I love my family but tend to get bored with my husband. As far as I know, he has been faithful to our marriage, but I have not.
I don’t know whether to stay in the marriage or get a divorce so I may find a real soulmate.
I love him as a friend, but at the same time I would like to get away from him. Should I sacrifice my marriage for a chance to be truly happy with someone else? Although I do know there is no such thing as a “happily-ever-after” relationship, I wonder if I should try to find it.
Let us please dispense with the notion of a “soulmate.” This is an invention designed to sell books that dangle the promise of relationship perfection that doesn’t exist for most (if not all) people. For many, being peacefully married to your high school sweetheart and friend, and having three beautiful children, is the definition of “happily ever after.”
But happily ever after starts with you. You married young, and you are now headed into the great gaping maw of midlife. You have not stayed faithful to your husband (and your children). Cheating means you are engaged in secret-keeping, and this further distances you from your family, interfering with intimacy.
One route to true happiness is to experience the joy and challenge of living an authentic life. In your case, it means getting to the bottom of what’s eating you — and not blaming your boredom with your husband solely on him.
Marriage or divorce is a binary choice, but life doesn’t really work that way. You leaving the marriage would have ripples of consequences across many lives, not just your own. There are many ways to try to salvage and reinvigorate a static marriage, and boost and stimulate a static life. Cheating is not a healthy choice.
Therapy could help you explore your motivations and choices, including your baseline selfishness.
The thing is, he’s 23 and I’m 17. Is there any hope for a relationship?
It is not safe for you to engage in Tinder matching. It is risky enough for older people, but especially so when an adult expresses an interest in hooking up with a teenager.
So no — there is no hope for a relationship. Tinder in this context is not about relationship building. Furthermore, I doubt that he is looking to have the type of relationship you might be hoping for.
If you are determined to experience this algorithmic phenomenon, there are matching apps specifically for teenagers. You should not be on Tinder’s over-18 site, and once he learned your real age, he should have “swiped left.”
The grandparents overstepped their bounds. They violated the family’s privacy by snooping and violated the parents’ rights by insisting that the kids be punished in a specific way. If I were the parents, I would make sure these grandparents understood that they were no longer welcome for extended stays in the household.
Also, it is hard to believe that pot is still exciting people into such hardcore responses.
Copyright 2018 by Amy Dickinson; distributed by Tribune Content Agency
PREVIOUS ARTICLE