Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It seems the sex is bad. I will never pick a tv show over good sex.
This is OP. So good sex should trump everything else? If it doesn’t, it’s not good? I can’t have sex all night and get up for work the next day. Or I should want sex with him so much that I can’t imagine anything better?
If you have to ask this question, explaining to you won't help.
Try to explain this to me like I'm 5. I don't understand how sex is the center of all in a relationship. It is one component of it. But at 60, he needs help and he's been honest with me that if we didn't have sex, it would be okay with him. I'm the one who encouraged medication. To the person that wrote this---what are you going to do when you're 60 and things just don't work like they used to anymore? Yes, sex is nice, but that's just it--it nice; it's one aspect. There is nothing in my life that I always want to do---eating, sleeping, going to a concert, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Just because he might like to remarry doesn't mean you have to. It also doesn't mean you have to end it. Enjoy your 1-2 nights a week together, and then ... enjoy your Bridgerton.
I think it sounds wonderful.
Here's what I think.
Men want to get married again so they can reduce their mental (and emotional) load. Women don't want to get married again so they won't increase their mental and emotional load. And housekeeping load.
My grandmother had a boyfriend for 20-30 years after my grandfather died. Her beau wanted to marry, but she said no thank you. But they stayed together, saw each other, had companionship. But she wasn't doing his laundry or cooking his dinner!
Be who you want to be. Do not be pressured into HIS needs and wishes at the expense of your own.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just because he might like to remarry doesn't mean you have to. It also doesn't mean you have to end it. Enjoy your 1-2 nights a week together, and then ... enjoy your Bridgerton.
I think it sounds wonderful.
Here's what I think.
Men want to get married again so they can reduce their mental (and emotional) load. Women don't want to get married again so they won't increase their mental and emotional load. And housekeeping load.
My grandmother had a boyfriend for 20-30 years after my grandfather died. Her beau wanted to marry, but she said no thank you. But they stayed together, saw each other, had companionship. But she wasn't doing his laundry or cooking his dinner!
Be who you want to be. Do not be pressured into HIS needs and wishes at the expense of your own.
Your thinking is wrong and invalid. Men today do their own laundry and cook. Get with the times.
Anonymous wrote:Op, do you have an avoidant personality style? How was the last marriage?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you saying you want to spend less time with him? Or you're happy with the current situation but don't want more? If it's the latter, I don't think you have to end it. Don't lie about your feelings and intentions. He might end it, if he's not happy with it, but that's his choice.
I don't think there's anything wrong with being in a committed relationship with someone and not living together if it works for both of you. My dad and his partner have been living happily this way for a decade. They came together in their late 50s and have their own homes and interests and this set up works for them.
Maybe. As I think about it, I have a circle of friends that I enjoy spending time with and activities that I enjoy doing. Anytime I have free time and want to spend it doing something other than being with him he gets disappointed and it comes through. He doesn't have a large circle of friends or hobbies. In the summer months, he enjoys outdoor concerts with friends, but they don't do anything during the colder months. Maybe I just don't want to be someones "everything".
Anonymous wrote:Just because he might like to remarry doesn't mean you have to. It also doesn't mean you have to end it. Enjoy your 1-2 nights a week together, and then ... enjoy your Bridgerton.
I think it sounds wonderful.
Here's what I think.
Men want to get married again so they can reduce their mental (and emotional) load. Women don't want to get married again so they won't increase their mental and emotional load. And housekeeping load.
My grandmother had a boyfriend for 20-30 years after my grandfather died. Her beau wanted to marry, but she said no thank you. But they stayed together, saw each other, had companionship. But she wasn't doing his laundry or cooking his dinner!
Be who you want to be. Do not be pressured into HIS needs and wishes at the expense of your own.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you saying you want to spend less time with him? Or you're happy with the current situation but don't want more? If it's the latter, I don't think you have to end it. Don't lie about your feelings and intentions. He might end it, if he's not happy with it, but that's his choice.
I don't think there's anything wrong with being in a committed relationship with someone and not living together if it works for both of you. My dad and his partner have been living happily this way for a decade. They came together in their late 50s and have their own homes and interests and this set up works for them.
Maybe. As I think about it, I have a circle of friends that I enjoy spending time with and activities that I enjoy doing. Anytime I have free time and want to spend it doing something other than being with him he gets disappointed and it comes through. He doesn't have a large circle of friends or hobbies. In the summer months, he enjoys outdoor concerts with friends, but they don't do anything during the colder months. Maybe I just don't want to be someones "everything".
This is the problem. It's exhausting to be with somebody like that.
Communicate to him that you want time to yourself. Let him know you'll see him a couple times a week, but you need your space as well, and when he acts disappointed, it makes you want to see him even less. Also that he needs to make his own friends because you cab't be his only social outlet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd end it. You're hurting him if you feel that way. At 60 he's not totally over the hill and might have a chance of finding a better life partner if you end it now.
She on the other hand, at 54, is unlikely to find one.
Did you read the OP? She doesn’t care. She would rather watch tv.
Honestly, more power to her.
This is so short-sighted. Who will she hang out with when friends are busy? When her kids stop coming home? Who can she trust who will help her when she has a health problem? There is a lot to be said for a medium guy who is devoted and trustworthy.
Most elderly women are single. My mother and her 3 siblings are all widowed, single, or divorced. They help each other and make it work.
Between the ages of 50 and 60, something like 50% of women are widowed, single or divorced. Above the age of 65, the majority of women are in this category. Many men are as well. The reality is that most people deal with things on their own as they age.
Where did you get this stat?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd end it. You're hurting him if you feel that way. At 60 he's not totally over the hill and might have a chance of finding a better life partner if you end it now.
She on the other hand, at 54, is unlikely to find one.
Did you read the OP? She doesn’t care. She would rather watch tv.
Honestly, more power to her.
This is so short-sighted. Who will she hang out with when friends are busy? When her kids stop coming home? Who can she trust who will help her when she has a health problem? There is a lot to be said for a medium guy who is devoted and trustworthy.
Most elderly women are single. My mother and her 3 siblings are all widowed, single, or divorced. They help each other and make it work.
Between the ages of 50 and 60, something like 50% of women are widowed, single or divorced. Above the age of 65, the majority of women are in this category. Many men are as well. The reality is that most people deal with things on their own as they age.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd end it. You're hurting him if you feel that way. At 60 he's not totally over the hill and might have a chance of finding a better life partner if you end it now.
She on the other hand, at 54, is unlikely to find one.
Did you read the OP? She doesn’t care. She would rather watch tv.
Honestly, more power to her.
This is so short-sighted. Who will she hang out with when friends are busy? When her kids stop coming home? Who can she trust who will help her when she has a health problem? There is a lot to be said for a medium guy who is devoted and trustworthy.
Most elderly women are single. My mother and her 3 siblings are all widowed, single, or divorced. They help each other and make it work.