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What is a marriage?

(108 Posts)
Christinefrance Sat 29-Jul-17 18:14:18

Don't seem to be many positives with your marriage snowdrop. Sit down calmly and list the pros and cons of staying in this relationship then take action. Better to be alone and happy than miserable within a marriage.
Bon courage .

kittylester Sat 29-Jul-17 15:52:13

The advice above seems sensible and the only way forward unless, as roses said, there is mutual affection and/or you would miss him. It doesn't appear that either is the case but only you can know. Good luck, whatever you decide to do.

Liz46 Sat 29-Jul-17 15:00:53

I think maybe a trip to a solicitor may be an idea. They will usually give you a free half hour to discuss the practicalities. (Make notes or take a trusted friend with you to take notes.)

Would your house have to be sold to give you your share or would he have enough money to take out a mortgage?

There are many ways of making friends when you retire. Join a gym, knitting group, volunteer to do charity work etc.

rosesarered Sat 29-Jul-17 14:40:25

You say there is no love, but is there mutual affection?Would you miss him?
Have you weighed up the pros and cons?
It doesn't sound from your post Snowdrop that you really want to stay, but only you know your feelings.

Cherrytree59 Sat 29-Jul-17 14:33:56

Take your money, pension and run.
Rent somewhere small and work part-time.
This man is not showing you any respect.
You will have your own space where you will be able to have your family and grandchild to visit.

Good luckflowers

Luckygirl Sat 29-Jul-17 14:33:39

Doesn't sound like my cup of tea.

Grannyknot Sat 29-Jul-17 14:08:57

Run as fast as you can.

I read posts like this and I for the life of me cannot understand why people stick around...

Snowdrop Sat 29-Jul-17 13:49:18

I've been with my second husband 10 years or so. I married him knowing I didn't love him, but we got on well together and I thought he was what I needed. He was highly intelligent, well educated, loving, interesting and fun. We would talk for hours about anything and everything. He helped me sort my money troubles that my first husband left me and I'll always be grateful for that. He didn't give me money but he instilled in me the ethos that you can't have what you don't have the money for.

Not long in to the marriage I discovered he was using online porn (which I have no issues with), online chat rooms and dating sites. I tackled him and he swore nothing had happened. This recurred over the next few years. It erodes trust gradually, and any marriage needs trust to survive.

I work full time, he took early retirement from the military and was retired when I met him. I am due to be made redundant at the end of this year, I'll be 63 by then so can take my full pension, lump sum and redundancy. Being at home with no purpose to life is anathema to me so I shall find a part time job or do voluntary work.

The mortgage will be paid off when I retire and I have approx 1/3 share in the house - he put in a lot more capital than I.

My husband does nothing with his days other than walk the dogs (unless I'm home, when I do it), a bit of model railway stuff and online gaming. That's it. If I ask he will put the rubbish out, mow the lawn and do local shopping. Oh and Hoover after a fashion if the cleaner doesn't do her weekly 2 hour stint. He does his own ironing because I refuse to do it. I do everything else. He drinks too much, has high blood pressure and sleep apnoea, though isn't very overweight - like many men he needs to lose about a stone which is mostly beer gut.

We sleep in separate rooms, haven't had sex for 4 or 5 years and to be honest I'm at the end of my tether.

He will go from one week to the next without showering or washing his hair, regardless of the weather. I've just rescued a pair of trousers and underpants he's worn for more than a week, possibly nearer two, and put them in the wash. To be blunt, at times he smells. He was going to join the same gym as me but ever since has complained of some ache or another that stops him. He enjoys ill health and is the biggest hypochondriac out. I know that sounds unsympathetic but it wears very thin after a while. I worry that lack of social interaction, stimulation and outside interests as well as incipient health issues are all red flags for dementia.

Do I stay and make the best of a bad job with the man I've described who I don't love? I'm pretty sure he doesn't love me either, but I'm very convenient to have around! Money won't be a problem as he has a very generous pension - and with no mortgage and my less generous pension but a stash of cash we're financially secure.

Do I go? Break out and escape while I can and live the life of an independent single woman that seems so appealing in theory but in practice may be lonely and is daunting. With less money and financial security but no being taken for granted and no endless moaning.

There are other things like the fact he is estranged from his sister (I've never met her), his younger son (they had a final blazing row on holiday, so we now never see his only grandchild), and my son (my husband had a row with him over who my son should invite to his own wedding. The upshot of that is I go and visit my son, and his family, but they don't visit us).

We no longer communicate on more than a fairly basic level, he certainly isn't the man I married, and that's sad. We seem to be aging at vastly different rates and our life force and joie de vivre are on different scales entirely.

He is fairly easy going in that I have my own interests and money and he isn't controlling or cruel. He is very opinionated and assertive as you can probably tell by the number of family members he's rowed with. He's right and everyone else is wrong, may be an age thing - grumpy old man syndrome!

Advice? Thoughts?