Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was someone else’s midlife crisis and here’s what it looked like: falling in love with a patient 16 years younger, moving on her (not a serial offender, first and only time) and continuing an affair (am editing out details here but they are a lot) with her for years with wife’s knowledge, but not leaving wife or family and continuing to be the same father as always. Telling her he loves her as he has never loved his wife, telling his wife he loves the AP, needs this and will not stop; genuinely loving AP but being unable to hurt his kids by leaving as he loves kids more than AP, which AP actually supports. Never losing love for her and thinking about her every day even after she tried to save herself and went no contact for many years. Keeping her close mentally by sending kids to same camps and schools she went to. Nursing own wife successfully through breast cancer…and then reaching out to AP again to reconnect because he misses her. Protagonist is now 66 so I don’t know if you can still call that midlife. AP herself is now well into middle age and still loves him but keeps her distance bc she knows his priorities.
Breast cancer has been correlated to the stress and trauma of betrayal. There are studies on it and know 3 women (no family history) that were diagnosed with breast cancer within 2 years of affair discovery.
Anonymous wrote:I was someone else’s midlife crisis and here’s what it looked like: falling in love with a patient 16 years younger, moving on her (not a serial offender, first and only time) and continuing an affair (am editing out details here but they are a lot) with her for years with wife’s knowledge, but not leaving wife or family and continuing to be the same father as always. Telling her he loves her as he has never loved his wife, telling his wife he loves the AP, needs this and will not stop; genuinely loving AP but being unable to hurt his kids by leaving as he loves kids more than AP, which AP actually supports. Never losing love for her and thinking about her every day even after she tried to save herself and went no contact for many years. Keeping her close mentally by sending kids to same camps and schools she went to. Nursing own wife successfully through breast cancer…and then reaching out to AP again to reconnect because he misses her. Protagonist is now 66 so I don’t know if you can still call that midlife. AP herself is now well into middle age and still loves him but keeps her distance bc she knows his priorities.
Anonymous wrote:I was someone else’s midlife crisis and here’s what it looked like: falling in love with a patient 16 years younger, moving on her (not a serial offender, first and only time) and continuing an affair (am editing out details here but they are a lot) with her for years with wife’s knowledge, but not leaving wife or family and continuing to be the same father as always. Telling her he loves her as he has never loved his wife, telling his wife he loves the AP, needs this and will not stop; genuinely loving AP but being unable to hurt his kids by leaving as he loves kids more than AP, which AP actually supports. Never losing love for her and thinking about her every day even after she tried to save herself and went no contact for many years. Keeping her close mentally by sending kids to same camps and schools she went to. Nursing own wife successfully through breast cancer…and then reaching out to AP again to reconnect because he misses her. Protagonist is now 66 so I don’t know if you can still call that midlife. AP herself is now well into middle age and still loves him but keeps her distance bc she knows his priorities.
? Honey, he lied to both of you. You have no idea what is really going on in his marriage. You are getting a liar’s version. A liar that wants to keep you hanging on a string for 2 decades abs not living a full life, having your own family because he wants his cake and eat it too. You have been played. Get therapy to find out why not asking more for yourself and accepting 2nd place for so long. You deserve a lot more than an old man that preyed on his young patient.Anonymous wrote:I was someone else’s midlife crisis and here’s what it looked like: falling in love with a patient 16 years younger, moving on her (not a serial offender, first and only time) and continuing an affair (am editing out details here but they are a lot) with her for years with wife’s knowledge, but not leaving wife or family and continuing to be the same father as always. Telling her he loves her as he has never loved his wife, telling his wife he loves the AP, needs this and will not stop; genuinely loving AP but being unable to hurt his kids by leaving as he loves kids more than AP, which AP actually supports. Never losing love for her and thinking about her every day even after she tried to save herself and went no contact for many years. Keeping her close mentally by sending kids to same camps and schools she went to. Nursing own wife successfully through breast cancer…and then reaching out to AP again to reconnect because he misses her. Protagonist is now 66 so I don’t know if you can still call that midlife. AP herself is now well into middle age and still loves him but keeps her distance bc she knows his priorities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He dove into a new hobby (snakes.) It was snakes, snakes, snakes for a while. Then invested a lot of money in a new business venture, dancing in place as kinetic exercise, that caused a lot of worry. Thankfully, we made it through and now it's nothing but smooth, smooth sailing.
Wait, did you end up keeping the snakes? That's at least neat.
Some of them got away. We ate one and traded another to optometrist for two pairs fun Warby Parkers. I do not miss them!
This post needs its own thread!
Anonymous wrote:So maybe this should be a spin-off, but how can one prevent a destructive midlife crisis in one’s self or spouse?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:After 30 years of marriage, and turning 50, wife, in a mid-life crisis, had a few affairs. One long term, probably still occurring to this day. When pressed on the issue, she will not agree to a separation or divorce. Too much water under the bridge. I will always forgive her. I just cannot go down the road she's traveled. Never have believed that two wrongs make a right.
Well, 50 is kinda old for a 'mid-life' crisis. And I'm wondering if there's really a demand for a 50-year-old AP from multiple men.. Is there?
I'm a nearly 50 year old single woman. Yes, there's a demand. From multiple men. I'm sure it's even higher for an unhappy married woman who's probably down for NSA sex.
She likely has a rotation of hot early thirty-somethings, along with her devoted husband who will never leave her. Not a bad deal for her.
Just curious, what kind of demand? Demands for NSA sex, or demand for actual committed relationships?
Early 30-somethings banging 50-year old+ moms. Gross. Just gross.
I traveled for three weeks this summer to several popular domestic tourist destinations. I observed:
older men with younger women (I was in this group)
older men with younger men
older women with younger women
I even saw one older man with two younger women
But I never once saw older women with younger men. Not in the Keys, not in Vegas, not in Hawaii. Do older women take their boy toys to Peoria? Or do these couples just not exist.
DP, did you consider they don’t take these young men out to dinner and to places, that they just take them to bed?
Not possible. The female ego demands that they show off their boy toy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He dove into a new hobby (snakes.) It was snakes, snakes, snakes for a while. Then invested a lot of money in a new business venture, dancing in place as kinetic exercise, that caused a lot of worry. Thankfully, we made it through and now it's nothing but smooth, smooth sailing.
Wait, did you end up keeping the snakes? That's at least neat.
Some of them got away. We ate one and traded another to optometrist for two pairs fun Warby Parkers. I do not miss them!
Anonymous wrote:I'm in my early forties and just started getting really, really into golf. Does that count?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He dove into a new hobby (snakes.) It was snakes, snakes, snakes for a while. Then invested a lot of money in a new business venture, dancing in place as kinetic exercise, that caused a lot of worry. Thankfully, we made it through and now it's nothing but smooth, smooth sailing.
Wait, did you end up keeping the snakes? That's at least neat.
Some of them got away. We ate one and traded another to optometrist for two pairs fun Warby Parkers. I do not miss them!