Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Guest room, but honestly I wouldn't end a marriage over smoking weed.
This is a legit reason to end a marriage. Why wouldn't it....??! Who wants to be married to someone who likes to inhale this stuff into their lungs daily thus creating a person who not only wants to eat everything in the pantry, but also laughs at everything and everyone for no good reason, all while sitting on the couch w/glassy and bloodshot eyes. Wow...Real winner there. A real catch. Not.
OP, like you stated, there is also the issue of deception, betrayal and addiction here. These are all huge dealbreakers in any relationship, romantic or not.
People who need to smoke weed daily are addicts in my opinion.
Anyway, that being said...I say stick to your guns. Tell your husband in no uncertain terms will you take him back unless he seeks professional help with his drug problem. He already had a warning and blew it. If he gets defensive and refuses, then you know how dedicated he is to your marriage and family sadly.
Re: His living situation...Can you afford to hire a provider to watch the kids while you work?? If so, great. If not, you will still need him around for childcare so you may have no other choice but to let him continue living on the property. The guest house will work for now.
Good luck.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Since I earn our income, do I find him a place to stay and pay for it (i.e. AirBnB)?
To me this speaks volumes. It doesn't matter who makes the money, it's both of yours. What is this, 1950?
Do some introspection, OP.
Well, she will need to support two households so what she earns and can afford is relevant here; she needs to find something that is affordable to her. I see it as a practical thing, not a 1950s thing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Since I earn our income, do I find him a place to stay and pay for it (i.e. AirBnB)?
To me this speaks volumes. It doesn't matter who makes the money, it's both of yours. What is this, 1950?
Do some introspection, OP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The bottom line is that he can't be trusted with the kids. Period.
I wouldn't tolerate it. I'm only interested in a spouse who can act like a grown up.
You don't know that. You just don't. The OP hasn't given a single example of anything that her husband has done that has hurt the kids. None. And you're only getting her side of the story. I have a hunch that he would say, with some credibility, that it's a long and lonely existence being a SAHD with a demanding wife who by her own admission makes all decisions and he just needs an escape at the end of the day. Again, I wonder what folks would think if the roles were reversed . . .
Anonymous wrote:Guest room, but honestly I wouldn't end a marriage over smoking weed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who are you people bashing the OP? I am baffled. If she had said he agreed not to drink but she has found out that he was secretly drinking and lying about it, would anyone blink twice about saying that he can't be the SAHP/caregiver any longer?
Perhaps this is generational but I don't think there is anything benign about smoking pot on a regular basis unless there is a prescription and a medical reason. OP, I don't have any answers for you, but please don't take the initial responses to be indicative of the way most DCUMs would react to your situation. Good luck.
Is the drink affecting anything or is he just disobeying his wife's orders?
Op here. Just to be clear, I haven't been giving "orders". After a lot of hard emotional work and many sessions of marriage counseling, we came up with an agreement that could work for both of us. Part of the reason for the agreement as to build trust, and part was to move to the point where I could see pot as "harmless" after my horrible child (and adult) experiences with my father. The issue for me comes down to respect and trust in your partner. I wouldn't be making me this post if he had come to me to say "I'd like to change our agreement" or "our agreement isn't working". But that isn't how this came about.
How long has he been hiding it and how did you find out?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who are you people bashing the OP? I am baffled. If she had said he agreed not to drink but she has found out that he was secretly drinking and lying about it, would anyone blink twice about saying that he can't be the SAHP/caregiver any longer?
Perhaps this is generational but I don't think there is anything benign about smoking pot on a regular basis unless there is a prescription and a medical reason. OP, I don't have any answers for you, but please don't take the initial responses to be indicative of the way most DCUMs would react to your situation. Good luck.
Is the drink affecting anything or is he just disobeying his wife's orders?
Op here. Just to be clear, I haven't been giving "orders". After a lot of hard emotional work and many sessions of marriage counseling, we came up with an agreement that could work for both of us. Part of the reason for the agreement as to build trust, and part was to move to the point where I could see pot as "harmless" after my horrible child (and adult) experiences with my father. The issue for me comes down to respect and trust in your partner. I wouldn't be making me this post if he had come to me to say "I'd like to change our agreement" or "our agreement isn't working". But that isn't how this came about.