Anonymous wrote:Something similar happened to me before marriage. My husband married me anyway and I eventually got treated! I will never be able to do the same things but my health is ok. My husband is a good person. You know someone is good when they stick by you through sickness.
Anonymous wrote:I'd break up.
I got a divorce because my husband became lazy and fat after marriage. We were an active couple pre-marriage... taking trips, hiking, rafting/canoeing, biking, or just taking long walks around and exploring a new area.
Post-marriage, all he wanted to do was relax after work and watch TV. He was fine if I went and did all those things without it, and I did at first, and then it got to the point where we were just living separate lives. I'd be out with my friends, he'd be either at home or at a bar with his friends, and we'd see each other for a few hours each night and weekend and that was it. I had zero desire to veg on the couch and he had zero desire to do anything that required too much movement.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's ok to feel this way. I just don't think he's the one for you.
+1 If the bond between you doesn't feel more profound than enjoyment of outdoor activities, you are not madly in love and he is not the one for you (especially since you're still in the honeymoon period of the relationship). I would gently transition to supporting him through his illness as a good friend rather than a girlfriend. It sounds like more of a friendship than a big romance any way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When you're no longer useful to a woman, she'll throw you under the bus in a heartbeat. You can never be weak or sick for even a minute, or she'll despise you and start thinking about how to get rid of you.
Guy here. Reader of the same forum and subscriber to that philosophy. Yep, that was my first thought when I saw this post. Demonstrates on the principle of that philosophy very clearly. Meanwhile, if the roles were reversed, most guys would stick by the girl no question.
Actually, husbands of wives with chronic illness divorce them at a far higher rate than do wives of husbands with chronic illness.
https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2009-11/fhcr-mls111009.php
Anonymous wrote:Medical issues are basically the same as money issues. Don’t marry until everything is resolved, or else you are on the hook for everything the partner is tied to. You are 29, move on. The boyfriend needs time to heal before he can focus on the relationship. My brother had Lyme disease. It took years to figure out what was causing his health problems.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Medical issues are basically the same as money issues. Don’t marry until everything is resolved, or else you are on the hook for everything the partner is tied to. You are 29, move on. The boyfriend needs time to heal before he can focus on the relationship. My brother had Lyme disease. It took years to figure out what was causing his health problems.
Did he recover?