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LMU
Guest
Hello. Let me start by saying I am praying very hard for my marriage to survive. I recognize how I have hurt my wife and marriage through my choices, and have returned to the Church when things hit an absolute low. Over a year ago, my wife admitted what I had long suspected. She was having an affair. We’ve been struggling. We’re both miserable. But she hasn’t broken off the affair, and I don’t know if she ever will. I pray for her conversion and salvation.
It really seems like I’ve done all I can. I am at a crossroads. My spiritual advisers encourage me to pray and persevere. My Protestant co-worker, who has been a great mentor, wants me to consider divorce. My counselor tells me I should get out of this toxic relationship because of the psychological and emotional harm.
If we were to divorce, I would likely seek an annulment. Firstly, to be able to marry again if someone enters my life, and secondly, in the hopes that my wife will have her conversion afterwards and is free to marry someone she loves.
If you are familiar with annulments, please give me your honest answers.
Knowing what I know now about the sacrament of marriage, and thinking about where my wife and I were at the time, I don’t believe we had a sacramental marriage.
We should be celebrating our 25th anniversary later this year. Instead, we are both hurting. And she is indecisive about her decision. It seems that she will let this fester as it is for as long as she can. Either he will have to break it off with her or I will have to. And if he does break it off, there’s no guarantee that she will want to dedicate herself to our marriage. I really do want this marriage to work and have endured over a year of humiliation and depression, and we’ve had lots of fights, but I don’t see any change in her at all. And she does not want to go to church with me and says she won’t even if we stay together.
I don’t think I’d be able to have any effective witnesses. I kept my struggles to myself and most everyone we know thought we were happy.
What do you folks think? God bless you, and thank you for your time.
It really seems like I’ve done all I can. I am at a crossroads. My spiritual advisers encourage me to pray and persevere. My Protestant co-worker, who has been a great mentor, wants me to consider divorce. My counselor tells me I should get out of this toxic relationship because of the psychological and emotional harm.
If we were to divorce, I would likely seek an annulment. Firstly, to be able to marry again if someone enters my life, and secondly, in the hopes that my wife will have her conversion afterwards and is free to marry someone she loves.
If you are familiar with annulments, please give me your honest answers.
Knowing what I know now about the sacrament of marriage, and thinking about where my wife and I were at the time, I don’t believe we had a sacramental marriage.
- We were sexually intimate before and during our engagement, and we both use birth control. Birth control continued throughout our marriage, but we do have two adult children.
- We had actually gotten married months before our wedding in a civil ceremony in order to get her onto my work health plan, and we kept it a secret from her side of the family and still do.
- I had been suffering from depression when I met her and was seeing a counselor, but she didn’t see the need for it and I quit my sessions shortly after our engagement at her urging. Also, I believe she is in serious need of counseling–she has major anger issues.
- I believe I wanted to marry her because it seemed like a way out of my loneliness, and I also felt obligated to marry her since we were having sex. I asked God to excuse this behavior and promised to marry her to make things right. For her, marriage was a way out of a difficult family situation.
- We had an engagement of less than 6 months, and she was only 20. I was 27.
We should be celebrating our 25th anniversary later this year. Instead, we are both hurting. And she is indecisive about her decision. It seems that she will let this fester as it is for as long as she can. Either he will have to break it off with her or I will have to. And if he does break it off, there’s no guarantee that she will want to dedicate herself to our marriage. I really do want this marriage to work and have endured over a year of humiliation and depression, and we’ve had lots of fights, but I don’t see any change in her at all. And she does not want to go to church with me and says she won’t even if we stay together.
I don’t think I’d be able to have any effective witnesses. I kept my struggles to myself and most everyone we know thought we were happy.
What do you folks think? God bless you, and thank you for your time.
