to try to help someone, and don't be a white knight.
Anonymous wrote:Dating someone who divorced after a long marriage with children (stayed till kids were raised to adulthood). I asked if he still loved her and he said “I don’t think I ever loved her.” Is this revisionist history? Do people really not love someone they married while young and had three children with and stayed with for nearly 30 years? Or is this just how they remember it when it’s over? He says that he didn’t really know what love was until more recently (also stuns me).
Anonymous wrote:See I"m not so sure about all this. I mean it is possible to marry some one and not love them. You could marry someone because you want a family, or because you have been together for a while and your (or his/her) family expects you to. I know my mother didn't love my dad, but just felt it was time in her life for her to get married.
People marry for reasons other than love, so maybe this guys is telling the truth and maybe he never really did love his wife. I would ask him why he decided to marry her OP.
Anonymous wrote:I don't think my parents loved each other. They had four kids. My mom got pregnant, and so they got married. Then life just happened, and they had more kids.
I'm in my 50s, and I can see how some people might stay in a marriage for the kids even if you don't love the spouse. As long as you don't hate that person and can get along, you may stay together for the kids.