Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone enter marriage anymore and just not consider divorce an option? We've been married for 25 years. We have five children. We've had some rough times. But we made a commitment to each other and we took our wedding vows very seriously. My husband knows that he is the most important person in my life. He takes priority over the kids, our parents, our extended family, our friends....
We have several friends who have divorced over the years. The common theme seems to be a lack of respect from the wife. Next time you are out with your friends, listen to the way they talk about their husbands. How do you talk to your own husband at home? Do you speak negatively about him to friends? Does he feel loved and most of all respected. All you have to do is turn on the television....commercial after commercial depict men as stupid creatures that could not possibly survive without the help of their (nagging, condescending) wives. Think about the number of television shows that make men look inept.
Women need to feel safe and loved. Men, above all else, need to feel respected. If your husband doesn't feel valued and respected at home, there are plenty of women out there who will give him those things. It's not right. But it's reality. Men need to be the "king of their castle".
So, women don't need to feel respected? All men need are to feel respected and to be the "king of their castle?" I don't even know what that means!!!! King of their freakin' castle? Please tell me you are a SAHM that needs to believe this in order to justify that you have an important role to take care of this "king of your castle.". Honestly, if my DH ever said this to me I would laugh so hard I'd pee myself!
We both work f/t, have built our life together (including that not-so-castle-like house we live in) and share all of the household and child rearing activities 50/50. I say that respect needs to go both ways and both partners need to feel loved.
If there are any women who think he's not being treated like a man should, please come and clean my house and take care of my "king" so I can go off for a spa day and feel like a queen!
you may laugh, but the PP is right. there are huge genetic and evolutionary differences between men and women. men and women have different needs.
I think that's all crap. People may have different needs, but stereotyping it by gender is irrating to me. It's along the lines that I *must* have some guilt about being a working mom. I had some brief moments after my kids were born where I wondered if there was something wrong with me as a person for not feeling guilt AT ALL for going back to work after my kids were born. My DH and both missed our LOs and loved to rush pick them up after work but I never had any doubts or guilt just as he didn't.
So, if we are truly partners in our marriage why would one person need something more than the other. It's just ridiculous. Why do I need a DH to feel safe? Do you mean physically, emotinally, what?? Also, why wouldn't my DH want to feel loved any more than I do? I know he loves me and he know I love him. We show that mainly through respecting each other. I just don't understand why we need different things in our relationship. We need him to be a 50/50 partner and love and respect me the same way I love and respect him.
Btw, I told him that I felt bad that I didn't treat him like the "king of his castle" and he laughed!
how silly to deny gender differences. spend an afternoon watching mammals interact at a zoo or in the woods and then get back to me.
I'm not denying them, but I feel we are moving past many of them that stem from sociatal pressures. Norms about the roles of women and men have changed drastically, but not enough to move past calling some of them gender differences. I still have some traditional maternal instincts, but I didn't feel any more guilt going back to work than my DH did (which was actually none) but that is still accepted in our society as being okay for dads and not for moms. I felt pressure to pretend that I felt bad all day my first few weeks back at work because so many people gave me the *oh poor you* look. My DH didn't get any of those looks or comments.
I just see few differences in the needs of my DH and I emotionally and physically. I really should be treating my DH differently than I expect him to treat me? I honestly don't get it.
you are an outlier. most new moms feel differently. that is not based on societal pressures, that is based on hormones and evolution.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone enter marriage anymore and just not consider divorce an option? We've been married for 25 years. We have five children. We've had some rough times. But we made a commitment to each other and we took our wedding vows very seriously. My husband knows that he is the most important person in my life. He takes priority over the kids, our parents, our extended family, our friends....
We have several friends who have divorced over the years. The common theme seems to be a lack of respect from the wife. Next time you are out with your friends, listen to the way they talk about their husbands. How do you talk to your own husband at home? Do you speak negatively about him to friends? Does he feel loved and most of all respected. All you have to do is turn on the television....commercial after commercial depict men as stupid creatures that could not possibly survive without the help of their (nagging, condescending) wives. Think about the number of television shows that make men look inept.
Women need to feel safe and loved. Men, above all else, need to feel respected. If your husband doesn't feel valued and respected at home, there are plenty of women out there who will give him those things. It's not right. But it's reality. Men need to be the "king of their castle".
So, women don't need to feel respected? All men need are to feel respected and to be the "king of their castle?" I don't even know what that means!!!! King of their freakin' castle? Please tell me you are a SAHM that needs to believe this in order to justify that you have an important role to take care of this "king of your castle.". Honestly, if my DH ever said this to me I would laugh so hard I'd pee myself!
We both work f/t, have built our life together (including that not-so-castle-like house we live in) and share all of the household and child rearing activities 50/50. I say that respect needs to go both ways and both partners need to feel loved.
If there are any women who think he's not being treated like a man should, please come and clean my house and take care of my "king" so I can go off for a spa day and feel like a queen!
you may laugh, but the PP is right. there are huge genetic and evolutionary differences between men and women. men and women have different needs.
I think that's all crap. People may have different needs, but stereotyping it by gender is irrating to me. It's along the lines that I *must* have some guilt about being a working mom. I had some brief moments after my kids were born where I wondered if there was something wrong with me as a person for not feeling guilt AT ALL for going back to work after my kids were born. My DH and both missed our LOs and loved to rush pick them up after work but I never had any doubts or guilt just as he didn't.
So, if we are truly partners in our marriage why would one person need something more than the other. It's just ridiculous. Why do I need a DH to feel safe? Do you mean physically, emotinally, what?? Also, why wouldn't my DH want to feel loved any more than I do? I know he loves me and he know I love him. We show that mainly through respecting each other. I just don't understand why we need different things in our relationship. We need him to be a 50/50 partner and love and respect me the same way I love and respect him.
Btw, I told him that I felt bad that I didn't treat him like the "king of his castle" and he laughed!
how silly to deny gender differences. spend an afternoon watching mammals interact at a zoo or in the woods and then get back to me.
I'm not denying them, but I feel we are moving past many of them that stem from sociatal pressures. Norms about the roles of women and men have changed drastically, but not enough to move past calling some of them gender differences. I still have some traditional maternal instincts, but I didn't feel any more guilt going back to work than my DH did (which was actually none) but that is still accepted in our society as being okay for dads and not for moms. I felt pressure to pretend that I felt bad all day my first few weeks back at work because so many people gave me the *oh poor you* look. My DH didn't get any of those looks or comments.
I just see few differences in the needs of my DH and I emotionally and physically. I really should be treating my DH differently than I expect him to treat me? I honestly don't get it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone enter marriage anymore and just not consider divorce an option? We've been married for 25 years. We have five children. We've had some rough times. But we made a commitment to each other and we took our wedding vows very seriously. My husband knows that he is the most important person in my life. He takes priority over the kids, our parents, our extended family, our friends....
We have several friends who have divorced over the years. The common theme seems to be a lack of respect from the wife. Next time you are out with your friends, listen to the way they talk about their husbands. How do you talk to your own husband at home? Do you speak negatively about him to friends? Does he feel loved and most of all respected. All you have to do is turn on the television....commercial after commercial depict men as stupid creatures that could not possibly survive without the help of their (nagging, condescending) wives. Think about the number of television shows that make men look inept.
Women need to feel safe and loved. Men, above all else, need to feel respected. If your husband doesn't feel valued and respected at home, there are plenty of women out there who will give him those things. It's not right. But it's reality. Men need to be the "king of their castle".
So, women don't need to feel respected? All men need are to feel respected and to be the "king of their castle?" I don't even know what that means!!!! King of their freakin' castle? Please tell me you are a SAHM that needs to believe this in order to justify that you have an important role to take care of this "king of your castle.". Honestly, if my DH ever said this to me I would laugh so hard I'd pee myself!
We both work f/t, have built our life together (including that not-so-castle-like house we live in) and share all of the household and child rearing activities 50/50. I say that respect needs to go both ways and both partners need to feel loved.
If there are any women who think he's not being treated like a man should, please come and clean my house and take care of my "king" so I can go off for a spa day and feel like a queen!
you may laugh, but the PP is right. there are huge genetic and evolutionary differences between men and women. men and women have different needs.
I think that's all crap. People may have different needs, but stereotyping it by gender is irrating to me. It's along the lines that I *must* have some guilt about being a working mom. I had some brief moments after my kids were born where I wondered if there was something wrong with me as a person for not feeling guilt AT ALL for going back to work after my kids were born. My DH and both missed our LOs and loved to rush pick them up after work but I never had any doubts or guilt just as he didn't.
So, if we are truly partners in our marriage why would one person need something more than the other. It's just ridiculous. Why do I need a DH to feel safe? Do you mean physically, emotinally, what?? Also, why wouldn't my DH want to feel loved any more than I do? I know he loves me and he know I love him. We show that mainly through respecting each other. I just don't understand why we need different things in our relationship. We need him to be a 50/50 partner and love and respect me the same way I love and respect him.
Btw, I told him that I felt bad that I didn't treat him like the "king of his castle" and he laughed!
how silly to deny gender differences. spend an afternoon watching mammals interact at a zoo or in the woods and then get back to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone enter marriage anymore and just not consider divorce an option? We've been married for 25 years. We have five children. We've had some rough times. But we made a commitment to each other and we took our wedding vows very seriously. My husband knows that he is the most important person in my life. He takes priority over the kids, our parents, our extended family, our friends....
We have several friends who have divorced over the years. The common theme seems to be a lack of respect from the wife. Next time you are out with your friends, listen to the way they talk about their husbands. How do you talk to your own husband at home? Do you speak negatively about him to friends? Does he feel loved and most of all respected. All you have to do is turn on the television....commercial after commercial depict men as stupid creatures that could not possibly survive without the help of their (nagging, condescending) wives. Think about the number of television shows that make men look inept.
Women need to feel safe and loved. Men, above all else, need to feel respected. If your husband doesn't feel valued and respected at home, there are plenty of women out there who will give him those things. It's not right. But it's reality. Men need to be the "king of their castle".
So, women don't need to feel respected? All men need are to feel respected and to be the "king of their castle?" I don't even know what that means!!!! King of their freakin' castle? Please tell me you are a SAHM that needs to believe this in order to justify that you have an important role to take care of this "king of your castle.". Honestly, if my DH ever said this to me I would laugh so hard I'd pee myself!
We both work f/t, have built our life together (including that not-so-castle-like house we live in) and share all of the household and child rearing activities 50/50. I say that respect needs to go both ways and both partners need to feel loved.
If there are any women who think he's not being treated like a man should, please come and clean my house and take care of my "king" so I can go off for a spa day and feel like a queen!
you may laugh, but the PP is right. there are huge genetic and evolutionary differences between men and women. men and women have different needs.
I think that's all crap. People may have different needs, but stereotyping it by gender is irrating to me. It's along the lines that I *must* have some guilt about being a working mom. I had some brief moments after my kids were born where I wondered if there was something wrong with me as a person for not feeling guilt AT ALL for going back to work after my kids were born. My DH and both missed our LOs and loved to rush pick them up after work but I never had any doubts or guilt just as he didn't.
So, if we are truly partners in our marriage why would one person need something more than the other. It's just ridiculous. Why do I need a DH to feel safe? Do you mean physically, emotinally, what?? Also, why wouldn't my DH want to feel loved any more than I do? I know he loves me and he know I love him. We show that mainly through respecting each other. I just don't understand why we need different things in our relationship. We need him to be a 50/50 partner and love and respect me the same way I love and respect him.
Btw, I told him that I felt bad that I didn't treat him like the "king of his castle" and he laughed!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone enter marriage anymore and just not consider divorce an option? We've been married for 25 years. We have five children. We've had some rough times. But we made a commitment to each other and we took our wedding vows very seriously. My husband knows that he is the most important person in my life. He takes priority over the kids, our parents, our extended family, our friends....
We have several friends who have divorced over the years. The common theme seems to be a lack of respect from the wife. Next time you are out with your friends, listen to the way they talk about their husbands. How do you talk to your own husband at home? Do you speak negatively about him to friends? Does he feel loved and most of all respected. All you have to do is turn on the television....commercial after commercial depict men as stupid creatures that could not possibly survive without the help of their (nagging, condescending) wives. Think about the number of television shows that make men look inept.
Women need to feel safe and loved. Men, above all else, need to feel respected. If your husband doesn't feel valued and respected at home, there are plenty of women out there who will give him those things. It's not right. But it's reality. Men need to be the "king of their castle".
So, women don't need to feel respected? All men need are to feel respected and to be the "king of their castle?" I don't even know what that means!!!! King of their freakin' castle? Please tell me you are a SAHM that needs to believe this in order to justify that you have an important role to take care of this "king of your castle.". Honestly, if my DH ever said this to me I would laugh so hard I'd pee myself!
We both work f/t, have built our life together (including that not-so-castle-like house we live in) and share all of the household and child rearing activities 50/50. I say that respect needs to go both ways and both partners need to feel loved.
If there are any women who think he's not being treated like a man should, please come and clean my house and take care of my "king" so I can go off for a spa day and feel like a queen!
you may laugh, but the PP is right. there are huge genetic and evolutionary differences between men and women. men and women have different needs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone enter marriage anymore and just not consider divorce an option? We've been married for 25 years. We have five children. We've had some rough times. But we made a commitment to each other and we took our wedding vows very seriously. My husband knows that he is the most important person in my life. He takes priority over the kids, our parents, our extended family, our friends....
We have several friends who have divorced over the years. The common theme seems to be a lack of respect from the wife. Next time you are out with your friends, listen to the way they talk about their husbands. How do you talk to your own husband at home? Do you speak negatively about him to friends? Does he feel loved and most of all respected. All you have to do is turn on the television....commercial after commercial depict men as stupid creatures that could not possibly survive without the help of their (nagging, condescending) wives. Think about the number of television shows that make men look inept.
Women need to feel safe and loved. Men, above all else, need to feel respected. If your husband doesn't feel valued and respected at home, there are plenty of women out there who will give him those things. It's not right. But it's reality. Men need to be the "king of their castle".
So, women don't need to feel respected? All men need are to feel respected and to be the "king of their castle?" I don't even know what that means!!!! King of their freakin' castle? Please tell me you are a SAHM that needs to believe this in order to justify that you have an important role to take care of this "king of your castle.". Honestly, if my DH ever said this to me I would laugh so hard I'd pee myself!
We both work f/t, have built our life together (including that not-so-castle-like house we live in) and share all of the household and child rearing activities 50/50. I say that respect needs to go both ways and both partners need to feel loved.
If there are any women who think he's not being treated like a man should, please come and clean my house and take care of my "king" so I can go off for a spa day and feel like a queen!
you may laugh, but the PP is right. there are huge genetic and evolutionary differences between men and women. men and women have different needs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone enter marriage anymore and just not consider divorce an option? We've been married for 25 years. We have five children. We've had some rough times. But we made a commitment to each other and we took our wedding vows very seriously. My husband knows that he is the most important person in my life. He takes priority over the kids, our parents, our extended family, our friends....
We have several friends who have divorced over the years. The common theme seems to be a lack of respect from the wife. Next time you are out with your friends, listen to the way they talk about their husbands. How do you talk to your own husband at home? Do you speak negatively about him to friends? Does he feel loved and most of all respected. All you have to do is turn on the television....commercial after commercial depict men as stupid creatures that could not possibly survive without the help of their (nagging, condescending) wives. Think about the number of television shows that make men look inept.
Women need to feel safe and loved. Men, above all else, need to feel respected. If your husband doesn't feel valued and respected at home, there are plenty of women out there who will give him those things. It's not right. But it's reality. Men need to be the "king of their castle".
So, women don't need to feel respected? All men need are to feel respected and to be the "king of their castle?" I don't even know what that means!!!! King of their freakin' castle? Please tell me you are a SAHM that needs to believe this in order to justify that you have an important role to take care of this "king of your castle.". Honestly, if my DH ever said this to me I would laugh so hard I'd pee myself!
We both work f/t, have built our life together (including that not-so-castle-like house we live in) and share all of the household and child rearing activities 50/50. I say that respect needs to go both ways and both partners need to feel loved.
If there are any women who think he's not being treated like a man should, please come and clean my house and take care of my "king" so I can go off for a spa day and feel like a queen!
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone enter marriage anymore and just not consider divorce an option? We've been married for 25 years. We have five children. We've had some rough times. But we made a commitment to each other and we took our wedding vows very seriously. My husband knows that he is the most important person in my life. He takes priority over the kids, our parents, our extended family, our friends....
We have several friends who have divorced over the years. The common theme seems to be a lack of respect from the wife. Next time you are out with your friends, listen to the way they talk about their husbands. How do you talk to your own husband at home? Do you speak negatively about him to friends? Does he feel loved and most of all respected. All you have to do is turn on the television....commercial after commercial depict men as stupid creatures that could not possibly survive without the help of their (nagging, condescending) wives. Think about the number of television shows that make men look inept.
Women need to feel safe and loved. Men, above all else, need to feel respected. If your husband doesn't feel valued and respected at home, there are plenty of women out there who will give him those things. It's not right. But it's reality. Men need to be the "king of their castle".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have had 3 friends find out their husband was cheating on them in an awful, awful way. Each was different but equally demoralizing, upsetting, disgusting and crappy. Only one is staying with her husband and I think it was his first and only time BUT he got caught really publically.
I was shocked at the man who did this each time - never thought he was the type. Same about one woman I know who cheated and left her husband and child(ren).
I always think now that it could be me, it could be her, him, frankly it could be anyone of us. I dont think we ever know other people as well as we think we do, not even our husbands, parenets, children. Everyone has secret, dark parts of themselves that they hide from others. I used to not believe this but I know now it is true.
What would stop me, I believe, is the fear of my children hating me or not being able to look at me with love and respect. I also would be afraid of not being able to look at myself in the mirror.
Like your friends, I found out that my husband was cheating on me in an awful, awful way. NO ONE would ever imagine that my husband would be the type of man to do the things he's done. People have the hardest time believing it.
Since my separation began, I have found an inner strength that I never imagined I had. My days are getting better and better - I realize I can survive without a husband. Life goes on, and it can be a full, joyful, new life. But my children - that's different. The legacy of their father's cheating will overshadow their lives, and it's heartbreaking. They don't know about it now, but it's not something that can be kept a secret forever. Sooner or later they will start asking hard questions. I dread that day, but I probably don't dread it as much as their dad does.
Americans are so uptight about infidelity. You need to accept it and move past it, and it should not be the reason to end a marriage.
You are a very bitter, angry person to make a comment like that. Actually my husband did not sleep with ONE person; he is a serial cheater who did this throughout our marriage. He lied to me constantly. He betrayed me constantly. He got psychological help, but it didn't stop his behavior for long. He spent our money on these women, which I consider stealing. His work and career suffered. He became a distracted father to our three young children.
Once I found out, there was no way I would accept and move past it - I deserve better than that in life. And so do my children.
Next time, maybe you should think before you post such a nasty remark to someone on a thread like this.
no, not angry and not bitter. I just don't understand why it is that big of a deal. It is not the norm for men in recorded history to accept monogamy. I think allowing mistresses / legalized prostitution would be good for many marriages.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We probably seem to everyone to be a happily married couple. We've been married 6 years, together for almost 9, and have two young kids. We're pretty social and are pretty loving with each other - never bicker or anything in public. We have a nice little house and happy kids and everything probably seems great to everyone else. But only my best friend knows that my husband cheated on me last year. It was just a physical affair and very brief, but was utterly devastating to me. We have been in counseling and he has been great. I am trying desperately to forgive because of the kids. But we'll see. I'm sure everyone who knows us would be shocked if they knew this.
I could never forgive my husband for cheating on me. That would be the end. I'd rather be alone.
Aot of people say this and mean it, but until you've been in that position, you don't know how you will react.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have had 3 friends find out their husband was cheating on them in an awful, awful way. Each was different but equally demoralizing, upsetting, disgusting and crappy. Only one is staying with her husband and I think it was his first and only time BUT he got caught really publically.
I was shocked at the man who did this each time - never thought he was the type. Same about one woman I know who cheated and left her husband and child(ren).
I always think now that it could be me, it could be her, him, frankly it could be anyone of us. I dont think we ever know other people as well as we think we do, not even our husbands, parenets, children. Everyone has secret, dark parts of themselves that they hide from others. I used to not believe this but I know now it is true.
What would stop me, I believe, is the fear of my children hating me or not being able to look at me with love and respect. I also would be afraid of not being able to look at myself in the mirror.
Like your friends, I found out that my husband was cheating on me in an awful, awful way. NO ONE would ever imagine that my husband would be the type of man to do the things he's done. People have the hardest time believing it.
Since my separation began, I have found an inner strength that I never imagined I had. My days are getting better and better - I realize I can survive without a husband. Life goes on, and it can be a full, joyful, new life. But my children - that's different. The legacy of their father's cheating will overshadow their lives, and it's heartbreaking. They don't know about it now, but it's not something that can be kept a secret forever. Sooner or later they will start asking hard questions. I dread that day, but I probably don't dread it as much as their dad does.
Americans are so uptight about infidelity. You need to accept it and move past it, and it should not be the reason to end a marriage.
You are a very bitter, angry person to make a comment like that. Actually my husband did not sleep with ONE person; he is a serial cheater who did this throughout our marriage. He lied to me constantly. He betrayed me constantly. He got psychological help, but it didn't stop his behavior for long. He spent our money on these women, which I consider stealing. His work and career suffered. He became a distracted father to our three young children.
Once I found out, there was no way I would accept and move past it - I deserve better than that in life. And so do my children.
Next time, maybe you should think before you post such a nasty remark to someone on a thread like this.
Anonymous wrote:I have several co-workers who are on their 4th marriages, no widows or widowers.
Two of them are in the process of divorce.