Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
My parents took the step you want to and neither is happy now. Mom pulled the trigger instead of going for counseling . My sisters and I still can't figure out how you can be happy through close to 30 years of marriage (and they were-lots of physical affection) and not be able to find the energy to make it through a rough patch. The travel plans they made went in the toilet, mom is very poor and neither landed on their feet romantically. As adult children we are very resentful. We had a good family life growing up and now hate holiday meal negotiations over who is going to see who. Our family no longer exists and I have never forgiven my mom for leaving for no good reason. Don't do it. Your kids will hate you.
Wake up and grow up, Child! There was most likely a very good reason, but didn't feel they owed you the details. You know far less than you think about your parents and their marriage. It was their choice to make and I'm sure it doesn't mean they loved you any less. There is only so much a person can take and it sounds like they'd had enough of whatever misery they were in.
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I agree. Your parent's marriage is not about you as an adult child. BTW, that 30 year "happy" marriage was probably not so happy. Expecting your parent's to live the remainder of their lives in misery so that you can live a fantasy and not have to "negotiate" holidays is extremely selfish.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My parents took the step you want to and neither is happy now. Mom pulled the trigger instead of going for counseling . My sisters and I still can't figure out how you can be happy through close to 30 years of marriage (and they were-lots of physical affection) and not be able to find the energy to make it through a rough patch. The travel plans they made went in the toilet, mom is very poor and neither landed on their feet romantically. As adult children we are very resentful. We had a good family life growing up and now hate holiday meal negotiations over who is going to see who. Our family no longer exists and I have never forgiven my mom for leaving for no good reason. Don't do it. Your kids will hate you.
OP here. Thank you for sharing. And I realize this may sound selfish or immature, but as a DH close to 50, I am incredibly frustrated by the situation. MY DW doesn't want relations, and I think because it is for control and away to punish me. I understand what you are saying and suspect you are correct but I feel like my wife know I am stuck and can therefore treat me like shit. So I have to put up with a bad situation because of the kids. How is she going to treat me once they are out of the house ? I do not think it is going to be pretty.
Anonymous wrote:
My parents took the step you want to and neither is happy now. Mom pulled the trigger instead of going for counseling . My sisters and I still can't figure out how you can be happy through close to 30 years of marriage (and they were-lots of physical affection) and not be able to find the energy to make it through a rough patch. The travel plans they made went in the toilet, mom is very poor and neither landed on their feet romantically. As adult children we are very resentful. We had a good family life growing up and now hate holiday meal negotiations over who is going to see who. Our family no longer exists and I have never forgiven my mom for leaving for no good reason. Don't do it. Your kids will hate you.
Wake up and grow up, Child! There was most likely a very good reason, but didn't feel they owed you the details. You know far less than you think about your parents and their marriage. It was their choice to make and I'm sure it doesn't mean they loved you any less. There is only so much a person can take and it sounds like they'd had enough of whatever misery they were in.
.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My parents took the step you want to and neither is happy now. Mom pulled the trigger instead of going for counseling . My sisters and I still can't figure out how you can be happy through close to 30 years of marriage (and they were-lots of physical affection) and not be able to find the energy to make it through a rough patch. The travel plans they made went in the toilet, mom is very poor and neither landed on their feet romantically. As adult children we are very resentful. We had a good family life growing up and now hate holiday meal negotiations over who is going to see who. Our family no longer exists and I have never forgiven my mom for leaving for no good reason. Don't do it. Your kids will hate you.
Wake up and grow up, Child! There was most likely a very good reason, but didn't feel they owed you the details. You know far less than you think about your parents and their marriage. It was their choice to make and I'm sure it doesn't mean they loved you any less. There is only so much a person can take and it sounds like they'd had enough of whatever misery they were in.
Anonymous wrote:My parents took the step you want to and neither is happy now. Mom pulled the trigger instead of going for counseling . My sisters and I still can't figure out how you can be happy through close to 30 years of marriage (and they were-lots of physical affection) and not be able to find the energy to make it through a rough patch. The travel plans they made went in the toilet, mom is very poor and neither landed on their feet romantically. As adult children we are very resentful. We had a good family life growing up and now hate holiday meal negotiations over who is going to see who. Our family no longer exists and I have never forgiven my mom for leaving for no good reason. Don't do it. Your kids will hate you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DH was like you in a loveless marriage and decided he wanted to be happy again. He divorced and then met me-yeah! Anyway, I think he has found happiness again. If you're a good guy, you will too.
PP, did your DH have children and if so, how is that relationship? I'm not the OP, but looking for encouraging stories -- or a reality check.
Anonymous wrote:My DH was like you in a loveless marriage and decided he wanted to be happy again. He divorced and then met me-yeah! Anyway, I think he has found happiness again. If you're a good guy, you will too.
Anonymous wrote:OP, how about if you tell her if she doesn't want relations that you should be able to seek it outside with her permission? She will say no at first but negotiate it with her. Get it in writing in case you guys end up divorced so she can't change her mind and claim cheating. And whatever she finds important that she doesn't get met, you would yield on it. Each gets one thing.
Anonymous wrote:You sound horribly selfish and self-absorbed. Whatever mistake your mother may have made, she lives with it everyday. And to have you compound it with your selfish, all-about-me vitriol is sickening. Maybe she's better off without you and your sisters if your idea of love is beating up on your mother emotionally.Anonymous wrote:My parents took the step you want to and neither is happy now. Mom pulled the trigger instead of going for counseling . My sisters and I still can't figure out how you can be happy through close to 30 years of marriage (and they were-lots of physical affection) and not be able to find the energy to make it through a rough patch. The travel plans they made went in the toilet, mom is very poor and neither landed on their feet romantically. As adult children we are very resentful. We had a good family life growing up and now hate holiday meal negotiations over who is going to see who. Our family no longer exists and I have never forgiven my mom for leaving for no good reason. Don't do it. Your kids will hate you.