Anonymous wrote:For those of you who are comfortable or more like roommates, do you regret marrying them?
Anonymous wrote:There are a lot of good comments on this thread. I am a DW and married a great guy; kind, thoughtful, loving, considerate, everything I wanted when we met. But this was a rebound relationship for me, and things just never felt "right" for me...we have very few things in common, but get along ok. We got married and had a "roommate" style relationship, the sex was ok.
Fast forward 8 years, and things fell apart. He misses having someone with whom he has more in common, and also feels that the "spark" we used to have is gone. We're separating now, and will divorce. I was happy to go along as things are, but he's hoping to find a better match.
The thing is, I'm not really sad about this. I know there's a better match out there for me too, and I hope he finds happiness. I wish, at the outset, I had broken things off before we got married and so entwined... lesson learned.
Anonymous wrote:Just wondering what has happened to people who was dating someone who was a good person and there was no real reason to leave them so you married them. You might have had a feeling that this person wasn't the right person for you, but you loved them and they were good and kind and you couldn't come up with a reason to break up. Or maybe you realized after you were married that being good wasn't good enough to sustain a marriage.
What happened? Are you still married? Happily? Divorced?
Anonymous wrote:[
Because men are (on average) simpler to keep happy.
Anonymous wrote:Anyone else notice all the responses are women bored with men? Think twice before you get married fellas!
Anonymous wrote:My sister did. And is now divorced. They dated for 3 years with break-ups in-between. Then they married in 2000 and he filed for divorce in 2013. They have one child. He is a very nice guy, but SO different from my sister. When they met they were both working at the same agency, both working as social workers. My sister went on to get her Master's, LICSW, and then started a PhD program. He continued to work in his same job. He had a very different upbringing than we did, neither parent went to college, is one of 5 boys from a small, Kentucky town. Parents very religious, two of his brothers home-school their kids. We grew up in DC, went to private school, both our parents have advanced degrees...I think he just always felt like she was too driven for him if that makes sense and she felt like he was not motivated. But he was nice, a fantastic father, wonderful with my DS. They just weren't right for each other. Shockingly, he was the one who filed for divorce, saying she was selfish for "holding him back" from ever advancing in life. Really long story I won;t go into, but now they are amicably divorced and are co-parenting their 6 year-old beautifully. I think sometimes people find each other and get married because they think after so many years, why not?
Anonymous wrote:We were great on paper
Anonymous wrote:Sometimes I wonder if there any any married couples who are actually happy after a few years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anyone else notice all the responses are women bored with men? Think twice before you get married fellas!
Because men are (on average) simpler to keep happy. I wouldn't say my DW and I are roommates, more like friends who have sex sometimes, and have each other's back. No real butterflies, sometimes we can create some passion. Married 10 years, two school age kids. I am pretty content with peace, family and sex. I don't need a soulmate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This thread makes me want to seriously consider open marriage as an option. I've struggled with this for sometime and even went so far at one point as to think that if I really loved my DW then I'd feel butterflies, so I thought I didn't really loved her.
Then I tried to imagine my life without out here and I was devastatingly sad. The thought of not having her in my life was crushing. Not having her as my best friend, not appreciating her humor, not raising children together, not enjoying each other's company, when we have sex we know exactly what the other needs and we even experiment from time to time, etc.
If that's what it's like to live like roommates then she's the best goddamn roommate I've ever had (of course, in college, I had a roommate who would eat his toenail clippings).
However, having all that and then still wanting more can be draining on a relationship. I want all those things she has to give, but I also want newness and excitement. I want to confide in someone else so I'm not constantly burdening her with my issues, and I want her to confide in someone else so I don't feel drained by hers.
I feel bad for your wife, good lord. Get some counseling.
Women- raise your boys to turn into men.