>I am going to offer another point of view. I am probably of
>your mom's generation and have 2 grown sons. Our marriage has
>been basically happy but sometimes I fantasize about leaving
>it. Just about all of my friends who are of the same age
>express the same feeling. It is just that you were the mom
>and the wife and now you would really like an opportunity to
>be yourself. Two posts mention about their parents living in
>homes that their fathers love but that their moms hated. What
>does that tell you about decisions that were made? Believe me
>this doesn't happen overnight. These women have been
>internalizing their feelings for years. Also you can discuss
>all you want with your DH about changing certain things in a
>relationship but men don't like to change whatever it is that
>is bugging you. Many of us went from our parents' homes to
>our marriages without ever having an opportunity to live by
>ourselves and we would like that chance. There are many of us
>who have only had one serious relationship in our lives and
>would like a chance for a different relationship. One thing I
>will bet is that everyone of these women have felt "taken for
>granted". We feel sorry for dad we feel sorry for ourselves
>but has anyone considered how mom has been feeling?
Someone once said to me 'Nobody, not even the kids, know what's REALLY going on in a marriage but the two people who are in it.' My late mother spoke a lot about dreams deferred and feeling... caught. She got married to her first husband to get out of her abusive father's house. When he came home from WWII "a stranger" they divorced and she hooked-up with my dad. Both of her husbands were good men and great dads (she had a son & daughter with each of her two husbands, the children from marriage #1 raised by HER parents). All my mother ever wanted was to go places but she never got to. When I graduated high school, having made no plans for my future, I joined the Navy because there was nothing else and because it's what my mom had always wanted to do. She insisted I'd "Go places" and "See things" and she was right. She was such an amazing woman but she never got to fulfill a single dream in all of her 79 years. It wasn't anyone's fault, just as it's really not anyone's fault in any marriage, really. In my mother's day nobody ever asked "What do you want to do with your life?" You got married and made babies. Period. And you stayed where you were, abandoning your dreams or exploding when it finally became unbearable. There's just a point where many people say to themselves "This can't be all there is."
But Allison, and others here, are proof, it really is Hell on the kids, even when they aren't little anymore. Wouldn't it be great if we could all be happy without hurting anyone else? And the weirdest thing now is EVERY woman I know feels trapped at work and WANTS to stay home with the kids. I'm 47, single, childless (by choice - because I can barely take care of myself). Moms (including my late mother) think I've got it made, while I envy them their families. They think I have all this freedom but, on a single income? Yea, right. Looks are deceiving and the grass is always greener.