Anonymous wrote:As someone who told myself he would never even when he was basically living in "the basement" and suddenly nasty to me all the time, I say to myself "you idiot!"Anonymous wrote:Reading his kids a bedtime story gets in the way of sitting in the basement sexting his AP.
Anonymous wrote:My DH got incredibly crabby and lazy around 42. He had always been a check the box kind of person, and my theory is that he never developed any sort of internal monologue or goals for himself beyond what he thought he was supposed to do. So now he has a kid, family, wife, nice house, vacation house, and job title he always wanted, but he feels empty because he doesn’t have a sense of his true values. I think he feels trapped by us and a sense of being unfulfilled, but because he can’t look inward he blames me/kids/family obligations/dog for how he feels.
You can’t call someone like this out on it because they just lash out, in my experience. I think that my DH could have a come to Jesus moment and realize that his empty soul is the problem, not us or his job, or he’ll just keep using us as his punching bag. He won’t walk away from us because I think deep down he knows he’d be left with just himself and that he’s the problem.
I've also heard they use Amex or Visa gift cards to hide purchases.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ask to see his phone. If he balks you have your answer right there.
Most of them are pretty smart. They’ll use a secondary device (even a work phone) or use apps like Telegram and WhatsApp, and hide them. They’ll do other stupidly obvious things, but they know how to hide stuff.
They use game apps like words with friends
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ask to see his phone. If he balks you have your answer right there.
Most of them are pretty smart. They’ll use a secondary device (even a work phone) or use apps like Telegram and WhatsApp, and hide them. They’ll do other stupidly obvious things, but they know how to hide stuff.
Hahaha! I have to find and frame it. But it was literally the best thing that could have happened to me. When I thought "he would never" I also thought the possibility of "never" would destroy me. Instead it was the most f^&cking liberating experience of my life. Wild. (But unlike OP I don't have young children. That would have made the situation really awful.)Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As someone who told myself he would never even when he was basically living in "the basement" and suddenly nasty to me all the time, I say to myself "you idiot!"Anonymous wrote:Reading his kids a bedtime story gets in the way of sitting in the basement sexting his AP.
Well, there is that horribly accurate meme that as soon as you say “he would never! Here he comes, never in like he nevered before”
Anonymous wrote:The extent to which men can betray their wives and children when they are interested in a new woman is astonishing. It’s deeply cruel
and gutting. You no longer recognize the person, and they are resolute in their decision to distance themselves from their family. We need to do a better job of warning women about this. I was shocked when it happened to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Definitely affair territory. And men are likely to want to overthrow their current family and start a new one ... Keep an eye out and listen to your gut!!
It’s this.
Stop asking him what’s wrong and nagging and accusing.
Just start treating him the way you did before he was “yours”—
I know I’ll get pushback for saying this, but it’s really often as simple as that.
Engage. Attend. Be present FOR HiM and behave in ways that make him want to be around you more, not less.
Anonymous wrote:As someone who told myself he would never even when he was basically living in "the basement" and suddenly nasty to me all the time, I say to myself "you idiot!"Anonymous wrote:Reading his kids a bedtime story gets in the way of sitting in the basement sexting his AP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If he's not having an affair, he is depressed. He needs individual therapy stat.
He doesn’t seem depressed. He seems angry. But who knows. I can’t force him to go.
Depression commonly presents as low level anger and irritability in men.
This. I'd suspect depression more than an affair, and I'd be concerned about him, OP. Maybe his new job isn't going well and he can't take the stress?
Anonymous wrote:Definitely affair territory. And men are likely to want to overthrow their current family and start a new one ... Keep an eye out and listen to your gut!!
Anonymous wrote:Ask to see his phone. If he balks you have your answer right there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If he's not having an affair, he is depressed. He needs individual therapy stat.
He doesn’t seem depressed. He seems angry. But who knows. I can’t force him to go.
Depression commonly presents as low level anger and irritability in men.