Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You feel trapped being with your wife. So what I wonder is, what does being married prevent you from doing that you'd like to do? In what ways does your wife hold you back?
She doesn't do anything to hold me back. The issues I have are self-imposed. I feel a lot of guilt all the time for being quite selfish and not fully engaging with my family enough, but perhaps I do the same or more than most people?
Otherwise really it's just the greener grass thing. There could be someone more engaging, prettier, funnier, smarter, taller, which I know makes me sound like a jerk.
Anonymous wrote:No criticism from me.
You sound very honest, self aware, reflective, and oddly caring despite your selfishness. It’s refreshing. I think more people than you think feel like this.
Anonymous wrote:You sound like me, except I'm female. I never felt settled until I met my husband. I walked out on two marriages because whenever I looked into the future, I felt nothing except panic at being with that person forever. I was single for a while and my husband now called me one day and asked me out. We had known each other for years but had rarely talked and were just casual friends. After a couple of months of talking, I suddenly just realized that I actually loved him. We've been married almost 8 years now, and it still feels like a honeymoon to us. I can imagine him being mine forever. This totally shocks me because of my history, but it's a wonderful feeling! My advice is to divorce, OP, because staying only causes resentment. You are searching, and you won't find it in your marriage. Trust me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You feel trapped being with your wife. So what I wonder is, what does being married prevent you from doing that you'd like to do? In what ways does your wife hold you back?
She doesn't do anything to hold me back. The issues I have are self-imposed. I feel a lot of guilt all the time for being quite selfish and not fully engaging with my family enough, but perhaps I do the same or more than most people?
Otherwise really it's just the greener grass thing. There could be someone more engaging, prettier, funnier, smarter, taller, which I know makes me sound like a jerk.
Anonymous wrote:You feel trapped being with your wife. So what I wonder is, what does being married prevent you from doing that you'd like to do? In what ways does your wife hold you back?
Would you enjoy coming home to an empty house where nobody is happy to see you?
Would you enjoy having to cook ALL your own meals?
Would you enjoy seeing something funny on tv and having nobody to share it with?
Would you enjoy meeting minor surgery and not being able to count on your wife taking you home and making sure your recovery goes well?
Would you enjoy being sick and having to drag yourself out for tissues and soup and such?
Would you enjoy going to someone else's wedding without a date?
Companionship counts for a lot.
Would you enjoy seeing something funny on tv and having nobody to share it with?
Would you enjoy having to cook ALL your own meals?
Would you enjoy being sick and having to drag yourself out for tissues and soup and such?
Would you enjoy going to someone else's wedding without a date?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So yours is a shotgun marriage? Am I right? No wonder you feel stuck. If you say you don't have a spark for her, it's because you never did. Nothing complicated.
Not quite, we're not religious or anything, so there was no shame in getting pregnant. I just wanted to give her the stability by promising to marry her. We didn't marry until two years later.
Anonymous wrote:I have a friend who is like you but actually left his girlfriend and kid to pursue his dream life. He travels, lives in different countries, parties, sleeps around with beautiful women. Sees his kid maybe twice a year. Makes good money and has total freedom.
Guess what, he’s still unhappy. He’s unhappy that he can’t find a decent woman who will commit to him. His unhappy that he can’t settle down. He’s unhappy with work. He’s unhappy that his kid is now a teen and wants nothing to do with him. He always thinks that if he just finds the right job, or moves to the right country, or finds the right woman, he will finally find happiness. It’s been going on for 15 years.
Your problem is within.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are there specific things she does that make you feel like you’d be happier without her? Or is that just the fantasy of something different?
There's really nothing she does, aside from the normal annoyances of living with someone, so the desire to be single is simply to relieve the claustrophobic/trapped feeling I keep getting.
If I were to get into another relationship I'm 99% sure I would go through the same thing with someone else, which is why I don't ever think I'd necessarily be happy with someone else.
My wife meets 90% of my needs; the only thing lacking is conversation. I'd love to discuss science, politics, religion, current affairs, with her, but she's just not that way inclined and those subjects don't interest her.
We used to talk before we had children, I can't remember what about, but I imagine the kids leaving home in 10-20 years and not having anything in common or to talk about.