Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m so angry u can barely talk to him
Don’t forgive him, he’s a narcissist. I bet every decision he made over the last 25 years only had to do about him and was for him. He was never a family man or a true father or true husband.
Take time and process this all.
Take the money, talk with the kids- tell the exactly what happened here, then take a 6 month around the world cruise to celebrate and heal.
More psychotic talk. Stop projecting. You don’t know these people. It’s more likely she’s the problem if he filed.
Men file early on if wife is unwell mentally.
Jerk men file gray divorce after the free childcare and housekeeping, to get another young bite at the apple.
And most men don’t marry ever and have children out of wedlock either multiple women. Let’s not forget that 30% contingent!
Anonymous wrote:Sounds like a mid life crisis!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m so angry u can barely talk to him
Don’t forgive him, he’s a narcissist. I bet every decision he made over the last 25 years only had to do about him and was for him. He was never a family man or a true father or true husband.
Take time and process this all.
Take the money, talk with the kids- tell the exactly what happened here, then take a 6 month around the world cruise to celebrate and heal.
More psychotic talk. Stop projecting. You don’t know these people. It’s more likely she’s the problem if he filed.
Anonymous wrote:Sounds like a mid life crisis!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How old are you and your soon to be exdh? Is there enough money for retirement? Reasons for the gray divorce?
The answers to these questions has implications for whether forgiveness is possible.
53, 3 kids 18,20,22
Financial issues and not enough for retirement but not dire.
He wants more passion and feels we have grown apart.
Yeah, “passion”. If he isn’t already cheating he has prospects lined up.
HAHAHAHA. How many prospects does a pathetic mid-50s guy have?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How old are you and your soon to be exdh? Is there enough money for retirement? Reasons for the gray divorce?
The answers to these questions has implications for whether forgiveness is possible.
53, 3 kids 18,20,22
Financial issues and not enough for retirement but not dire.
He wants more passion and feels we have grown apart.
Yeah, “passion”. If he isn’t already cheating he has prospects lined up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You don't have to forgive him.
Forgive yourself for being mad. It's understandable you're mad. Let yourself feel your anger, talk to someone about it (therapist, friend, someone) but release yourself from it.
Someone once did something really awful to me and they never apologized or even took responsibility for it. For a long time I kept telling myself I had to forgive them (partly because other people kept telling me I'd never move on if I didn't forgive them). But I couldn't! How can you forgive someone who isn't even sorry for the harm they caused?
But then one day I decided to just accept that I couldn't forgive them, and I decided it was fine, and that gave me the release I needed to move on. Some people suck. You don't have to let them off the hook (they can figure that out themselves) but you can let yourself off the hook.
Wishing you peace, OP.
Forgiveness isn’t letting them off the hook for what they did. It’s admitting that this is your life now, you have to move on and make the best of it for yourself so they can’t steal anymore joy from your life than they already have. They won’t ever see what they did as wrong, but you can live a life according to your values and choose better people to be close to going forward.
PP here. We are saying the same thing. I have personally found that not trying to frame this as "forgiveness" is easier because I'd get hung up on it being something I was a giving someone who didn't deserve it. I thought of it as just letting go of them and focusing on my own well being. I never really forgave but I did move on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s telling that you are refusing to accept his agency in your relationship…
What do you mean? I understand he needs to be happy but I’m still pissed since I sacrificied a lot.
Let this be a lesson to younger women - do not sacrifice more than you are willing to.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s telling that you are refusing to accept his agency in your relationship…
He stayed long enough for you to do all the free childcare, cooking, running of the household, cleaning, raising & launching the kids.
Now his pretending to be a husband and father are more formally over.
Let the playtime commence!
He also stayed long enough to give her a significant chunk of assets, pension, etc. so even if she did all that, that work wasn’t free to him.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here - married 26 years. I get logically he deserves to be happy, but blowing up my life at this stage at almost 54 is beyond me.
Please tell us all the things he did to reignite your marriage, the trips, the intimacy card game, the therapy sessions and the Gottman books he initiated?
Be honest, this didn’t come out of nowhere.
DP
He wanted more passion and attention!
Those pesky three kids and damn 5000 sq house and yard. That just kept wifey too busy and him away more.