Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Some things about me:
Pros: solid career with good earnings, physically 7.5-8, good sense of humor, good at planning things, smart, own home, go to therapy when I need to
Cons: don’t want kids (this narrows my pool), I’m sometimes overly sensitive, I am not submissive, my family members are a mixed bag
I'm going to say no .
Not because of him but because of you. You don't seem capable of an accurate self assessment yet are very critical of him. Which leads me to believe he's not as inflexible as you claim.
He did start meds which is a huge thing. So I'm inclined to believe that what you call inflexibility is just him not wanting to be molded into your perfect man.
Anonymous wrote:I wouldn’t, no.
The women on here with adhd messy husbands are miserable. You will be doing 99% of the housework in this scenario. Is that how you want to live for the rest of your life?
.
Anonymous wrote:Let me tell you a woman version of it.
My ex-gf of age 43 has ADHD, type 2, super messy, inflexible/very rigid and have spending problem. She is more than $80K of credit card debt and a nurse's salary of $60K or so won't cut it. I took care of all the bills outside and inside including rent, going out, dresses, and other items around house and she wasn't contributing much or didn't have much to contribute.
I probably could handle someone with ADHD as it is a medical issue but the thing about being rigid is what was the biggest issue. She would argue about anything small even when it is not affecting or crossing boundaries such as how I need to raise my kids(we have kids from 1st marriages) and didn't take it well when I was firm on my boundaries. Then it resulted into some kind of tantrum and everything got very toxic. I had to end it but it was and still is painful. Your choice but it doesn't end well.
Anonymous wrote:If you don't want kids, just live together as partners. Keep finances separate. You can easily end the relationship if things don't work out.
This
Did I miss where Op said how old she is? How old he is? OP, unless both of you are near 40 yrs old, either of you might change your mind re: wanting to have kids. It's unfair to marry younger and hold the other person to their original decision.
Anonymous wrote:We really need to rethink how we use the term “broken family”. Just because a marriage ends in divorce doesn’t mean a family is broken. Divorce can be a healthy solution to a problem. There are so many married people who overlook child abuse, infidelity, physical abuse, and other terrible things to stay married. They are married but a broken family. If someone leaves such a dynamic they do so because they are healthy, and are setting a good example for any children involved.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Some things about me:
Pros: solid career with good earnings, physically 7.5-8, good sense of humor, good at planning things, smart, own home, go to therapy when I need to
Cons: don’t want kids (this narrows my pool), I’m sometimes overly sensitive, I am not submissive, my family members are a mixed bag
If you don't want kids, just live together as partners. Keep finances separate. You can easily end the relationship if things don't work out.
Anonymous wrote:My boyfriend wants to get married. I want to get married in general. My parents went through a bad divorce, so I’m weary. I want to avoid something like that. I want to go into marriage with eyes wide open. From those of you who are more experienced can you tell me if you think my boyfriend is marriage material? We don’t want kids.
Pros: very sweet, loyal, showers me with attention, hard working, smart, good politics, nice friend group
Cons: diagnosed adhd, messy, stubborn/inflexible, dysfunctional family (but not local)
He’s in low earning profession but I don’t mind that.
Anonymous wrote:If you love him do it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just chiming in to point out the double standard we see here nearly every day of the guy being a (gasp) low earner.
If he lives within his means, and doesnt carry debt- so what? Is OP not working?
It seems an awful lot of women on DCUM demand their partner be a high earner to finance their lifestyle, without a similar commitment to their own career.
OP said she didn’t care that he was a low earner. Also in an environment where women were historically barred from earning, still face employment discrimination and blockage from the most powerful positions, and we are CURRENTLY seeing a resurgence of people calling for women to be removed from top positions in the military and generally be pushed out of the workforce, it’s not a double standard it’s a survival instinct.
Anonymous wrote:No. The low earning WILL matter. If you don’t want kids, don’t marry at all. You’ll be a caretaker, forever.