Anonymous wrote:I’d be depressed too if I had two kids with a guy that wouldn’t marry me.
Anonymous wrote:How the heck do you do the work of having a commitment ceremony but not get married? Maybe she’s tired of you. And at this point who would want to marry you anyway. I really hope OP is a troll.
You wanted a birthing machine. Nothing more. Congrats. Caveat emptor.
I don’t understand why she had two kids with you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lots of parents regret having kids. It's really hard! She probably misses the freedom and lack of responsibilities she used to have. That is totally understandable. If I were you, I would try to have a judgement free conversation about it. Why did you decide to have the 2nd one?
If this is true, it’s completely terrible!
What is wrong with these new parents, who regret having kids?
Has selfishness and immaturity taken over the USA ?
Anonymous wrote:I think we refer to this as a Come To Jesus talk. Sit down with your spouse and lay out what you've told us. It doesn't matter if the genders are reversed, I would give the same advice to a wife with a checked out husband.
Basically, this can't continue. Your wife is checked out of family life and it's not fair to you or your kids. If this is a medical issue, then she needs to go get it checked out. Whether it's PPD or depression, she can't keep ignoring it because it's harming your family. You deserve a partner that pulls her weight and your kids deserve a mom who is present.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That whore cheated and your simp ass wants to commit to this hoe
Divorce destroys kids, it’s better to work it out. She probably did it due to him not committing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What are her specific grievances? I’m sure she’s expressed unhappiness about certain things over the years.
Op here
To answer your question about specific grievances, it's actually hard to pin down because she hasn't really expressed being unhappy (other than that one comment about regretting kids). She was never a super hands on parent, but she definitely did more with my eldest when she was younger.
One thing that's always been tough is that she doesn't really show physical affection with the girls. But I know that stems from her own childhood environment, her family wasn't affectionate at all, so I understand where that comes from and I don't hold it against her.
The biggest issue now is how she actively avoids parenting duties. She consistently stays late at work or goes out with work friends specifically so she misses bedtimes and the eldests clubs. It definitely escalated after our youngest was born, but the avoidance was always there to some degree.
I want to be clear: I still love her deeply, and I really want to make this work. I'm not looking to walk away. I just don't know how to bridge this gap and get through to her before her distance seriously impacts our girls emotionally
Anonymous wrote:
Divorce/Separate
Anonymous wrote:Lots of parents regret having kids. It's really hard! She probably misses the freedom and lack of responsibilities she used to have. That is totally understandable. If I were you, I would try to have a judgement free conversation about it. Why did you decide to have the 2nd one?