Anonymous wrote:I’m 36 and happily married but man, I do not understand wanting to find a new serious thing. If we got divorced it’d be hookups and sleeping TF alone for me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Early 40s divorced woman here. You and I have kind of simliar situations. You stayed in a marriage for your child when you probably should have left. So did I. The difference is that I never had a good marriage and was about to leave and had an accidental pregnancy in a place where my career was not located and I could not leave. I stayed...until I could not...wasted a decade. But here is the key difference...the moment I I had the positive unplanned pregnancy test, I knew it was over (the dream of having a marriage I wanted with a man I wanted to be with)--I was now stuck with a child with someone I did not want to be with. I knew that staying meant I would probably never have the relationship I really wanted because time would pass me by. I was already in my early 30s then...it would be have been fine for me to start over without the pregnancy but once that happened, I knew my chances of having what I really wanted would probably never happened since I was staying. So, when I finallly divorced in my early 40s, I had no illusions about the supply of men. I divorced assuming I would stay single forever and may never be in love again (the last time I was in love was before my bad marriage that was always a mistake).
I am sorry you are going through this now and it must seem overwhelming. I was prepared for it and divorced knowing that ship has sailed.
I have dated younger men. It's fine but I am not under the impression it will turn into anything. I think you are right that men never married by 40 likely have issues. I just learned that myself the hard way recently. I thought maybe I did find what I was looking for, but then issues came out than explained why he had never married.
Back to square 1 for me. But I am okay with the fact that the long-term partnershlp I wanted is not likely to ever happen. If I have some companions that last a year or two here and there, that is really good enough for me now. I was devastated 10 years ago when I accepted this was probably never going to happen for me when I stayed due to the pregnancy. I guess I already went through this early in my marriage vs. going through it upon divorce.
Good luck.
NP: i don’t understand with these stories why you would knowingly stay in a bad marriage and not tell the other person. It sounds like you stayed in the marriage for you and not your child.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. To the two previous posters, thanks for your insight. It is sad that you were not able to find somebody worthy, but I am glad that you are in a good place now.
I have always envisioned myself with a trusted partner who is my best friend and companion. I had such a relationship with my ex-husband until he started cheating during my pregnancy. I was/am so hoping to find a wonderful relationship again.
PP has only been single for two years. Don’t write off the possibility.
Yes- I think OP was feeling rebuked at the advice to woman up and heal and be strong, so it then became “sad” that the ones encouraging some time and introspection “couldn’t find love”. Honey- I’m not looking for love, I’m independently wealthy and have the luxury of enjoying the crap out of my life without a bad man in it. Nothing sad about that, I promise.
Anonymous wrote:So you're a parent, but you want a non-parent to be interested?
I find this funny. Its like the fat women who only want athletic men.
Anonymous wrote:I am really sad about the tiny chances of partnering up with a cultured, emphatic man in my age group who is not tangled in some energy-draining co-parenting situation. In my opinion/experience, all good men between 40 and 55 are taken. Those who have never married have issues. Those who get divorced have issues (certainly including me).
There really is a reason why most marriages take place between the ages of 25 and 30, when both genders are at the peak of their physical beauty.
FWIW, I am successful, in shape and take care of myself. I have an 11 year-old.
I am just very disheartened at the thought that the ship sailed for me 20 years ago. I find the whole idea of online dating repulsive - it is like a meat market out there.
Anonymous wrote:I’m 36 and happily married but man, I do not understand wanting to find a new serious thing. If we got divorced it’d be hookups and sleeping TF alone for me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve noticed the exact opposite of the co-parenting issue. Most men with kids are either weekend-only dads, or their kids live in another state entirely and they see them only a couple times a year.
OP here. Now that is really sad. I honestly would not want to be with a man who places such little value on being with his children.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. To the two previous posters, thanks for your insight. It is sad that you were not able to find somebody worthy, but I am glad that you are in a good place now.
I have always envisioned myself with a trusted partner who is my best friend and companion. I had such a relationship with my ex-husband until he started cheating during my pregnancy. I was/am so hoping to find a wonderful relationship again.
Please take my soon-to-be ex-partner. He is 47 and won't cheat on you. I wish he'd get the hell out of the house instead of sitting around, but he is a family man or anti-social or I'm not even sure. No hobbies, never goes anywhere unless I go with him, or he goes to see his family. Please take him. We are not married, so no divorce to waste anyone's time.
Anonymous wrote:I am really sad about the tiny chances of partnering up with a cultured, emphatic man in my age group who is not tangled in some energy-draining co-parenting situation. In my opinion/experience, all good men between 40 and 55 are taken. Those who have never married have issues. Those who get divorced have issues (certainly including me).
There really is a reason why most marriages take place between the ages of 25 and 30, when both genders are at the peak of their physical beauty.
FWIW, I am successful, in shape and take care of myself. I have an 11 year-old.
I am just very disheartened at the thought that the ship sailed for me 20 years ago. I find the whole idea of online dating repulsive - it is like a meat market out there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. To the two previous posters, thanks for your insight. It is sad that you were not able to find somebody worthy, but I am glad that you are in a good place now.
I have always envisioned myself with a trusted partner who is my best friend and companion. I had such a relationship with my ex-husband until he started cheating during my pregnancy. I was/am so hoping to find a wonderful relationship again.
OP. Getting rid of a cheating partner takes time and give yourself some time reorient and find what you want.
Anonymous wrote:You never know. My FIL married his AP six months after the divorce, soon after DH was done with college. They are happily married for over a decade now, swimming in $$$. She was 45 and he was 55 when they married. They both had kids at a young age, so they were younger empty nesters.
Anonymous wrote:Early 40s divorced woman here. You and I have kind of simliar situations. You stayed in a marriage for your child when you probably should have left. So did I. The difference is that I never had a good marriage and was about to leave and had an accidental pregnancy in a place where my career was not located and I could not leave. I stayed...until I could not...wasted a decade. But here is the key difference...the moment I I had the positive unplanned pregnancy test, I knew it was over (the dream of having a marriage I wanted with a man I wanted to be with)--I was now stuck with a child with someone I did not want to be with. I knew that staying meant I would probably never have the relationship I really wanted because time would pass me by. I was already in my early 30s then...it would be have been fine for me to start over without the pregnancy but once that happened, I knew my chances of having what I really wanted would probably never happened since I was staying. So, when I finallly divorced in my early 40s, I had no illusions about the supply of men. I divorced assuming I would stay single forever and may never be in love again (the last time I was in love was before my bad marriage that was always a mistake).
I am sorry you are going through this now and it must seem overwhelming. I was prepared for it and divorced knowing that ship has sailed.
I have dated younger men. It's fine but I am not under the impression it will turn into anything. I think you are right that men never married by 40 likely have issues. I just learned that myself the hard way recently. I thought maybe I did find what I was looking for, but then issues came out than explained why he had never married.
Back to square 1 for me. But I am okay with the fact that the long-term partnershlp I wanted is not likely to ever happen. If I have some companions that last a year or two here and there, that is really good enough for me now. I was devastated 10 years ago when I accepted this was probably never going to happen for me when I stayed due to the pregnancy. I guess I already went through this early in my marriage vs. going through it upon divorce.
Good luck.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. To the two previous posters, thanks for your insight. It is sad that you were not able to find somebody worthy, but I am glad that you are in a good place now.
I have always envisioned myself with a trusted partner who is my best friend and companion. I had such a relationship with my ex-husband until he started cheating during my pregnancy. I was/am so hoping to find a wonderful relationship again.
PP has only been single for two years. Don’t write off the possibility.