Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dude WTF? You are PATHETIC. There are thousands upon thousands of 30-something attractive single women in this area who do NOT have baggage or kids. Go find one.
Remember: she dumped you the first time and went and had kids with someone else. THIS WAS NOT MEANT TO BE.
Haha, your ferocity is admirable if not telling.
Personally, I'm not the type to rush in and think with my little head. Her kids are amazing and well behaved.
I'm planning to take it slow, no idea what the future will hold. What I'm looking guidance on is how to set the ground work so she'll consider me.
Also, it's been more than 10 years, I rounded down. There was no chance the first child was conceived "on my watch".
Anonymous wrote:OP, it take 10 months to have a kid. She has a 9 year old she broke up with you, got knocked up, got married and has never worked a day in her life. Run now!!!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dude WTF? You are PATHETIC. There are thousands upon thousands of 30-something attractive single women in this area who do NOT have baggage or kids. Go find one.
Remember: she dumped you the first time and went and had kids with someone else. THIS WAS NOT MEANT TO BE.
Haha, your ferocity is admirable if not telling.
Personally, I'm not the type to rush in and think with my little head. Her kids are amazing and well behaved.
I'm planning to take it slow, no idea what the future will hold. What I'm looking guidance on is how to set the ground work so she'll consider me.
Also, it's been more than 10 years, I rounded down. There was no chance the first child was conceived "on my watch".
Anonymous wrote:The GF might not go back to her ex. That wouldn't be my concern as OP. My concern as OP would be that I am a convenient place filler because she does not want to do the hard work of reflecting what went wrong in her marriage and building a new life for her kids. The LAST thing she should be expending valuable effort and energy on right now is an ex boyfriend. It's not mature nor wise and OP needs to be very leery of exactly WHY she is using this time of growth and uncertainty in life to get back in contact with him.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Okay then, I'd say ask her if she wants to meet up for lunch or coffee while the kids are at school. Progress to dinner and help figure out creative ways to find babysitters (you could pay for the babysitter or find a cousin who'll sit for her for free for a favor - whatever floats your boat) - just show her you're interested in her and understand that her kids come first & you're willing to work with that. Move on to attending the kid's games or having a 'family' picnic in the park.
Bottom line - talk to her face-to-face, see what she's looking for in life, explain where you're going, see if you're still a match, and make it clear you're not just looking for her ass but care about her kids as well.
I like this advice, too, with the exception of the kids' games and family picnic...I would save anything to do with the kids until MUCH, MUCH later. Also, not that you need to be nosey about it, but I would want to know what led to her divorce. Is she planning on working now? Does she have a way to earn a living? Are you well-off, and that's why she's reaching out? Did you see any red flags before that you have conveniently forgotten?
What led to her divorce; her husband grew to be a bi-polar, combat veteran, that was cheating for the second time. (not using veteran as a pejorative. I'm a combat veteran as well)
Is she planning on working now; Yes, she's found a good job at Microsoft, I think, through her sister-in-law.
Does she have a way to earn a living? Yes, and moved back to be closer to her family that is offering support.
Are you well-off; I own my own business and it keeps me comfortable. Adding 3 people to my bottom line would be taxing, but I could manage.
- My read on things is partly that I am a comfortable connection to the past, and partly that I have grown and matured while her husband remained bogged down in his issues. From what she's told me, didn't grow emotionally or on his career, and it hurt the family unit. If I was managing an Arby's, I don't think I'd be having this conversation.
I mean this as kindly as possible, but it's very rare a marriage ends because of one person only. Trust and believe she has her shit too, slow down enough so that you can see it and make a clear decision on whether or not you want to live with it.
Yes kids. Suck up that abuse because you have flaws too. Don't let your marriage end because your flaw of not having a thicker skin or a tougher jaw.
Anonymous wrote:^no but if she has a 9 year old she jumped into a new relationship very quickly and is now doing the same thing again. Op hasn't been married or has kids; she has and those things plus her divorce have changed her in very real ways that he cannot anticipate. It's just good damn sense for any woman to take a breather exiting a relationship and take some time to rebuild her life and figure out what she needs and wants going forward. Time traveling to the past to the last guy you dated is at best misguided and at worst disastrous. She isn't the same person he dated then nor can she be. She needs to figure out who she is now and stand on her own two feet before entering into a relationship again.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dude WTF? You are PATHETIC. There are thousands upon thousands of 30-something attractive single women in this area who do NOT have baggage or kids. Go find one.
Remember: she dumped you the first time and went and had kids with someone else. THIS WAS NOT MEANT TO BE.
I'm planning to take it slow, no idea what the future will hold. What I'm looking guidance on is how to set the ground work so she'll consider me.
Also, it's been more than 10 years, I rounded down. There was no chance the first child was conceived "on my watch".
Okay then, I'd say ask her if she wants to meet up for lunch or coffee while the kids are at school. Progress to dinner and help figure out creative ways to find babysitters (you could pay for the babysitter or find a cousin who'll sit for her for free for a favor - whatever floats your boat) - just show her you're interested in her and understand that her kids come first & you're willing to work with that. Move on to attending the kid's games or having a 'family' picnic in the park.
Bottom line - talk to her face-to-face, see what she's looking for in life, explain where you're going, see if you're still a match, and make it clear you're not just looking for her ass but care about her kids as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Okay then, I'd say ask her if she wants to meet up for lunch or coffee while the kids are at school. Progress to dinner and help figure out creative ways to find babysitters (you could pay for the babysitter or find a cousin who'll sit for her for free for a favor - whatever floats your boat) - just show her you're interested in her and understand that her kids come first & you're willing to work with that. Move on to attending the kid's games or having a 'family' picnic in the park.
Bottom line - talk to her face-to-face, see what she's looking for in life, explain where you're going, see if you're still a match, and make it clear you're not just looking for her ass but care about her kids as well.
I like this advice, too, with the exception of the kids' games and family picnic...I would save anything to do with the kids until MUCH, MUCH later. Also, not that you need to be nosey about it, but I would want to know what led to her divorce. Is she planning on working now? Does she have a way to earn a living? Are you well-off, and that's why she's reaching out? Did you see any red flags before that you have conveniently forgotten?
What led to her divorce; her husband grew to be a bi-polar, combat veteran, that was cheating for the second time. (not using veteran as a pejorative. I'm a combat veteran as well)
Is she planning on working now; Yes, she's found a good job at Microsoft, I think, through her sister-in-law.
Does she have a way to earn a living? Yes, and moved back to be closer to her family that is offering support.
Are you well-off; I own my own business and it keeps me comfortable. Adding 3 people to my bottom line would be taxing, but I could manage.
- My read on things is partly that I am a comfortable connection to the past, and partly that I have grown and matured while her husband remained bogged down in his issues. From what she's told me, didn't grow emotionally or on his career, and it hurt the family unit. If I was managing an Arby's, I don't think I'd be having this conversation.