Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How will you feel when your DH is happily remarried to a younger woman that your kids adore, living in a nicer house than yours, and spending holidays with your kids on fabulous vacations while you are single and alone (or celebrating holidays with friends since they take pity on you)? That's what I'm observing in my peer group, even though the women are relatively young (late 30s/early 40s), professionally successful, super fit and attractive.
Try harder to fix your relationship---starting with your own mindset---before jumping ship.
No younger woman wants her husbands kids to tag along on fabulous vacations. Especially not when their own babies come along. Trust me on this. And on that note, making the kids hate the new wife is a piece of cake, too.
Not true. I can tell you of at least two cases where the new wife adores the kids. One of the couples is older now and have grandkids and she treats them as her own.
The other met someone who is fit, attractive and about 8 years younger. She loves his kids, and they have a younger one of their own.
In this case the ex-wife's loss was their gain. They're both integrated in happy families on the father's side. The new wives got what they wanted ultimately - a family they're part of.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How will you feel when your DH is happily remarried to a younger woman that your kids adore, living in a nicer house than yours, and spending holidays with your kids on fabulous vacations while you are single and alone (or celebrating holidays with friends since they take pity on you)? That's what I'm observing in my peer group, even though the women are relatively young (late 30s/early 40s), professionally successful, super fit and attractive.
Try harder to fix your relationship---starting with your own mindset---before jumping ship.
No younger woman wants her husbands kids to tag along on fabulous vacations. Especially not when their own babies come along. Trust me on this. And on that note, making the kids hate the new wife is a piece of cake, too.
I'm observing that kids end up liking the new mom. I'm observing lavish trips to Disney, Europe, etc. I'm observing you get second wives with great careers and money who don't want a kid of their own. And from what I can see on FB, they enjoy their time without the kids as well (50-50 custody). Meanwhile, the ex wife is living in a crappy rental and either struggling with dating losers on tinder or losers from the neighborhood/school district. They spend holidays with friends instead of their kids. They are stressed out and money is tight. I have yet to see an ex-wife thrive, yet I have observed lots of ex-husbands thrive in new marriages, dual income households.
And the impact on the kids isn't good. Sorry.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How will you feel when your DH is happily remarried to a younger woman that your kids adore, living in a nicer house than yours, and spending holidays with your kids on fabulous vacations while you are single and alone (or celebrating holidays with friends since they take pity on you)? That's what I'm observing in my peer group, even though the women are relatively young (late 30s/early 40s), professionally successful, super fit and attractive.
Try harder to fix your relationship---starting with your own mindset---before jumping ship.
No younger woman wants her husbands kids to tag along on fabulous vacations. Especially not when their own babies come along. Trust me on this. And on that note, making the kids hate the new wife is a piece of cake, too.
I'm observing that kids end up liking the new mom. I'm observing lavish trips to Disney, Europe, etc. I'm observing you get second wives with great careers and money who don't want a kid of their own. And from what I can see on FB, they enjoy their time without the kids as well (50-50 custody). Meanwhile, the ex wife is living in a crappy rental and either struggling with dating losers on tinder or losers from the neighborhood/school district. They spend holidays with friends instead of their kids. They are stressed out and money is tight. I have yet to see an ex-wife thrive, yet I have observed lots of ex-husbands thrive in new marriages, dual income households.
And the impact on the kids isn't good. Sorry.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How will you feel when your DH is happily remarried to a younger woman that your kids adore, living in a nicer house than yours, and spending holidays with your kids on fabulous vacations while you are single and alone (or celebrating holidays with friends since they take pity on you)? That's what I'm observing in my peer group, even though the women are relatively young (late 30s/early 40s), professionally successful, super fit and attractive.
Try harder to fix your relationship---starting with your own mindset---before jumping ship.
No younger woman wants her husbands kids to tag along on fabulous vacations. Especially not when their own babies come along. Trust me on this. And on that note, making the kids hate the new wife is a piece of cake, too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How will you feel when your DH is happily remarried to a younger woman that your kids adore, living in a nicer house than yours, and spending holidays with your kids on fabulous vacations while you are single and alone (or celebrating holidays with friends since they take pity on you)? That's what I'm observing in my peer group, even though the women are relatively young (late 30s/early 40s), professionally successful, super fit and attractive.
Try harder to fix your relationship---starting with your own mindset---before jumping ship.
No younger woman wants her husbands kids to tag along on fabulous vacations. Especially not when their own babies come along. Trust me on this. And on that note, making the kids hate the new wife is a piece of cake, too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:taketothebank wrote:Exactly my thoughts. What a horrible way to label children. They are people, with hearts and feelings. How dare you call them baggage!!!! What a jerk.
Call them whatever you want,
How about calling them children? The other posters are correct. Calling children baggage is horrible.
"Baggage" is shorthand for "a huge, multi-year emotional and financial burden that you should think very carefully before you assume and needn't feel bad if you'd rather not do so".
Calling them "children" in an effort to sugar-coat this fact and to make people feel bad if they don't want to assume that burden is stupid and mendacious.
+10000. All the feigned outrage by these sheltered bitches. Im sure none of whom have actually been divorced with multiple kids and so couldnt possibly understand how there little snowflakes could be thought of as anything but a snowflake by anyone. Get divorced and see what the dating pool is for a 40's-50's women with 3 Kids. Why would any established man date you old horses when he could date a younger, hotter women with no kids, ie, no (gasp) baggage??
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:taketothebank wrote:Exactly my thoughts. What a horrible way to label children. They are people, with hearts and feelings. How dare you call them baggage!!!! What a jerk.
Call them whatever you want,
How about calling them children? The other posters are correct. Calling children baggage is horrible.
"Baggage" is shorthand for "a huge, multi-year emotional and financial burden that you should think very carefully before you assume and needn't feel bad if you'd rather not do so".
Calling them "children" in an effort to sugar-coat this fact and to make people feel bad if they don't want to assume that burden is stupid and mendacious.
+10000. All the feigned outrage by these sheltered bitches. Im sure none of whom have actually been divorced with multiple kids and so couldnt possibly understand how there little snowflakes could be thought of as anything but a snowflake by anyone. Get divorced and see what the dating pool is for a 40's-50's women with 3 Kids. Why would any established man date you old horses when he could date a younger, hotter women with no kids, ie, no (gasp) baggage??
*their. Idiot
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:taketothebank wrote:Exactly my thoughts. What a horrible way to label children. They are people, with hearts and feelings. How dare you call them baggage!!!! What a jerk.
Call them whatever you want,
How about calling them children? The other posters are correct. Calling children baggage is horrible.
"Baggage" is shorthand for "a huge, multi-year emotional and financial burden that you should think very carefully before you assume and needn't feel bad if you'd rather not do so".
Calling them "children" in an effort to sugar-coat this fact and to make people feel bad if they don't want to assume that burden is stupid and mendacious.
+10000. All the feigned outrage by these sheltered bitches. Im sure none of whom have actually been divorced with multiple kids and so couldnt possibly understand how there little snowflakes could be thought of as anything but a snowflake by anyone. Get divorced and see what the dating pool is for a 40's-50's women with 3 Kids. Why would any established man date you old horses when he could date a younger, hotter women with no kids, ie, no (gasp) baggage??
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How will you feel when your DH is happily remarried to a younger woman that your kids adore, living in a nicer house than yours, and spending holidays with your kids on fabulous vacations while you are single and alone (or celebrating holidays with friends since they take pity on you)? That's what I'm observing in my peer group, even though the women are relatively young (late 30s/early 40s), professionally successful, super fit and attractive.
Try harder to fix your relationship---starting with your own mindset---before jumping ship.
No younger woman wants her husbands kids to tag along on fabulous vacations. Especially not when their own babies come along. Trust me on this. And on that note, making the kids hate the new wife is a piece of cake, too.
Anonymous wrote:taketothebank wrote:Exactly my thoughts. What a horrible way to label children. They are people, with hearts and feelings. How dare you call them baggage!!!! What a jerk.
Call them whatever you want,
How about calling them children? The other posters are correct. Calling children baggage is horrible.
"Baggage" is shorthand for "a huge, multi-year emotional and financial burden that you should think very carefully before you assume and needn't feel bad if you'd rather not do so".
Calling them "children" in an effort to sugar-coat this fact and to make people feel bad if they don't want to assume that burden is stupid and mendacious.
Anonymous wrote:How will you feel when your DH is happily remarried to a younger woman that your kids adore, living in a nicer house than yours, and spending holidays with your kids on fabulous vacations while you are single and alone (or celebrating holidays with friends since they take pity on you)? That's what I'm observing in my peer group, even though the women are relatively young (late 30s/early 40s), professionally successful, super fit and attractive.
Try harder to fix your relationship---starting with your own mindset---before jumping ship.
Anonymous wrote:How will you feel when your DH is happily remarried to a younger woman that your kids adore, living in a nicer house than yours, and spending holidays with your kids on fabulous vacations while you are single and alone (or celebrating holidays with friends since they take pity on you)? That's what I'm observing in my peer group, even though the women are relatively young (late 30s/early 40s), professionally successful, super fit and attractive.
Try harder to fix your relationship---starting with your own mindset---before jumping ship.