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Married man but having feelings for another woman

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Sam91

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The complimenting the body part idea is all well and good; as long as she doesn't feel like an object. She needs to feel appreciated and respected emotionally or that won't work. I agree with the latter though.

Your wife after the child goes to bed is in need of time where no one wants or needs anything. She may need to rest or might benefit from time out the house going for a walk or something. You could try asking her how she feels at the end of a day.

It is hard a child needing you all day and not even being allowed to go to the bathroom for a minute or two. You are on alert the whole time, if you manage to go alone, so your ears are straining to know what the little one is up too and rushing about your business.

If being asked to deal with your needs to it is so much more pressure. However, after seeing to her needs for a little space or rest. Talking to her, or doing something with her. The dynamic can be changed from you demanding intimacy to it being something you both want to enjoy.
 
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Sam91

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I take issue with the part that saying being a full time parent is easy. Being a working mum is easy because you get your needs met in the workplace.

I found being a mum to one child easy. But have seen others struggle. It depends on the child too because no two are the same.
 
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Jennifer Rothnie

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I didnt mean to insult anyone but did react to a woman saying men calling looking after children call it babysitting and dont understand it. Maybe she shouldnt be so insulting.

Saying, ""looking after a child" or "babysitting" as some men say" is not equivalent to saying "all men view raising a child as babysitting." She was referring to a problem that some men have, not all, in not realizing the work it takes to parent and minimizing it. It's also very different from directly insulting another user or recommending they divorce their spouse! Even in your rebuttal you mentioned that you dropped your children off at childcare - that is hardly the same as being a stay at home mom who never gets a break. The hardship of motherhood isn't so much the physical tasks of getting kids ready and corralling them - it's that you don't get much of a break, ever, and when you do get a break that break is liable to be interrupted at any time. Basically imagine doing your normal work job which hopefully you enjoy - but not getting the 15 min breaks or the hour lunch hour, day after day after day.

Consider this study - it found that of the 2000 women they surveyed, being a stay at home parent was the equivalent of a 98 hour work week. https://www.marieclaire.co.uk/life/work/parenting-is-a-full-time-job-526614

Now, it's going to vary family to family. My kids sleep well and consistently, for example, so I have a reasonable assurance that I'm not going to have to get up from 9:30pm to 8:30-9am to check on them, and their naps cross over so I get at least 2 hours in the middle of the day to rest or do chores as needed. But not all kids sleep well - some cry for hours at night, and my first kid did not nap at all until 8 months!. Even if a mom lets a baby cry to sleep, she isn't getting any rest herself during that. My husband is very gracious and doesn't expect a spotless house - his expectations are far more realistic like me keeping up with the laundry, getting dinner on the table around the time he gets home, and making sure things don't get too crazy. He often does dinner dishes himself, even, while I sweep, scrub messes off the floor, or watch the kids. But not every husband contributes the same way, and many have far more expectations - wanting a home cooked fancy meal every day, or a spotless house, etc.
 
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GirdYourLoins

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Her post came across as all men think the same but only some call it babysitting. Im not going to comment any further because you all seem intent on this attitude, which I find insulting to me and a lot of men I know. A lot of what I said has been ignored to take this attitude. The post about a man who feels trapped in a bad relationship has been taken over and turned into a thread about women making it sound like bring ing up kids is one of the worst things to do in the world. You have completely ignored what I said about making sure a stay at home mum has adult contact and time to do her own thing and attacked me because I said that I found the childcare I did easier. less stressful and far more pleasant than working even though I did more childcare than my wife when her maternity leave ended. You really need to get things in perspective and appreciate the time you have with your kids rather than attack anyone who doesnt see it as a hardship.
 
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mama2one

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The post about a man who feels trapped in a bad relationship has been taken over and turned into a thread about women making it sound like bring ing up kids is one of the worst things to do in the world.

no, that is not what I understood from the OP's post at all

he is not trapped, he and his wife created a child together and the child is only 19 mos old

his expectations were high without appreciating the fact that his wife is at home all day long with a 19 mos old

she doesn't have a job outside the home, nor do they use daycare
so their situation is not at all similar to your situation

however, there are SAHM on CF that know and understand and can relate to what the wife must feel and most woman "know" if their husband has eyes/attention on someone else as the OP did

but the OP is going to change and focus back on his wife and child; thank God for that
 
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joshua 1 9

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Every since the baby, things went from bad to worse. She dedicates everything to this baby and I completely understand why, they're an amazing gift from God. However since the baby her negligence for me as her husband has went to full throttle.
If she really cares about the baby then she will want a strong loving marriage for the sake of the baby. Very few things can harm a child as much as the marriage of their parents falling apart. This could be due to a lack of vasopressin hormone which is attributed to long term (lifetime) relationships. Of course this is the same hormone that bonds the mother to the child.
 
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joshua 1 9

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First, please pray for me, I'm in inner turmoil and can't function like this. I believe my brain is telling me what's right based on truth and my sinful heart is being deceived.
Is a "sinful heart" really what we are dealing with??? First of all there are receptors in the heart but the hormones are produced in the brain. These are hormones that God created to be sure that a species reproduced. Having to do with body and soul that we are born with. Then with Adam and Eve we do have monogamy. They were designed to go beyond the animals and live a life of monogamy. This is why we have the old nature and the new nature we are to have as born again believers. You may not have the marriage God intended for you to have, but I do not see why you can not have the marriage He wants for you to have.
 
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Jennifer Rothnie

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We can't really speculate or comment too much on her spiritual struggles, as she isn't the one who posted. It's true that it's best for a child to be family-centric, not child-centric - and that there easily is such a thing as becoming too wrapped up in the kids or acting like a cruise director more than a parent. It's also true that both spouses commit to ongoing marital relations when they marry. However, we only know things from the OPs perspective and do not know if she is genuinely begging off marital intimacy due to exhaustion, depression, health, or otherwise vs. her voluntary eschewing it because she sees it as unimportant. We don't know if her time spent with their toddler is normal upbringing or if she is taking it too far, etc. And, we don't need to know - it would just be gossip. Unless she posts asking advice, then trying to diagnose her contributions to marital difficulties is pretty useless.

All we can focus on is what the OP has said about himself, what the Bible says in regards to that emotional affair, and practical things he can do to improve the situation with his wife based on the comments he has made on his own expectations.
 
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Jack L Palmer

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Everyone... I think this thread has completely devolved from the point. The OP has already said he appreciated the responses. He made the right (IMHO) choice and cited your collective advise as being central to that choice. Collectively, you've all helped save a marriage. You did good work.

I'm too lazy to go back and figure out why this thread devolved into what it is now. But whatever problem there is, you all need to let it go. Yes, raising a family is tough. Stereo-typically women are the ones that do the lion's share of the child rearing. Dads should help. It's a lot of work. It's exhausting - whether you enjoy it or not and whether you call it "work." Every child comes with their own batch of challenges, plain and simple. Every parent struggles in their own ways to maintain a balance and their own sanity.

This thread should really come to an end.
 
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joshua 1 9

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we only know things from the OPs perspective
I was a single parent for 12 years and I have known a LOT of divorced people. Most everyone blames the other person and I am no exception. Of course in my case she walked out on me and her 2 1/2 year old son.

The point I was making though is what we find in a study of Prairie Voles that tend to mate for life and science feels this is because of hormones. Compared to other species of Voles that do not mate for life and they lack these hormones
 
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