Anonymous wrote:No house is worth this op.
Anonymous wrote:Op, there is nothing stopping your dh from divorcing *you* when he feels like it. Food for thought….
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Gosh I’m sorry to hear this . I am not in this situation but I wonder if you both could agree to live separately under one roof . You may agree that you both could seek out companions (I know this opens the marriage.) does your daughter know you’re miserable ? She must at this point . If you have cardiac issues I don’t think it’s worth torturing yourself like this and risking your health . Have you tried therapy ?
OP here. Thanks for your kind words. We already live separately under the same roof. Our daughter knows this. I wouldn't care if he started seeing other women. In fact, he had several affairs in the past (before we "separated"). As for me, I don't have the bandwidth to date.
I have tried therapy, and it seemed to be a waste of time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are a psycho
Who stays to leave their daughter the house to live in with her husband????
You have to be a troll
One your daughter could like other girls are you ok with her marrying a woman and moving in?
Wth? Is wrong with you?
Your kid might never marry give. Your situation they are living in trans. Who thinks their kid will want to live in the house they grew up in forever ???
You have to be a troll
Hi, there. OP here. No, I am not a troll. My daughter is straight, plans to get married and have children. She loves our home, which is very conveniently located in a very desirable area.
We bought the house a few years ago, when mortgage rates were lower. I know our plan to turn over the house to our daughter when she has children sounds strange to Americans. We both come from a culture where the elderly vacate the main house and "retire to the cottage".
I plan to stay married after our daughter leaves for college for the following reason:
If we get divorced, the burden of managing my husband's things would fall on my daughter or a new wife. While he is a high earner, he is incapable of managing taxes, insurances, home repairs, investments, etc. I manage even his parents' care.
Anonymous wrote:Can he move out? And forget about leaving the house to your daughter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’d put an in-law apartment on the property and live in that.
OP here. There is already a guest apartment on the property, currently used as my home office (I work from home). It is only 560 sq ft but it has a kitchen, bath, living room and a bedroom. I might just move there full-time.
You work from home and are worried about keeping up appearances on a neighborhood? Move into the guest house and put some money together to move. There are some really sweet neighborhoods that you can move to on your salary which is much more than mine. Force the sale of the house then wait as rates subside. When it gets around 3.5% you can afford about a $700k -800k house. Get one that is move in ready. Try to find a townhome with no yard work. Those quiet silver spring neighborhoods that are a little farther out like 4 corners and up along 29 where it’s real quiet and new developments are where you should be looking. I’m not familiar with Virginia at all but people here can point you in the right direction. Actually those neighborhoods are affordable for you RIGHT NOW as you can find a town house for 4-550k. Your kid can have 2 houses.
I agree except rates are never going to go back to 3.5%. OP needs to start making plans based on reality.
All I hear from OP are excuses. OP, if you are that concerned about appearances, everyone knows. You will gain more respect by leaving this excuse for a man.
I’m not actually convinced OP’s husband is some sort of monster. It takes two to tango.
OP here. Some additional examples for his behavior:
He says that the reason why I manage his parents' care exclusively is because I want to get them to change their will so that I inherit half their estate. This is blatantly delusional and extremely hurtful. His parents are in their late 80s and not capable of living on their own. We live far away, and I do what I can from the distance (identify nursing homes, talk to the hospitals where they were treated, arrange for a guardianship, coordinate outpatient medical appointments, talk to the neighbor who helps them), because he would not do anything for them. He is an only child and he never calls them unless I tell him "come, let's call your parents now". He has admitted that he does not feel any kind of love for his parents.
Yesterday he berated me for having spent $142 for a pair of racing shoes for our daughter's track meets, in a situation where she has only one pair of shoes left (not only sports shoes but any kind) that still fits her. This, while he runs up as much as $8k per month on his credit card.
He berates me for shopping at Whole Foods instead of Trader Joe's.
I don't think that therapy would help me improve the problems.