Opinion When I Turned 40, I Realized I Had Emotionally Outgrown My Husband

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When I Turned 40, I Realized I Had Emotionally Outgrown My Husband​

I walked into the bedroom and found my husband watching television. It was Saturday afternoon and our children had games to get to. All of us were ready to get into the car.

"It’s time to go," I said.

"No one asked me what I wanted to do today," said my husband.

I was aggravated by his response.

"You decided what you were doing today," I said, "when you became a father."
He was annoyed but got up to leave with us.

I shocked him by having such a rapid no-nonsense response to his childishness.

Typically, I would simply plead with him to be rational or do the right thing.

But I was nearing my 40th birthday and I had lost my patience.

Not long after, my husband began a weekly football escapade.

It was like being married to a frat boy.

He couldn't miss watching football with his friends and he had to get wasted. Let me frame this properly. I met my husband in college. There wasn’t much to do in Scranton, Pennsylvania besides drink.

My husband was drinking more than my college boyfriend. And they were the same guy.​

I was thinking how is this possible?

Around this time, my boys and I were in a car accident. The cars in front of me stopped and I stopped behind them. We lived in a rural area outside of Washington, D.C. with winding country roads.

I saw a car coming in my rearview mirror.

I had only one thought: All three of my boys were in the car with me.

The old man driving the car hit us and threw us into the oncoming lane. The side of my front bumper got caught in the car ahead of us. It was a double-impact accident.

I was so relieved the car seats had stayed secure.

I kept it together until the firemen arrived and I spotted a friend of my brother’s. It was like stimulus and response. My brother was a firefighter too. A familiar face allowed the tears to flow because I was so relieved my children were okay.

They urged me to go to the hospital but I refused.

They told me that the force with which we were hit mandated getting checked out. At the very least, they explained that since I braced for impact after seeing the car coming toward us, combined with the speed, meant I would have trouble moving in the days ahead.

I called my husband and he showed no concern for his family. He finished his workday like any other day and arrived home at his regular time.

The next day I could barely move.

It seemed the firefighters were correct. I got through as best I could but I was unable to carry our son upstairs. He was nearly a year and more than twenty pounds.

"I don’t think you can go away this weekend," I said.

"What do you mean?" said my husband.

He had an Arizona football weekend planned with his buddies.

"I’m afraid I can’t take care of our kids," I said. "I’m having a difficult time moving and as the day has gone on it’s getting more difficult. The firefighters tried to tell me this would happen because of the speed of impact but I didn’t believe it."

My husband eventually canceled his trip. But he was not happy.

You would think he would have been grateful his family was okay.

I walked past him in the garage the next day as he was sweeping. He was swiping that broom so furiously that it was hard not to notice his anger.

It was a full-on embarrassing and lacking self-respect adult tantrum.

"What’s wrong?" I said.

"I’m disappointed," he said. "I wanted to go away."

It was one of the first times I found my husband absolutely unattractive. It was gross seeing a grown man need to announce his mood to gain attention. Our children didn't even do that.

Things were piling up.

Emotionally my husband and I were no longer on a level playing field.

I wanted to shout, "Grow up! You are blessed your family is okay."

But all my husband could focus on was a missed boys' weekend.

At this point, I was emotionally outgrowing my husband.​

Was I conscious of this? Not entirely. I just felt annoyed and aggravated. I felt shocked and turned off. But I was still deeply engrained in our less-than-healthy relationship.

But I did remember something someone told me years before. It was floating in my memory. It was disappointing because I realized what my young self once discarded is actually coming true.

"You know," said my sister. "A lot of marriages end because one person emotionally outgrows the other."

I deposited this wisdom in the recesses of my mind.

I was in my twenties and newly married. I didn't think it applied to me.

I now realized it did apply to me. I was nearing the age of 40 before I completely digested this. Before I was forced to pluck it from my memory. In between, wanting to yell at my husband to, “Grow up!”

In truth, you could simply say I outgrew my husband. It’s not even necessary to say I emotionally outgrew him.

He wasn’t maturing at the same pace.​

There’s actually a bit of controversy about whether or not you can emotionally outgrow your spouse. As a relationship columnist, I’ve spent more than a decade in the counseling and research of love, relationships, marriage, and divorce.

Emotionally outgrowing your spouse is definitely recognized.

At the same time, there’s a mitigating factor.

Are you really outgrowing your spouse? Or are they simply who they were all along?​

And you have matured enough or evolved or grown enough to recognize this is who they always were. In other words, you haven’t necessarily outgrown them because you both aren’t evolving at the same emotional maturity.

One of you hasn’t been stunted while the other grew.

You are both who you always were — only you’ve matured enough to recognize you’ve outgrown your spouse.​

I’m not gonna lie, even as a relationship expert it’s a lot to take in.

I’d have to say I agree with the latter. My husband and I weren’t moving through life and marriage together with one of us suddenly stunting our growth.

We weren’t both suddenly becoming different people.

We were both who we had always been. I just recognized I married someone who wasn’t fully an adult.

He was childlike if he didn’t get his way. He hadn’t evolved into full maturity. It appeared he had because he was professionally successful but he didn’t take accountability for all aspects of his life.

My husband was never going to move forward with me.

We were 40 years old. It wasn’t my responsibility to tell him to be responsible.

Sadly, once I realized I had emotionally outgrown my husband I remained in our marriage for too long. It’s an unhealthy relationship phenomenon that the longer we stay in an unhealthy marriage the more difficult it is to get out.

We get worn down.

We make excuses and we nobly (supposedly) attempt to rescue our marriage.

I wish my twenty-something newlywed self had listened more intently the day my sister shared some undeniable wisdom.
 
I've known multiple women like this who divorced not-great not-horrible husbands, then married someone MUCH worse.
They put their kids through hell with their new stepfather, then end up divorcing the second husband after the kids are already fucked up.

This bitch will go through a series of "why won't he commit??" almost-boyfriends, then either give up or marry an emotionally abusive alcoholic who can't keep a job.
 
Or she broke him. I see a lot of men start off as motivated, dutiful fathers. Then they are constantly undermined and overriden by mom, have no authority or respect in the house and eventually give up because there is less fighting in the house that way.

Happens to a lot of not-great-not-terrible guys. A lot of women feel inexplicably driven to push every limit as far as it can go, and not every man is the stern alpha type. Like there's something in her that needs to try and either break her husband, or he breaks her. Some guys just want to be nice and get along, and the woman pushes it and pushes it and pushes it until one day, she goes too far, attacking, damaging, or breaking something that really mattered, and you can't unscramble that egg. He can't ever see her the same way after The Incident, whatever it was.
 
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Happens to a lot of not-great-not-terrible guys. A lot of women feel inexplicably driven to push every limit as far as it can go, and not every man is the stern alpha type. Like there's something in her that needs to try and either break her husband, or he breaks her. Some guys just want to be nice and get along, and the woman pushes it and pushes it and pushes it until one day, she goes too far, attacking, damaging, or breaking something that really mattered, and you can't unscramble that egg. He can't ever see her the same way after The Incident, whatever it was.
I rated this a winner because this is pretty much the norm in marriages these days. My wife will pull this shit too and I know when I’m getting shit tested. So I have to put her in her place, which is what she wants, and I’m wishing that my evening wasn’t ruined because she wanted to feel some tingles at the expense of what I was hoping for a relaxing evening.
 
My wife will pull this shit too and I know when I’m getting shit tested. So I have to put her in her place, which is what she wants, and I’m wishing that my evening wasn’t ruined because she wanted to feel some tingles at the expense of what I was hoping for a relaxing evening.
I know I've addressed this before, but y'all niggas be fucking crazy for putting up with this shit at all, even if you "win". Pussy ain't good enough to tolerate a grown-ass woman who acts like a disobedient child her whole life.
 
I rated this a winner because this is pretty much the norm in marriages these days. My wife will pull this shit too and I know when I’m getting shit tested. So I have to put her in her place, which is what she wants, and I’m wishing that my evening wasn’t ruined because she wanted to feel some tingles at the expense of what I was hoping for a relaxing evening.

And it's happened because legally, men have been stripped of all authority in the home. If you tell her "no," there is the chance, no matter how slight, that she'll call a lawyer and ruin your life (and hers, and the kids'). So you have to figure out how to say no, but also determine how nuts she is. Hell, a friend of mine divorced her husband out of pure FOMO. She even told me, he hadn't done anything, she just freaked out one day that maybe she wasn't living her best life, maybe the universe had something better for her, and maybe she was missing it by settling for him. So she called an attorney. There was no way for him to win. Women have the right to be completely retarded and blow up the core building block of civilization because Muh Equality. And it's obvious this isn't working for women. They're mentally ill, they're obese, and they're drinking themselves to death.

I know I've addressed this before, but y'all niggas be fucking crazy for putting up with this shit at all, even if you "win". Pussy ain't good enough to tolerate a grown-ass woman who acts like a disobedient child her whole life.

Women never stop acting childish, see the chart below. Girls mature earlier than boys, but they also stop maturing a lot sooner. You can't be happy at all in marriage unless you accept that what we call "adulthood" is really just "manhood," and women never grow into it, because they're women. If what you want is an equal partner, go start a business with another man. Women are just women. They bring their own sort of goodness into your life, but they're never men.

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Women are just women. They bring their own sort of goodness into your life
Guess I'll have to take your word for it, but this always comes off like Stockholm syndrome cope, especially right after you get done pontificating about how easily a woman can completely ruin your life and the frivolous, capricious reasons they'll have for doing so.
 
Guess I'll have to take your word for it, but this always comes off like Stockholm syndrome cope, especially right after you get done pontificating about how easily a woman can completely ruin your life and the frivolous, capricious reasons they'll have for doing so.

If I tell you just the bad things about dogs, they'll sound like retarded little poop factories who destroy your shoes and make it impossible to keep a garden in the back yard.
 
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