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September 16, 2017 3:24 pm  #761


Re: A gay ex-husband answers your questions

Thank you for writing Brooksey, Daryl, and Lily. I'm very sorry that you're hurting Brooksey and even more sorry that you're here. In response to your post/questions:

1. My husband and I met in our early 20's. We dated for about four years but he had never dated anyone else and wasn't ready for a commitment. I knew at that time he had had communications with men in chat rooms. We went our separate ways and fell totally out of contact. We moved to separate states and hadn't spoken in years, but I loved him every day. I loved him so much I wasn't ever able to have a meaningful relationship with anyone else. About eight years ago, I signed up for Facebook and within a few days, I got a friend request from him. I was excited since I'd never given up hope on us, but scared at the same time. We talked causally for a while, then he started getting flirty and eventually we decided to meet while I was vacationing near where he lived at the time. It was like no time had passed and it seemed like our love was stronger than ever.

Understood. I assume you're both in your early 40s now.

2. We had a long-distance relationship for a while, during which time he admitted he was bisexual and had been with men from hookup websites. It wasn't really a surprise to me, and I wasn't terribly affected by what he'd done when we weren't together. He had also had sexual relationships with a smaller number of women. After a year, he decided to move to where I live. We had normal couple bickering, but never argued or were cruel to each other. We had what I believe is a normal sex life, somewhat hampered by having very different schedules, but always loving and passionate. I knew he watched gay porn and had talked to men online. In my mind, I didn't really mind it because I know that's not something I can give him, and as long as he was faithful, I didn't really care about the other aspect.

If I'm reading this correctly, it sounds like he was fairly open about his bisexuality. This is rare as most straight spouses who post here have gay-in-denial husbands. It also appears that you were accepting of his attraction to men. Correct?

3. He started talking about proposing, and I would ask him often if he's SURE I would be enough for him. He always said yes, that he's sexually attracted to men and women, but only wants a relationship with a woman. He proposed and we were engaged for two years before we started planning a wedding, and again I often asked him and received the same reply.

This is a red flag to me. It seems you already had your fears about his attraction to men before you married.

4. We've now been married for 2 1/2 years. Last week, I found a gay dating app on his phone.

If it was Grindr, Scruff, or Hornet, these aren't gay dating apps. They are gay sex apps men use for hook ups. I know because I've used them. That may sting a bit my friend but I just wanted to be completely honest in my replies.

5. He admitted that he has cheated on me with four men. I was so angry and upset, and I told him to pack some bags and get out for a while. For days he begged me to work it out, that we could go to counseling together and he would do anything to fix this. He has severe depression or possibly bipolar disorder that I've encouraged him to get treatment for for years (he thinks medications are for "crazy people" and he doesn't need that).

I applaud you for kicking him out. That took a lot of courage. First and foremost, if you've been having unprotected sex with your husband, please get tested for STDs immediately. If you do choose to have sex with him in the future, always use condoms. In my experience, cheating is a bit like an iceberg: 9/10ths of the truth is often under water. So I'd take his "four men" and just assume that's bullsh*t. If he's been on Grindr (or other sex apps) for years, he's likely been cheating with dozens of men. So for the sake of your health, I'd err on the side of caution. Get tested for STDs, always use condoms, and assume he's cheated with more than just four men.

6. Two night ago, he came over to talk. I told him I love him, and I would be willing to try to forgive him. That we could incorporate more things into our sex life that satisfy his needs, and I would even be okay with occasionally agreeing for him have a "free" time with a man, as long as is was just sex.

This is a very dark place to be in my friend and I'm sorry that it's come to giving him "free" time with another man just to keep him. I have a question: what are you getting out of this relationship? You continue to make concessions but what is he giving in return? I've read similar posts from other straight spouses. They give and give until they're so broken, depressed, and unhappy that they can't give anymore. I'd recommend taking out a pen and paper and finishing the following sentences:

​Love for me means...
Marriage for me means...
​A husband should...

​Don't think about your present situation when writing the above. Just write from your heart. Then I'd suggest you compare what you've written to your current situation.

7. He was shut down before he arrived here, and basically said, "I don't love you, never have, I just needed someone to look normal for my parents but I'm going to be with men now." It's the first time he's ever spoken to me with cruelty in the decades I've known him.

I'm sorry you had to go through such cruel treatment. You deserved better. This sounds a lot like narcissistic discard. If you've read through my previous posts, I believe that many gay-in-denial spouses demonstrate certain behaviours that resemble narcissistic personality disorder ("narc" or "NPD"). It sounds like he's punishing you for kicking him out of the house. A mentally stable person would feel shame, express regret, and ask for forgiveness. A narc would act very much like your husband apparently did because people suffering from NPD are incapable of sympathy towards others. Saying "I don't love you and never have..." sounds very much like the cruel words of a black-belt gay-in-denial narcissist.    

8. I am devastated. I have never loved anyone else. After this amount of time, I don't think I could. I've loved him for 20 years and I don't want to believe this is the end, but from what I've read here, this sounds like basically a textbook case of a closeted man.

I agree.

8. I know he's meeting men on sites and having anonymous sex. I am a very forgiving and open-minded person, and I understand he feels some freedom now and is basically having an orgy. But I feel like he packed my life in his bags and walked out the door with it. I'm left to pick up the pieces of a lifetime that I now feel was wasted or fake. He won't even return my calls.

It sounds like he's punishing you for making him feel this, "For days he begged me to work it out, that we could go to counseling together and he would do anything to fix this." The silent treatment is yet another way narcs torture their partners. I'm sorry you're going through this.

9. I deserve fidelity, or at least to be involved in decisions that affect our sexual relationship. I deserve honesty.

Good for you. 

10. But I don't want to think of my life without him. I know there's no way around it if he is no longer interested in women at all or never was, but I feel so lost and almost cheated that he made this decision that is life changing for BOTH of us, and we had never even had a conversation about it. Don't I at least deserve a chance to see if we could agree on a new normal that builds on the love we already have?

This may be painful to read, but I believe he's already moved on my friend. Look at how easily he discarded you and left the relationship...simply because you dared have boundaries. I'd caution you about "a chance to see if we could agree on a new normal." This sounds a lot like bargaining with reality. I'd go back and read what you wrote about love, marriage, and a husband. If we forget the gay thing for a moment, you are chasing a man who said he never loved you and has repeatedly cheated on you. HE'S the one who f*cked this up so why isn't he chasing you, calling you, and begging you to take him back?   

11. I didn't know it was possible to be this sad. I think I know what everyone is going to say, but I am holding the tiniest bit of hope for advice or guidance that could lead to us having a happy relationship, even if it isn't the Norman Rockwell version we're conditioned to think is normal. Thank you for reading my long post and for anyone who has time to reply. 

From what you've shared, it certainly sounds like your husband is gay-in-denial, bipolar, depressed, cheating on you, and perhaps even a narcissist/sociopath. This is not a healthy relationship. While many members may suggest you "RUN LIKE YOUR HAIR'S ON FIRE", we're giving advice based on hindsight. Most couples break up and get back together an average of five to seven times before calling it quits. It's just part of the process. Moreover, many of us have tried open or mixed orientation marriages. Few of those have succeeded. And then there is therapy, counselling and so on. It's all part of the process of accepting reality (gay/straight marriages don't work), detaching from our partners with love, and then moving on. 

​So what's my point? Regardless of your decision, I urge you to get tested as soon as possible for STDs. If and when you reconcile with your husband, you should assume he's still cheating and therefore only practice safe sex. I'd also recommend posting here for support, reaching out to the Straight Spouse Network to find a buddy or participate in meetings, and finding a therapist (not marriage counsellor) just for you. I hope that helps my friend. Please feel free to post again. You are not alone.  

Last edited by Sean (September 16, 2017 3:29 pm)

 

September 16, 2017 6:25 pm  #762


Re: A gay ex-husband answers your questions

Thank you, Lily, Daryl, and Sean for taking the time to speak with me.

We are both in our early 40s now. He was open with me (only me) about his bisexuality, and I was accepting of his attraction to men. Others may disagree, but I do not believe sexuality is a choice, and frankly if there wasn't such a need in our society to make people fit perfectly into one tiny box, I think many of us might not have need to share our painful stories here.

"This is a red flag to me. It seems you already had your fears about his attraction to men before you married."
To be honest, my fears were more about my possible inadequacy and how it would affect his and our overall happiness. I am not attracted to women sexually, so I am unable to relate to those feelings and the impact it has on relationships. I know many times both sexes hold attraction but the idea of a LIFE falls more to one or the other. I trusted his word since I'd not had any reason to think otherwise.

"If it was Grindr, Scruff, or Hornet, these aren't gay dating apps. They are gay sex apps men use for hook ups. I know because I've used them. That may sting a bit my friend but I just wanted to be completely honest in my replies."
Yes, I mis-labeled this in my comments. It was Growlr, a sex app for his type of man. I also knew he had used a site before we rekindled our relationship called Farmers Only(?) or something like that but I'm not sure what type of site that was.

"I applaud you for kicking him out. That took a lot of courage. First and foremost, if you've been having unprotected sex with your husband, please get tested for STDs immediately. If you do choose to have sex with him in the future, always use condoms. In my experience, cheating is a bit like an iceberg: 9/10ths of the truth is often under water. So I'd take his "four men" and just assume that's bullsh*t. If he's been on Grindr (or other sex apps) for years, he's likely been cheating with dozens of men. So for the sake of your health, I'd err on the side of caution. Get tested for STDs, always use condoms, and assume he's cheated with more than just four men."
You read my mind on this one. He said four; I assumed that means 40. I have an appointment on Tuesday with my physician to begin all recommended tests. Definitely not a position I thought I'd be in as someone who has been monogamous since 1998 and only had one other partner prior.

"Love for me means...
Marriage for me means...
​A husband should..."
I began this list earlier in the day yesterday from one of your previous posts. I kind of feel like I'm in the Denial/Bargaining stage of mourning. The idea of expanding our sexual horizons is/was exciting for me, I will admit. However there would be a line at which my dignity would be compromised, and I don't know I could ever trust him to respect that.

I have often suspected he has bipolar disorder but he has never treated me with anything but gentleness until now. I have often considered myself so lucky to have a thoughtful partner who is so lovely to be around. I think that's why this sudden anger and cruelty is especially shocking. He's like a different person.

"This may be painful to read, but I believe he's already moved on my friend."
I sadly agree with you. I think he had already moved on before I knew anything about it, and he's projecting his guilt back onto me so he can make me the villain in this story I had no part of.

As much as I WANT to have hope we could be saved, logic and reality disagree. I have a trusted therapist I will continue working with. (I myself have dealt with severe depression and anxiety disorder, which was made so much worse last year when I was diagnosed with Multiple Sclerosis and lost my mother just six days later.) If my husband requested some sessions to speak together as well, I would agree to it in hopes I can find a way to forgive. Not for him, but for me. He's touched every part of my life, and I don't want every good memory in my life tainted by the pain he's caused me now. I believe in miracles, but I'm not sure my marriage is worthy to receive one.

Thank you all so much. I wish you blessings of love and happiness-
brooksey
 

 

September 16, 2017 6:31 pm  #763


Re: A gay ex-husband answers your questions

brooksey wrote:

Others may disagree, but I do not believe sexuality is a choice, and frankly if there wasn't such a need in our society to make people fit perfectly into one tiny box, I think many of us might not have need to share our painful stories here.

Amen to that.
 


“The future is unwritten.”
― Joe Strummer
 

September 17, 2017 2:41 am  #764


Re: A gay ex-husband answers your questions

Thank you for sharing Daryl & Brooksey. That took a lot of courage my friend. Given what you've shared, your honesty, and your ability to reflect, I think you're on the right track. Please keep sharing your story Brooksey because I find many straight spouses eventually stop defending their horrible gay-in-denial husbands (or ex-husbands) as they start to accept the facts of their relationships. You wrote the following:

1. I have often suspected he has bipolar disorder but he has never treated me with anything but gentleness until now. I have often considered myself so lucky to have a thoughtful partner who is so lovely to be around. I think that's why this sudden anger and cruelty is especially shocking. He's like a different person.

I have to disagree with your "gentleness" comment my friend. Cheating, closeted, and bipolar husbands are anything but gentle in my opinion. 

2. He has severe depression or possibly bipolar disorder that I've encouraged him to get treatment for for years (he thinks medications are for "crazy people" and he doesn't need that).​ I myself have dealt with severe depression and anxiety disorder, which was made so much worse last year when I was diagnosed with Multiple Sclerosis and lost my mother just six days later.

I'm so sorry for your diagnosis and also for the tragic loss of your mother. Please take care of yourself my friend and good luck with your next doctor's appointment. Following my coming out in May 2012, my ex-wife and I continued to profess our "love" for one another. I even continued to write that I loved her in my earlier posts. It was all bullsh*t because I loved my closet more than I ever loved her. When a husband and wife are both depressed, bipolar, and suffer from anxiety, insomnia, or any other such ailments, clearly something is wrong with their relationship. I know because I've been there my friend. From what I understand, one of the main problems with narcissistic or gay-in-denial relationships is giving up this false narrative that the marriage was somehow happy. Most of these relationships were tolerable at best. Take my marriage for example. I think we were "happy", in the classic Disney sense of a happy relationship, for about 18 months. For the remainder of our 18-year marriage, we fought constantly, rarely had sex, I was a porn addict, and later started cheating on my wife. Sadly, I believe my wife clung desperately to the idea that I would revert back to some hetero version of my bubbly 20-something self - a self that was just a mask.

​So what's my point? The hardest thing for a straight spouse to accept is that her gay-in-denial husband is (and always was) a bad person, if not a monster. I now believe that straight spouses suffer years, or even decades, of abuse and develop a form of battered wife syndrome. Most new members are in shock when they first post here. We need look no further than my recent exchange with a straight spouse. She actually wrote this:

"He [husband] tested positive for HIV last year, and I was expected to believe that he had no idea how it happened.  That it was probably related to travel he'd done overseas.  But we couldn't discuss it and he grew more desperate for sex. I tested negative, thanks to no penetration probably. And lest you all think he's a complete monster by now, he burst into tears and hugged me when my results were negative."

​This straight spouse is giving her ex-husband praise for not giving her HIV/Aids. It's like saying your husband is a great guy because 'He only beats me on Wednesdays, not all week.' I am not criticising straight spouses, nor am I being critical of you Brooksey. I'm simply encouraging you and all straight spouses to continue posting here to see your gay-in-denial husbands for who they are: damaged; cheating; lying; and manipulative men who are the root cause of your anxiety and depression. And I include myself among them. While married to a straight woman, I was an abusive nightmare. You all deserve so much better. My ex-wife deserved better.

​I urge you to keep coming back and sharing your story. Posting here will help you give up the myth of your relationship while focusing on the most important person: you. I hope that helps my friend.  

Last edited by Sean (September 17, 2017 11:17 am)

 

September 18, 2017 10:11 am  #765


Re: A gay ex-husband answers your questions

Sean what do you know about Neurosyphilis? I've read it mimicks Parkinsons and other spinal diseases. My ex showed all the signs of PD and brain problems which all tested negaitve. I'm wondering if that's what his got and he contacted this years ago and has been doing his 'rodeo' thing for a while.


Life is like phases of the moon.... We really only see it when it's beautiful, full and in our face. 
 

September 18, 2017 4:31 pm  #766


Re: A gay ex-husband answers your questions

​Hi Scrupulous. Q: "Sean what do you know about Neurosyphilis?" A: Nothing I'm afraid my friend other than I believe Henry VIII went mad because of his syphilis. Is your ex still showing the same signs of PD?

 

September 20, 2017 10:52 am  #767


Re: A gay ex-husband answers your questions

This is what kills me the most, how does he not see how much this is killing me? I'm constantly asking him about how it would feel if the shoe was on the other foot and he knew I wasn't attracted to him and was attracted to all these other men and masturbating to fantasies of them or pictures of them. Or what if he felt that I didn't want to be with him and was resentful of my life with him? Idk why it's so important to me, but I really need to see him get some empathy and some understanding of what he's putting me through mentally and emotionally, especially since he keeps saying he wants to stay married to me.

 

September 20, 2017 1:32 pm  #768


Re: A gay ex-husband answers your questions

Thank you for posting Jamie. I'm so sorry you've found yourself here and in this terrible situation. I've had a look at your first post as I didn't have much context to your questions here. I hope you don't mind if I cut/paste and respond to it here. If that bothers you, just let me know and I'll gladly remove it. Here is your original post with my comments.

​1. Super long story here, I met my husband online over 5 years ago. I was 44 and he was 27, that's already weird I know. He was in the military and we had common musical taste. We talked online and over the phone for a while and then he disappeared, when we started speaking again he told me he was gay.

As strange as this may sound, you're actually lucky to have heard, "I'm gay." As you've probably read in the various posts here, many straight spouses wait for years (or even decades) to hear the truth. And some straight wives never hear it.

2. He's from a very religious family in Texas and had never acted on any gay behavior. At that moment I told him that was fine and when he got back from his out of state training we would hang out and I would help him to go be gay.

Got it. I think you mean, "I would help him to not be gay." Please confirm.

3. When he finally came back a month or so later he came to spend the weekend with me and he was so cute and hung on every word I said, following me around like a baby duckling. We were intimate the first weekend and I continued dating other men, we were so honest with each other about everything. I would show him videos men sent me masturbating and it was a huge turn on to us both and so freeing to have all this honesty with someone. We continued hanging out and fell in love I guess, I didn't want to fall in love with him but he made me. I should also mention he liked to cross dress and never really did it before, I encouraged it and let him know that didn't make him gay, started to realize he didn't really know himself too much and was pretty dicked up from his upbringing, like crazy end of the world stuff. We were really open about everything and he told me that he wasn't gay after all, maybe bi, and he wanted to be monogamous with me, I agreed after a lot of discussion.

​You're very courageous to have shared all of that my friend so thank you.

4. We were married 6 months later and it's been almost 5 years now. He's gone back and forth on the cross dressing, throwing everything away and rebuying it a few times. He decided he wanted to be a make up artist at one point and got into that, got into soccer, got into a band, he's just all over the place. Also got his commercial drivers license and went back to school after getting out right after we married, all these years have been all about him and going back and forth on everything we talked about, what I wanted out of life, what I expect in a partner, etc. I have grown kids and my tubes tied, he thought he wanted kids at one point.

I think you're very lucky you didn't have kids together.

5. Also I'm a recovering alcoholic/addict, sober 31 years now...

Congratulations on celebrating 31 years of sobriety.

6. ...and talked to him about whether or not he would smoke pot when he got out, he said no. Ending up smoking pot and eating edibles behind my back, with my oldest kid, ugh. We split at one point and when he came back there was supposed to be a total honesty policy. Found out he cross dressed and made a profile on Plenty of Fish, was watching gay porn and masturbating for a year and a half behind my back. Just so many lies and hiding crap.

These are all red flags my friend but you already know that.

7. He's had a huge drinking problem which has finally tapered off and we have been in marital counseling for a couple years, me in individual counseling and him finally seeing a counselor who specializes in gay/Bi/Trans. I'm giving it till January to make my final decision about what to do here.

​I think it's a very wise decision to set a timeline. Good for you.

8. We do love each other deeply, but I think he's trying so hard to not be gay, don't feel the attraction any more and he's told me how he fantasizes about getting rimmed and anal sex, if I talk about a man giving him love he gets instantly hard, if I'm standing there naked there's nothing and our sex is not very often.

I'm sorry that he's making you feel this way. A husband should make his wife feel sexy.

9. I've been so supportive over the years, going to the cross dressing clubs, pegging him, having him watch gay porn to get turned on before sex. If our problems stopped at sex there wouldn't be such an issue...

I believe by "pegging" you mean anal play but please confirm.

10. I know the age thing comes into play too and I feel the vibes coming off him, he hates this grown up life I've forced him into, he put the make up career on hold and is driving trucks now. He says everything is ok, but I can tell when he touches me that he's not into me.

Again I'm really sorry that he's making you feel this way. You deserve better.

11. I'll be 50 next month and I just had a tummy tuck and breast lift 7 months ago and I'm damn hot!

​I'm sure you are my friend. Good for you.

12. He's 33 now, not really a kid. I should mention he never really had long term relationships but swears he's never acted out on gay behavior, I believe him because I see how scared he is of it even though it turns him on so much. We have had spurts where things are great and then I see the depression come over him. He wants to be married to me, in word anyway, but his actions never match up, and I guess how can they when he's probably gay and I don't have the right parts? He's very hairy but trim, he's into the bears and leather daddies.

​You've covered a lot here my friend and I applaud you for being so open and honest. Let's forget your husband for a moment and imagine you're reading a dating profile that reads like this:

​- 33 year old male
- From Texas, religious family
- Former military, make up artist, musician, and now truck driver
- My interests: drinking, pot, cross dressing and going to clubs for cross dressers
​-  Sexually I like: bears and leather daddies, watching gay porn, watching men masturbate, rimming, and pegging

​These are more or less your words. Does this sound like the profile of a straight man? And this is how he makes you feel:

- We have been in marital counseling for a couple years.
​- I can tell when he touches me that he's not into me.
​- He wants to be married to me, in word anyway, but his actions never match up, and I guess how can they when he's probably gay and I don't have the right parts?
- I didn't want to fall in love with him but he made me.
- Just so many lies and hiding crap.
- This is what kills me the most, how does he not see how much this is killing me?
​- I really need to see him get some empathy and some understanding of what he's putting me through mentally and emotionally, especially since he keeps saying he wants to stay married to me.

I have some experience with 12-step programs and if I were your sponsor, I'd tell you this relationship, and all the stress surrounding it, are putting you at serious risk of relapsing. Now I'm not your sponsor so I'm going to give you my opinion. This may sting a bit so get ready.

​Given what you've shared, I believe your husband is gay. I have a theory that I've shared here and it goes something like this: I believe there are men who are emotionally straight. This describes men who want to be with women to conform because of the society they live in (for example a state where homosexuality is frowned upon), their religious upbringing, or because of internalized homophobia. I too was emotionally straight I married to hide my attraction to men. While your husband may have an emotional attachment to you, clearly his sexual preference is homosexual. For example, you shared that he watches gay porn, likes anal, likes bears/leather daddies and so on. You also shared that he doesn't seem to have an attraction to women. So he's emotionally straight and yet sexually gay. This suggests that you're his beard, or his anchor to a straight identity.

Now let's talk about your health and safety first. If your husband lied about things like pot smoking, cross dressing, and his "Penty of Fish" dating profile, he's probably lying about what he has and hasn't done with men. So if you are still having sex/sexual relations with your husband, I'd err on the side of caution and always practice safe sex. Why? Because I've read too many wives who also claimed, like you, "he's never acted out on gay behavior, I believe him because I see how scared he is of it even though it turns him on so much." This is a contradiction but you already know that. If he's lied in the past, let's just assume he's lying about this as well so protect yourself if you're having sex with him.

With regards to your post:

"This is what kills me the most, how does he not see how much this is killing me? I'm constantly asking him about how it would feel if the shoe was on the other foot and he knew I wasn't attracted to him and was attracted to all these other men and masturbating to fantasies of them or pictures of them. Or what if he felt that I didn't want to be with him and was resentful of my life with him? Idk why it's so important to me, but I really need to see him get some empathy and some understanding of what he's putting me through mentally and emotionally, especially since he keeps saying he wants to stay married to me."

​This sounds a lot like gay-in-denial narcissism, which is just self-centredness to a point that he can't appreciate your emotions. I'm so sorry that you're going through this. Unfortunately, if your husband is anything like me he's simply too f*cked up emotionally to even appreciate how you're feeling. Empathy is simply a language he doesn't understand and probably never will.

So what now? I suggest you continue posting to gain some clarity about your situation. I'd also suggest reaching out to the Straight Spouse Network to see if there are meetings or potential sponsors in your area. If you have a trusted friend or family member who knew you before getting married, reach out to him/her to share your story. And finally, I applaud you for getting therapy, but please ensure that you have a therapist 100% focused on you and your mental health.   

​I hope that helps my friend. If you have additional questions, please feel free to post them here.


 





 

 

September 20, 2017 1:58 pm  #769


Re: A gay ex-husband answers your questions

Thank you Sean, lots of great info and validation, I need it and can't really talk to people other than a few friends and my sponsor about this. And I really meant I was going to help him be gay, be his "fag hag", doing anal play on him and helping him to not be scared to go be gay. I felt so bad for him that he didn't seem to have much information and had been so sheltered in life. As far as pegging, I actually put on a strap on and did him in the butt a few times, it was actually pretty hot and I didn't mind it, just seemed like from that point everything was about him and him fulfilling all his fantasies. At that time he was having major premature ejaculation issues and I wasn't getting my orgasms, finally had to be blunt and tell him he needed to take care of me too, could be his fingers, vibrator, whatever. He really had no long term sexual relationships in the past, guess no woman ever explained to him about female orgasm and how women are like an old car and men like a sports car, women need to be warmed up.

He did quit the pot within the first year,  but it took years of explaining to him that I wasn't trying to control him, this was about me and that pot was my drug of choice and I wouldn't have dated him or married him if he was going to do it. All the drinking, same thing, I don't expect him to not drink, just not over drink to the point of being a retard or throwing up. So many things were about "control" with him. Dude, I'm not trying to control you, I'm just trying to get you to understand where I'm coming from and follow through with who you said you were, what you would and wouldn't do and what goals of mine you were going to help me reach. I was so open about who I was and what I wanted, that hasn't changed. The only thing I have gotten in our 5 years was my plastic surgery, and I needed it. Was 300 pounds 7 years ago and had weight loss surgery, so lots of saggy skin, maintaining 140 pound weight loss. There was another post, not sure if it was yours? About the wife with an eating disorder and coming from alcoholic family, that's me! Mom was bipolar and alcoholic, dad a drug addict and not there for me, I became an alcoholic as a teen and got sober shortly before turning 19, I crashed my car on my 18th bday, killing my friend who was the passenger. I was also molested by my stepdad for years from 10 to 13, right under my mom's nose, she was drunk and I had to depend on this guy. So anyway, I've been in years of therapy, but I see I'm the prime type of person to fall into this crazy situation I'm in, ugh.

 

September 20, 2017 2:41 pm  #770


Re: A gay ex-husband answers your questions

More to add to last reply, I got married at 22 to a man in AA who had a 3 year old daughter, mom was out of the picture and I wanted to nurture this little girl and be her mommy and loved this guy, but more of it was probably about his kid and my lack of nurturing growing up. We married and had a son a few years later, I raised his daughter and worked full time. This man left me when our son was 5 months old, and there went my step daughter. A year later I started dating a guy at work, not totally attracted to him, but he was a great guy, loved my kid, wanted to buy a house with me, so I went. Did everything for my son, wanted him to have stability and a great life, the life I didn't have, his dad was not much in the picture after the divorce. Anyway, I had a daughter a few years later with the second hubby, was never really sexually attracted to him but he was a good dad and we had a good life, eventually I was so lonely in the marriage I blew up to 300 pounds. Everything in my life was about the kids and being super mom, I worked half time for 12 years and volunteered at school, Little League, daughter did soccer, gymnastics, etc. just made everything about giving my kids a good life and being there for them.

We became foster parents to 2 girls that were friends with my son in middle school, I just had to help these girls, again, more of that I wasn't nurtured and I had to nurture and help these girls, no matter how sucky my life was. We did this for a couple years.

Finally after my weight loss surgery I realized I wasn't going to be successful staying in this marriage and had to end it, son was out of the house, daughter was 14, gave my husband the option to stay married and raise her and date other people, he said no and wanted a divorce. So during the divorce I was sleeping with every guy who walked, I had years of pent up sexual energy to get out and I lost my freaking mind for about a year, which was when I met my current hubby. So I can see there were so many issues at play here, my losing my mind, my being this nurturer who is trying to fix my own past, etc.

Last edited by OCJamie (September 20, 2017 2:43 pm)

 

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