Joined: 05 Oct 2004 Posts: 304 Location: Plano, Texas
Help Me Please... Posted: 11-26-04 22:07pm
I live in tx and I need some help. I knwo
I want a divorce, it's uncontested and it
just needs to be over. We have talked
about it and agreed a divorce is the best
thing. We have no debt, we have no things
owner together, I just want ti done. Can
someone tell me how to go about getting a
divorce? I am cluless and have no idea
what to do.
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Granps
Experienced User , Rather EHEALTHy
Joined: 12 Nov 2004 Posts: 225 Location: Arlington, TX
Posted: 12-23-04 23:32pm
Posrschelvr
i'm sorry you've chosen this avenue, but
wish you luck.
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Granps
Experienced User , Rather EHEALTHy
Joined: 12 Nov 2004 Posts: 225 Location: Arlington, TX
Help Posted: 12-24-04 13:42pm
I don't know if this will help, or not @
this point, but thought it was worth
sending, anyway.
My husband's national guard unit was sent
to a military post for three months, and
there he started having an affair with a
local civilian woman. I was tipped off
through his cell phone bill, and then the
other woman actually called me and
confirmed it. Subsequently I find out
from another soldier's wife that he slept
with a woman in his unit after being
deployed overseas.
I am ready to file for divorce yet he is
begging me to give him another chance
because he "swears" he has changed after
being overseas, isn't doing anything wrong
now and finally realizes what is
important. We have a 3-year-old son and I
know you shouldn't stay married for a
child, but I want what's best for all.
Will a cheater always be a cheater? I do
feel very ignorant for asking this
question because to me it is obvious that
he has fouled too many times, but I guess
i'd like another opinion.
Answer: don’t feel ignorant. Love -- and
lust -- can make everybody stupid. That's
why millions of people go through this,
especially those like military couples who
endure long separations. “it’s common,”
says william fenton, chief of counseling
at the united states naval base in san
diego.
So what to do? Well, first, step back
from your assumptions. According to
shelley macdermid, the co-director of the
military family research institute at
purdue university, “there is evidence to
suggest that when a marriage is not full
of hateful conflict, and when it is not
violent, and when there are young children
involved, both parent and child may be
better off in the long-run if they work it
out.”
fenton agrees. “it’s not automatic that
marriages dissolve," he says. "marriages
can be stronger after an affair if
counseling is sought and if both parties
want to save the marriage.”
and by the way, macdermid says some people
do change, especially after serving in a
war zone.
None of this excuses what your husband
did. Being in the military, being
deployed, is not a license to cheat --
twice. He’s a major league screw-up.
And none of this means you should stay
married. Just don’t make your decision
based on your pain. Get some help. The
military makes counseling available and
your husband should contact his unit
commander or the family services division
at his home base to tap into those
resources. Even if he refuses, go on your
own.
Meanwhile, fenton recommends the following
book that he sometimes uses with his
clients: "after the affair: healing the
pain and rebuilding trust when a partner
has been unfaithful" by janis abrahms
spring.