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“At forty and thinking I’ll probably never get
married, it was amazing to run into an old and still single school boyfriend.
We hit it off immediately, and it was as if we’d never parted almost twenty
years before. Within a year, he proposed, I said yes and we got married. But,
it didn’t go like we expected.
You know that saying that you can’t teach an
old dog a new trick? Well, it’s true. We were both very mature and set in our
ways. Living in different cities, we had established careers, jobs and lives in
those cities. While commuting was fine, even fun, when we dated, marriage was
the real deal and we needed to decide where to live which meant one of us had
to give up their life to join the other.
I’d thought about this before the wedding but
just assumed since I was the more financially successful one, he would move to
my city. He didn’t think so; he felt since I was the female, I should be the
one to move. I didn’t think so. We argued about this and none of us would give
in. "
The truth for me was this: I was a realistic
forty year old woman with enough life experiences under my belt to know that
life is not a fairytale. I’ve been disappointed many times and have been part
of many friends’ heartbreaks. I was married but I was not holding my breath
that it would turn out perfect with a pretty house and many kids. At my age, I
might not even be able to have kids so I was not ready to gamble with my life by
leaving all I knew to start afresh in another city even though it would be with
my husband. I was old enough to know it’s a man’s world so I had more to lose
if things went awry between us. I would have lost my very good job, my many
sources of income which were tied to my being in my city, my contacts and
everything that made me who I was. I was not ready to take that risk even for a
husband.
None of us gave in and because my job was more
flexible than his, I commuted back and forth. This disagreement over a major
issue put a big strain on our marriage and within four years, I came less and
less because he was almost hostile whenever I was around. Then, eventually, I
gave up and didn’t come for about a year, during which time we barely
communicated.
One day, a neighbor called to say my husband
had a regular female caller and they appeared to be intimate. I took the next
flight to his city and confirmed it was true. The lady in question was even
there when I arrived and my husband was unapologetic. He said as far as he was
concerned, he was free to do as he pleased and there was no point in staying
committed to a relationship I wasn’t ready to commit to. The arguments turned
brutal and I stormed out hours after with our issues unresolved.
My friends all asked me to reconsider my
position and move to his city but I could not get myself to do so. I didn’t
tell any of them how terrified I was of uprooting my life at my age. I just
could not imagine starting afresh for that’s what it would be. It was a matter
of time and seven years after we married, my husband moved on. He’s living with
the woman who’s pregnant for him, and has asked me for a divorce. Initially, I
refused, wanting to hold on but within me, I admitted that I’d failed and it
was not his fault. Relocating was an issue I felt so strongly about so should
have discussed it with him before going on a journey where I wasted seven years
of his life and mine.
But out if it all, somehow, I’m still
convinced that I made the right decision not to move and change my life in my
forties; I feel that my real crime was knowing how I felt and not discussing
this before we got married and for that, I feel really bad.”
3 comments:
I dont understand, you thought you would never marry but its like you felt lucky to finally do. You now married and decided you cant do what it takes to stay married. Am confused. but if you're happy, then maybe I should shut up
Life is not exactly fair. Most times decisions that seem easy are the hardest to make.......giving that it is near impossible to predict the outcome of our actions,we tend to take the route that appears the safest atleast in our mindset...this is the woman's guilt
Pity, you wanted to eat you cake and have it. It doesn't happen that way. The guy did the right thing. I am inclined to think that you were not altogether a 'saint' -sexually I mean- in you own loaction. Obviously you were never ready for marriage.
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