Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why would you go scorched earth on a nice loving guy?
because he is choosing his job (which isn't needed to pay the bills) over his family, his wife's mental health and having a relationsip with his kids. Anyone can seem loving if you they only an hour a week with you. This guy needs to grow up. OP is single parenting, this guy is just a roomate living for free in her house. OP should just have an affair honestly until her husband figures out what to do about his job.
He knows he's letting everyone down. He's just trying to eek out a little more of it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are a married couple, not single, with one person working an afternoon/evening shift. If you wanted a 9-5 guy, with the potential for earning a high income, then you should have married one. Since that ship has sailed, and you chose to have kids with this guy, you have to make a decision.
I can see asking him to cut back his hours but essentially asking him to change what he does is TOO much. You do not marry someone, have kids by them, and then decide that you want a new model because this one isn't fitting into your fairy tale dream. Accept him as he is, make slight adjustments, and then go from there. There are plenty of couples that make marriage work where one person works an alternative shift. Seek advice from them.
You cannot marry someone and them ask them to dramatically change.
My thoughts as I was reading this. I dated a guy like this. I eventually broke up with him because I couldn’t see anyway to have and raise kids with him. But give OP a break. She seems to recognize that and this seems to be leaning toward divorce. That seems crazy unless you give him options first. Doesn’t the guy want to spend more time with his family?
GREAT QUESTION
What did he say about the ramifications when he UNILATERALLY decided to take this job 12 months ago (post marriage, post-having kids)?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why would you go scorched earth on a nice loving guy?
because he is choosing his job (which isn't needed to pay the bills) over his family, his wife's mental health and having a relationsip with his kids. Anyone can seem loving if you they only an hour a week with you. This guy needs to grow up. OP is single parenting, this guy is just a roomate living for free in her house. OP should just have an affair honestly until her husband figures out what to do about his job.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are a married couple, not single, with one person working an afternoon/evening shift. If you wanted a 9-5 guy, with the potential for earning a high income, then you should have married one. Since that ship has sailed, and you chose to have kids with this guy, you have to make a decision.
I can see asking him to cut back his hours but essentially asking him to change what he does is TOO much. You do not marry someone, have kids by them, and then decide that you want a new model because this one isn't fitting into your fairy tale dream. Accept him as he is, make slight adjustments, and then go from there. There are plenty of couples that make marriage work where one person works an alternative shift. Seek advice from them.
You cannot marry someone and them ask them to dramatically change.
My thoughts as I was reading this. I dated a guy like this. I eventually broke up with him because I couldn’t see anyway to have and raise kids with him. But give OP a break. She seems to recognize that and this seems to be leaning toward divorce. That seems crazy unless you give him options first. Doesn’t the guy want to spend more time with his family?
Anonymous wrote:Why would you go scorched earth on a nice loving guy?
Anonymous wrote:You are a married couple, not single, with one person working an afternoon/evening shift. If you wanted a 9-5 guy, with the potential for earning a high income, then you should have married one. Since that ship has sailed, and you chose to have kids with this guy, you have to make a decision.
I can see asking him to cut back his hours but essentially asking him to change what he does is TOO much. You do not marry someone, have kids by them, and then decide that you want a new model because this one isn't fitting into your fairy tale dream. Accept him as he is, make slight adjustments, and then go from there. There are plenty of couples that make marriage work where one person works an alternative shift. Seek advice from them.
You cannot marry someone and them ask them to dramatically change.
Anonymous wrote:You are a married couple, not single, with one person working an afternoon/evening shift. If you wanted a 9-5 guy, with the potential for earning a high income, then you should have married one. Since that ship has sailed, and you chose to have kids with this guy, you have to make a decision.
I can see asking him to cut back his hours but essentially asking him to change what he does is TOO much. You do not marry someone, have kids by them, and then decide that you want a new model because this one isn't fitting into your fairy tale dream. Accept him as he is, make slight adjustments, and then go from there. There are plenty of couples that make marriage work where one person works an alternative shift. Seek advice from them.
You cannot marry someone and them ask them to dramatically change.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You said the job has great perks?
Are you referring to him getting to sleep all day and then watch the game every night? Does he drink with his buddies at the arena? Is that why 8 hours of work turns into 11 hours a night?
Yes. He gets paid to schmooze.
Anonymous wrote:I would do the following:
1) tell him you are all moving and selling the house to be closer to your mom
2) tell him you want to start couples counseling immediately
3) reassess after 6 months on divorce. But if things haven’t changed after 6 months of counseling, say you want to separate and make sure he gets partial custody.
You and your children all deserve someone who is actually interested in spending time with you.
Anonymous wrote:Sounds like his dream job is sports DJ or announcer of something similar.
These types of jobs dont have to be forever jobs. Can you move and leave him behind until he tries of the job?
Anonymous wrote:She said he gets the kids off to school and sees them for a hour a day. Not that bad. I think OP should get a less stressful job and smaller house. It's hard to find a job you really like and I would feel guilty asking him to quit. Also, schedule more date time.
OP I would try all that before pulling the plug.