Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not really. I have friends for that. I have a therapist I go to a few times a year.
They can't be your everything.
Color me crazy but being spousal emotional support should be the #1 job of the husband to the wife, and the wife to the husband. I can't imagine any scenario where my DH isn't the first person I want to tell, bad/sad things but great things as well. I feel like so many of the marriages here are really just business arrangements...
Anonymous wrote:Not really. I have friends for that. I have a therapist I go to a few times a year.
They can't be your everything.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You woman-babies should learn to be strong and independent! It is not your husband's job to coddle you like a whimpering child who needs a boo-boo kiss!
Oh so when my mom had cancer I should kerp everything in. Great!
Anonymous wrote:You woman-babies should learn to be strong and independent! It is not your husband's job to coddle you like a whimpering child who needs a boo-boo kiss!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If my husband couldn’t support me emotionally and be my best friend, we wouldn’t be together. For me that’s an important part of feeling complete trust in our relationship.
I’m an earlier poster. This whole “husband as a best friend” thing is kind of dumb. Is he probably the closest person in the world to me in terms of knowing my inner thoughts and day-to-day activities? Absolutely. And we connected emotionally? Absolutely. Do I also use other people in my life for emotional support? Also yes.
¯\_(?)_/¯ You do you. But I’m being honest. Men are capable of having this emotional connection. Most of the men my friends are married to are this way. If it works for you not to have it, that’s chill. For me it would be a nightmare to live with someone who wasn’t a source of emotional support. I’d be sad for my kids too not to have someone who was fully emotionally available as a father.