pollyanna
New member
As I posted before, I sort of did what you are doing, although I stayed in the US. It's a hellacious nightmare at worst, and extremely stressful at best. I think you are very fortunate to have found a 'sister wife' who is so welcoming and, according to you, willing to make many concessions to make you happy.
I, too, think it's presumptuous and unreasonable for you to even ask him to replace his wife with you for your financial security. He should be providing that anyway, and can do it as things are now. It's called 'money.' He can give you a settlement of sorts (even if you all have to save it up over time) that would allow you to return home in the event of his death.
Yeah, I read you want to stay in Germany so you can spend your days as his grieving widow. Be realistic. He won't be there. His family is likely to want you gone. You will miss your children and want to come home where you can be comfortable again. Plus, you will probably die before he does anyway, given the age difference and your bad health, so I doubly think asking him to de-throne his wife is extremely unrealistic and selfish.
How to learn to accept this? You have to realize you have it pretty damn good over there, frankly. You are with a family that's willing to accommodate you, even while you are trying to make fundamental changes in the paradigm to suit your needs, and yours alone. You have to realize that any relationship with a married man gives you the short end of the stick. You have to decide whether the happiness is worth the heartache. You have to accept your place as #2. Maybe do some reading and some praying and some talking with friends. But nobody can 'teach' you how to accept it. You have to come to that conclusion on your own-- or not.
Again, it sounds like you have a pretty sweet deal there, and really, not much to come back to here. This is the bed you made. Now you have to make the best of it.
Speaking just for me, if he did divorce his wife and leave his children for you, you wouldn't feel very good about that either. There's this little thing called 'conscience.' It can eat you up. Trust me, I was the catalyst that ended my dh's previous marriage (without meaning to) and I feel such guilt. I wish I could find some way to let that woman know how sorry I am and to 'make it better,' but there really isn't. Even though I adore my dh and am so happy to be with him, I wish it had ended differently for them.
I, too, think it's presumptuous and unreasonable for you to even ask him to replace his wife with you for your financial security. He should be providing that anyway, and can do it as things are now. It's called 'money.' He can give you a settlement of sorts (even if you all have to save it up over time) that would allow you to return home in the event of his death.
Yeah, I read you want to stay in Germany so you can spend your days as his grieving widow. Be realistic. He won't be there. His family is likely to want you gone. You will miss your children and want to come home where you can be comfortable again. Plus, you will probably die before he does anyway, given the age difference and your bad health, so I doubly think asking him to de-throne his wife is extremely unrealistic and selfish.
How to learn to accept this? You have to realize you have it pretty damn good over there, frankly. You are with a family that's willing to accommodate you, even while you are trying to make fundamental changes in the paradigm to suit your needs, and yours alone. You have to realize that any relationship with a married man gives you the short end of the stick. You have to decide whether the happiness is worth the heartache. You have to accept your place as #2. Maybe do some reading and some praying and some talking with friends. But nobody can 'teach' you how to accept it. You have to come to that conclusion on your own-- or not.
Again, it sounds like you have a pretty sweet deal there, and really, not much to come back to here. This is the bed you made. Now you have to make the best of it.
Speaking just for me, if he did divorce his wife and leave his children for you, you wouldn't feel very good about that either. There's this little thing called 'conscience.' It can eat you up. Trust me, I was the catalyst that ended my dh's previous marriage (without meaning to) and I feel such guilt. I wish I could find some way to let that woman know how sorry I am and to 'make it better,' but there really isn't. Even though I adore my dh and am so happy to be with him, I wish it had ended differently for them.
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