[b]Anonymous wrote:OP here. You all have offered great advice.
Neither of us cheated. I have a major health illness that has caused a lot of stress on the family. I have chosen not to tell my parents, and husband disagrees with this decision. He is a kind, good man. I consider myself to also be a decent person. He realizes that we might be better off apart than together. He thinks he can actually help me handle the health issues when we are separated.
It is too complicated to communicate here, and I still haven't been able to sleep. I appreciate what everyone has contributed, and I am sure that therapy is in order. Hard to do that on a Saturday, but I am trying to get that lined up.
[b]Anonymous wrote:Kids in the house/parents rotate is common in my part of MoCo.
Here's how it plays out:
Cheater stays with BF/GF
Other parent crashes with the grandparents, friends or neighbors---some even rent a room from another single/separated/divorced friend
The goal is to keep the kids stable.
If you have to make the kids switch homes, then your husband should rent a place in the neighborhood.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. You all have offered great advice.
Neither of us cheated. I have a major health illness that has caused a lot of stress on the family. I have chosen not to tell my parents, and husband disagrees with this decision. He is a kind, good man. I consider myself to also be a decent person. He realizes that we might be better off apart than together. He thinks he can actually help me handle the health issues when we are separated.
It is too complicated to communicate here, and I still haven't been able to sleep. I appreciate what everyone has contributed, and I am sure that therapy is in order. Hard to do that on a Saturday, but I am trying to get that lined up.
Anonymous wrote:But no father would leave his children with an alcoholic mother.
. Why do folks come on here and make posts into games? This isn't win a prize for guessing the right answer.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. You all have offered great advice.
Neither of us cheated. I have a major health illness that has caused a lot of stress on the family. I have chosen not to tell my parents, and husband disagrees with this decision. He is a kind, good man. I consider myself to also be a decent person. He realizes that we might be better off apart than together. He thinks he can actually help me handle the health issues when we are separated.
It is too complicated to communicate here, and I still haven't been able to sleep. I appreciate what everyone has contributed, and I am sure that therapy is in order. Hard to do that on a Saturday, but I am trying to get that lined up.
Gosh, OP, of course it's hard to say what's going on from the outside, but what you've just written sounds like a cry for help from your husband. He needs someone else in his life to help with your illness. And since you are choosing not to bring in your parents, he feels a need to escape because he can't handle it all. If that's even remotely true, please seek some outside help, somehow.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids in the house/parents rotate is common in my part of MoCo.
Here's how it plays out:
Cheater stays with BF/GF
Other parent crashes with the grandparents, friends or neighbors---some even rent a room from another single/separated/divorced friend
The goal is to keep the kids stable.
If you have to make the kids switch homes, then your husband should rent a place in the neighborhood.
That's not stability for anyone and makes no sense. Dad wants the divorce. If he is cheating, she should get to keep the house and everything in it. He can move in with partner.
Anonymous wrote:
That's not stability for anyone and makes no sense. Dad wants the divorce. If he is cheating, she should get to keep the house and everything in it. He can move in with partner.
Anonymous wrote:Kids in the house/parents rotate is common in my part of MoCo.
Here's how it plays out:
Cheater stays with BF/GF
Other parent crashes with the grandparents, friends or neighbors---some even rent a room from another single/separated/divorced friend
The goal is to keep the kids stable.
If you have to make the kids switch homes, then your husband should rent a place in the neighborhood.
Anonymous wrote:Op, he dropped a bombshell on you a week before Christmas. I would assume the worst moving forward and be pleasantly surprised if things work out better than that. I would definitely hire a lawyer. Now. But you certainly don't need to tell him right now. Plan. I am a pessimist by nature. But a father and dad who drops that bomb shell right before Christmas isn't thinking clearly and can't be trusted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do the 180!!
What is that?