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@Ellamo, I haven’t yet read everyone’s comments, but I have read a few of yours, and my very strong gut feeling is that you are getting scammed due to having a generous good heart and soul.

You said you and he have never actually lived together (other than occasional short visits). That makes him a part-time friend, not a loving spouse that you can rely upon.

You also said that you would never divorce him. Why not? You don’t have a husband, you have a part-time selfish leech. You need to re-think never divorcing, because even in religions it is firmly said that a husband is supposed to cleave to his wife, not his parents. Your part-time leech obviously doesn’t believe in cleaving to you. He remains firmly cleaved to his selfish parents.

If I were you, I would open my eyes to this painful situation, make a list of exact dates he ever visited YOUR HOUSE from the date you married, the exact dates he on short notice or zero notice canceled his travel plans to visit you, etc….

Then go visit a savvy experienced lawyer about getting an annulment because your part-time leech married you under false pretense. If the lawyer says that an annulment is not possible, protect all your money, home ownership, MAKE A WILL specifically mentioning that he is not to inherit from you, etc…and then file immediately for divorce.

If you stay married too long, or you don’t take his name off your bank accounts and so on, you can find yourself in a world of trouble.

I know you have been given a lot of excellent advice, most of which has probably stung you badly and shocked you, but a shock is what you need in order to get your rear in gear and fix this unsavable marriage and mess.

I agree wholeheartedly with what Bounce wrote:

“…I can tell it's going to be heartbreaking for you to accept that the way it's been for three years just isn't right.... But it's better to realize and accept that now instead of wasting any more of your good years hoping it's going to be different with this man!

I feel like God has the right person out there for all of us and this includes you Ellamo. Someone who wants to be with you every day, live in the same house as you AND build his life with you!  The longer you stay in your current marriage, it's keeping you from finding the one who can truly make you happy. I wish you all the best.” - end quote from Bounce -

We all want you to have a loving, mature full marriage with a man who is your everything, not a marriage with a part-time selfish leech which is what you are enduring right now.

Get on it! We are pulling for you!

———————

edited to add: please do not have any children with this man. That condition would tie him to you and your house and citizenship forever. Do not rely upon condoms…sneaky people since the dawn of condom-use have arranged for condoms to fail. If he thinks you really plan to leave him, he could conceivably (double-entendre) woo you full court press with romantic intimate relations, and purposely impregnate you so you will never leave. Make sure your gyno puts you on close to foolproof contraception, keep your contraceptive actions secret from him, then assuming you normally use condoms, let him continue to use a condom, and if he sneakily pricks his condom to try impregnate you, you should still be shielded and okay via your own secret contraception. You cannot be too careful!
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Ellamo, resenting them isn't the issue here really. I will say having resentment uses up energy and headspace that just makes you feel worse and adds nothing positive to your life.

I don't like to point fingers on these forums. I had some harsh comments directed toward me when I asked for help, and it hurt. So. . .

It may be that you have to acknowledge that he was not ready to marry. There is a "contract" in marriage that a couple will be there for each other, support each other, grow a life together. I am not hearing that he is doing much of this for you and you have tried over the course of 3 years to try to be together. It's not 50/50, it's 100/100 if it will work at all.

His commitment to his parents; he cannot share that same commitment with you. Without questioning culture, or family dynamics, or motivations, it seems clear he was not ready to make a commitment to marriage and all that it entails. Your choice now is whether you continue in this unorthodox and unfulfilling arrangement or say to him that clearly, he wasn't ready for the commitment, and you will relieve him of it through annulment/divorce. Perhaps when he is really ready and IF you are still available, you can talk and see if the love is still there, but for now, for your life's fulfillment, this arrangement is detrimental to you.

Do what is right for you - even the loving thing - and offer/decide to release him from this mistake you have both made. He can concentrate on his parents, and you can concentrate on moving on. I wish you well in the journey ahead.
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I am so sorry you're going through this.... I'm in a similar situation. My husband moved in with his parents so he wouldn't be alone during the day (while I'm at work) to recover from a health situation, and has yet to move back home. While he was living with his parents, his Dad declined and sadly passed, and now he's living with his Mom who cannot live independently (she's 92). My husband basically feels like he needs to do everything to take care of his Dad's affairs before he can even *think* of getting his Mom some in-home care or moving her into a nursing home. Mom, though, is already showing signs of dementia and I believe she'll eventually need to go to a memory care facility. Meanwhile...I'm left on my own. He tells me how much he misses me, but his lack of action is telling.

I came to the forum asking what to do, and everyone that's answered your question basically told me the same thing. I do worry for you that your husband has another woman (or maybe another family!) in the country where he's living. I hate ultimatums, but he needs to know this situation cannot go on indefinitely. No one deserves to be in "second place" in their own marriage. I can tell you it's left me an angry, lonely and depressed person. :(

Sending virtual hugs your way. This situation is just unfair and you (and I) need to find a way out.
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Dupedwife Oct 2023
I empathize with what you’re experiencing with your husband. It’s time for your husband to make the choice of whether he wants to be with you or whether he wants to move in and live with his mother. If you both cannot come to a compromise, then it’s time to head to divorce court.
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Your husband is just making excuses because perhaps it’s some other reason other than taking care of his parents that he does not want to come and live with you. As others here on this forum has suggested, you should hire a private investigator to check him out. If your husband is in a third-world country, trust me, finding someone to help care for his parents is quite easy to find, and paying someone to care for them is also very affordable.

DO NOT let this man USE you or string you along with his excuses. It’s time for you to give him an ultimatum that he has to choose whether he wants to be with you or with his parents. If he chooses his parents, then be strong and divorce him. There are many other fishes in the sea.
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ellamo: Your DH's (Dear Husband) priorities are skewed. He cannot be in two places at the same time. His priority is his marriage.
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Hi everyone, thank u for all ur responses, advice, & input. It really wasn't what I wanted to hear but definitely what I needed to hear.. very hard to take it all in but very helpful.
I told him we need a "break", explained why, and he did not take it well. He is still convinced he is the good guy & I'm the bad guy. He's made his choice & it's heartbreaking.
All my friends say that if they were him they'd make the trip over even just for a few days esp when the marriage is clearly about to fall apart. He however isn't budging, his parents have him wrapped around their fingers.
Oh well. Sad situation, but I'm already feeling better honestly..
Thank u all for ur support 💖
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Dupedwife Oct 2023
I’m glad that you’ve made the right decision and you are now feeling better.

Wishing you continued happiness.
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Heck no. My parents did not approve of me marring my wife. We were married 33 years until death do us part. I did not invite them to our marriage because of the hateful things my mother said. But they crashed it anyway. I did not get along with my parents and moved out at 18. I never regretted anything.
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Ellamo, I'm so glad that your decision is making you feel better.

Please plan to see a lawyer soon to discuss your options and protect yourself and your assets.

A 20 year age difference in a big hurdle to overcome in any marriage. His and his parents' expectations clearly differ from yours.

Wishing you good things for your future.
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Although a little different, I will share that I, being the only family member for my aging mother, I was always the one to 'be there for her'. She was always afraid of 'losing me' because then she would be alone. As she aged, her dependence on me became greater. Although she didn't live with me and my husband, she was a mere 20 minute drive away in her own townhome. I would get calls at all times of day and even night - the refrigerator stopped working; the furnace isn't putting out heat; she can't get the remote to work, etc etc. Each time I had to go over and fix the problem. Then as she got a lot older, the health issues came up - she was having issues breathing (she was hyperventilating but she thought she was dying); she was so dizzy she couldn't stand up from the chair (she didn't tell me that a new doctor had prescribed a new med), etc etc.

For the last 10 years of her life (she passed at 95), each and every time my husband and I tried to leave on a weekend get away or a mini vacation, some type of medical 'crisis' would come up that we would have to cancel all our plans - a couple times the ER called me as we were driving to airport (had to turn around and cancel everything - she had fallen because she had tried to move the outdoor planter by herself, or even though I would forewarn her about an upcoming trip, she would go and do something like schedule a surgery (can't tall you how many anniversary dinners or trips were missed because of this). We were going to do a 2 day quickie to Vegas - for a break - and mother called her GP to tell her that we were abandoning her and she couldn't manage on her own....there went that trip.

Mother passed 2 years ago, and all those years of stress are finally catching up to me and my health and my husband's health has deteriorated as well. The trips we wanted to take are now mere memories in a travel brochure. All our 'prime' years for enjoying life after working all our lives - gone.

There will always be an excuse, an emergency, a pressing matter, that will prevent your husband from participating in the marriage. And every time he will try to put into place additional support, it will be nixed and protested and the guilt will be heavy handed and oppressive. And unless your husband can steel himself to all this, it will be challenging to change the situation..

The argument you had is because everything is simmering away - and nothing is changing or getting resolved. Most certainly an understandable level of frustration. He needs to consider YOUR feelings, unless he has decided that his parents are his priority - at which point he has made his choice.. You are not being selfish - you want a marriage - a real marriage - not a long distance one. Even if you went where he was, things would not really change and you might even take on caregiving duties (to maybe people who won't appreciate it) to try to help him. And what if this continues for another 3, 5, 10 years or longer? But this is something he has to do and deal with.
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