My wife left me over online games. I took care of my house. I provided for my family. In my mind, I lived up to my responsibilities. Before I started the gaming, I used to beg her for attention to the point of it seeming like I was constantly complaining. I, then, decided that just having her there was good enough and turned my attention to gaming. I figured it was better to play video games than to go to the bars or strip clubs. It was when I was no longer begging for her attention that she started wanting mine. I will say this. I loved and still love her with all of my heart. She regrets her decision. Will I take her back? No. My heart could not bear to watch her leave again. If he is anything like me, then he does not love you any less because he is gaming. You two have simply fallen into the routine of married life. Be careful and wise of the decisions you make.
2007-11-04 17:09:19
·
answer #1
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋
You told him you wanted more attention, that's a start, but that's not a solution. Did you offer a way so that you can compromise? It's good for him to be able to do the things he enjoys such as ebay and online games, but he also needs to spend some of his time with his family. It's harder because he works at night.
Do you have a job? If not, you should get one. That will take away from some of the stress he's probably feeling from work, add some extra income and freedom, so he could possibly look into working days somewhere else or with his company.
I also suggest you sit down with him and make a schedule. Plan the time you're going to be spending together and plan some time that he can have for himself.
2007-11-04 17:07:30
·
answer #2
·
answered by some female 5
·
0⤊
1⤋
Talk to him about it and also consider why his lack of interest may be. Sometimes we focus so much on our partners that we dont notice the things that we are not doing to keep who we have. Try to put the excitement back into the relationship. Most people would like to think relationships are 50 50 but they very seldom are sometimes they are 70 30 and that changes all the time. Hang in there and communicate more.
2007-11-04 18:01:03
·
answer #3
·
answered by marcus 2
·
0⤊
0⤋
I do not believe in divorce. At all.
So I would say work on it. Go to therapy, or if you can't afford it, find a minister, they pretty much always will sit down with you for free and give great loving advice.
See if you have any friends/family that went through the same thing, and all four of you should sit down together to resolve this.
Family is more important that letting this go over something like that. Now if he was cheating, then yes, of course, leave him.
2007-11-04 17:08:51
·
answer #4
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋
Sounds like marriage could now not be the object for you. If you even feel you could wish to be unmarried or verify out distinctive choices then you do not notice what marriage is and probably you ought to think about that now not gambling the discipline. Ask your self what he did and what you probably did to rationale the cut up. Marriage is a significant dedication that takes paintings, you shouldn't have a cut up up and transfer directly to a different man then whilst that falls aside return to whats acquainted. If I had been you I might do a little severe soul browsing and if you happen to uncover that dedication is not for you get divorced do not make your husband endure anymore whilst you play the discipline.
2016-09-05 10:43:29
·
answer #5
·
answered by ? 4
·
0⤊
0⤋
Are there reasons, things that never get discussed. Have you had a serious discussion once the kids are asleep?
I spend a lot of time with my 2 kids and mostly ignore my wife. She complains and when I try and tell her why she gets angry, storms out of the room and won't talk to me. However she's convinced all the problems stem from me.
In my case I've given up on her because:
- she still refuses to get a drivers licence at 28
- she talks about wanting to lose weight, but refuses to work out because she'd rather watch tv
- i give her time to work on school courses to better herself, then i walk by and see her squandering study time on IM chat.
2007-11-04 17:29:58
·
answer #6
·
answered by CHARLES R 6
·
0⤊
0⤋
What happens in 5 years? If you are waiting for the kids to graduate then frankly they are old enough to understand why you are leaving or making him leave. I would get custody, keep the house, make sure the child support pays the mortgage, and be happy with someone who really wants to be with you and not a computer.
2007-11-04 17:09:36
·
answer #7
·
answered by baseballdad69 5
·
0⤊
0⤋
love him as he is.not expecting returns.he will recognise your love soon.you cant change husbands like clothes .marriage is a bond between two people which should remain through out life time.you can of course get the help of his mother or a very close friend to bring his attention to your problem.He may have his own reasons for this behaviour.Find that out.Then decide.
2007-11-04 17:20:24
·
answer #8
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋
you married him do you remember what that means? you don't have the right to move on as you put it. You stay and you keep trying and trying it may take a year or it may take 10 years possibly 20 years but that is what you agreed to so stick it out. You have kids but it seems you are only thinking of yourself which makes you no better then he is.
2007-11-04 17:10:38
·
answer #9
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
1⤋
Don't give up so easily. Marriage has it's ups and downs all the time. Talk to him, if he doesn't listen, write him a note or something. I know you feel neglected, but these are problems that are more of a mis- communication and can be fixed, don't break up your family over it.
2007-11-04 17:06:38
·
answer #10
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋