Opinion Why I've Put Men On A (Possibly) Permanent Pause

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Why I've Put Men On A (Possibly) Permanent Pause​

After escaping a lengthy marriage that hosted a spectrum of abuse, I left therapy with a better understanding of why I tolerated his behavior for so long (the kids) while trying to heal a complex case of PTSD (him).

I had not been single for a couple of decades by the time I filed divorce papers. It had been a long, exhausting marriage. He wasn’t cooperating with the divorce, and the frequent trips to court were costly both dollar-wise and emotionally. I lost weight, couldn’t sleep, was terminally broke, and terminally upset. I could only afford housing on a street that bordered a ghetto. At night, that border blurred, and no one was outside except the cops.

I took a job at a college to pay bills and taught every online class I could find. I figured out how to teach ESL and worked in a community center while getting more training in the art of teaching ESL.

My new life felt foreign to me: I had to learn to cook for one, spend evenings alone for the first time in twenty-five years, and accept that the couples I had known pre-divorce had ghosted me. I started going for walks through a city park that was peopled by smiling couples. You know the type. They all looked like they were heading for a Hallmark movie casting call: holding hands, laughing, just perfect.

I would go home to my apartment, trying to forget the happily coupled folks I had just passed. I spent many hours cleaning the decades of dirt left by the previous tenant who had suffered from dementia during the last decade of her life. I found orange peels in the radiator, broken plates in the back of closets, and greeting cards from the 90’s high up on the pantry shelves.

As I cleared out the last bits of her life, I told myself this was a kind of cathartic therapy. In scrubbing and decluttering, I was creating a new life for myself. I didn’t know how to spackle or paint, but I managed, slowly, to clean, scrape, and sand the apartment into a passable space. Not beautiful, not magazine-ready, but organized and homey. It was the best I could do since I didn’t know much about home repair.

But I knew one thing: I did not want to date or be involved with anyone for a long time, if ever.

And then, about a year into my new life, I met Theo*. We began talking at a library event. He came to the next one. After the third book talk, we went out for coffee.

Theo was different — or at least I told myself that at the beginning.

Theo was a vegan yoga instructor with a job history that included counseling and nutritional guidance, and he spoke with a soft voice and began teaching me the principles of Buddhism.

We spent lots of weekend afternoons together on walks and became friends over the months. As we grew closer, our easy connection blossomed to the point where I think we both considered changing the relationship into one of greater intimacy.

Maybe?

I wasn’t particularly attracted to him physically. I probably wasn’t ready for anything more than our regular movie nights and walks to the arboretum or meetups at the local coffee shop.

But… I liked him.

One afternoon, while walking and still thinking of notching the relationship up, Theo reached for my hand. My heart began racing. It was such a simple act, but something shifted at that moment, and I didn’t feel at all afraid: I felt happy, excited even. This was a new beginning with a gentle person who made me feel accepted and seen. We said goodbye with a sweet, slow hug, and parted. That night, I could think of little else than the touch of his hand.

In the morning, dreamy from lack of sleep, I decided to wait a bit before seeing Theo again. I don’t know why. Do you know that voice that whispers things sometimes? She was nudging me to wait.

Or was it to wait? Of course, I have hindsight now; maybe that voice knew something intuitively that I didn’t want to acknowledge.

Out of character, Theo stopped by a few nights later.

All our previous meetings had been arranged via text or calls. We didn’t yet have that drop-in-any-time informality between us. Surprised to see him, he excitedly wanted to show me a movie trailer for our next movie night. He was running late for a yoga class and after planning our next Saturday movie, dashed out the door, leaving his laptop behind.

When I saw it still on my kitchen table, I closed the lid, thinking I would drop it off in the morning before picking up some groceries. I turned to write out some lesson plans, but before I sat down, that nagging voice nudged me once again.

Was there something amiss with Theo? Why was I having cautionary thoughts about him?

I waited. I couldn’t focus on any lesson plans. So, I got up and did what I am ashamed to have done, but I clicked on his search history, waiting to see pages about enlightenment open.

And that, my friends, is how I learned about the existence of torture porn. (I was naïve enough — or I was at the time — to believe that type of damage to women could not exist on the Internet. Sadly, it does.)

As I sped through his history, I noticed a theme: the women were either unconscious or bound as they were raped. I won’t give language to the torture I glimpsed.

I handed Theo his laptop when he came back, and I told him he needed to stay away from me for good and forever. He instantly denied the history. Theo insisted pornography was based on misogyny and he would never participate in such a habit. (I am sensitive to language and could not help but notice he used the word habit.) How did that history get there, I asked? Oh, get ready for this one:

My son, who was attending college in a neighboring state, has technical ability. This is true; he does. Theo explained how my son had accessed Theo’s computer and placed the reels of torture porn on his laptop.

Remotely.

That’s when I knew we would enter restraining order territory if Theo returned.

Namaste, Theo.

Deeply bothered to tears, I went to an Al-Anon meeting that night.

I had been to them before. I always found support in their circles, and not having much of a social life (okay, none), I went into the church basement and told the group how I seemed programmed to pick men with addictions, be it alcohol or pornography.

In their usual, wonderful Al-Anon way, they listened without judgment. There was one man in particular, an older man who you could tell had been very handsome in his youth, who leaned in as I spoke. Afterward, a few women approached me, and we chatted. They encouraged me to come back to the meetings and I said I'd give it some thought.

Then the older man came over to me. Without warning, he embraced me tightly and whispered, “I have dated actresses and models and even a princess.” I tried to push him away politely. (I know, why politely?) He hugged me even tighter when he sensed my backing away.

I am sure this man had dated many women. But Al-Anon is not Tinder, and how could he be squeezing me like that after what I had just narrated about Theo?

I backed away with purpose this time; still, he tried coming at me. I wrangled away from his grasp and never returned.

Theo and the older man had taught me two separate lessons. With Theo, I recognized something existed in me that believed once I began healing, I needed to be in a romantic relationship. It was some idea I had of completion. I wanted to be one of those radiant couples in the park; it was nearly a reflex.

And with the man from Al-Anon, I learned that in hugging me, he saw an opportunity and me as an object. He had no regard for the betrayal and loss I was feeling. I took his behavior as an omen. No longer would I be able to tolerate the views of men like this, the ones who failed to see women as human first.

In a way, both these men led me to the path I am on now. I have used the time and energy I would have spent on a romantic relationship to make my apartment pretty cozy, get a better job, and return to writing. I am now beginning a relationship with a person I forgot: the woman I was before being a wife and mother defined my entire identity. And so far, things are working out.

*names changed
 
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I’ll be honest, but I did actually enjoy the time I intentionally didn’t date anyone between the breakup with my ex and dating my husband. I got a chance to really work on myself and figure out what I wanted in life. There’s no need to rush into relationships, and I think that intentionally putting relationships on pause can be beneficial if it involves self reflection and self improvement. This goes for both men and women.
 
I swear every other post on the /r/TwoXChromosomes subreddit is just this article. "Why are men so terrible, why is my husband so useless, why is all the friction in my marriages and relationships never my fault?"
 
I'll give partial credit, this wasn't another "every man on Tinder just wants sex, UGH" article. But there's also nothing in here that warrants an article, a blog post, or even a chat over tea with friends. There's no insight, no relation to broader ideas or trends, no bit of advice to glean or even general experiences to empathize with.

She took an anecdote she thought might be interesting (it wasn't) and spun out an overwrought diary entry around it. What's the point?
 
I'll give partial credit, this wasn't another "every man on Tinder just wants sex, UGH" article. But there's also nothing in here that warrants an article, a blog post, or even a chat over tea with friends. There's no insight, no relation to broader ideas or trends, no bit of advice to glean or even general experiences to empathize with.

She took an anecdote she thought might be interesting (it wasn't) and spun out an overwrought diary entry around it. What's the point?
ass pats
why else complain on the internet?
 
I didn’t know how to spackle or paint
How do you not know how to spackle or paint it's literally the easiest shit to do. She also said she had to learn how to cook too like... you didn't know how to cook at any point before the divorce? None of these things are difficult to do, what's your excuse?

Taking this at face value though, I do feel a little bad for her. First time being on her own in 25 years so she probably rushed into a new relationship before she was ready out of loneliness. She mentions at the start of the article that she left therapy but maybe if she'd kept going she wouldn't have had to write this article.
 
(Dumping him quickly over it was the wisest decision she had ever made if she's not making it up.)
Please, she called him porn addicted because she found out he watched porn, and to others no less. A very easy way to tell if a woman is shit or not is if she labels any amount of porn watching as an addiction. Thousand kiwi likes that the "torture porn" was absolute basic shit.
 
Just another boring empty egg carton denying responsibility for anything she does 🥱 what else is new. Some of these boring cunts do get into lesbian relationships but aren’t actually attracted to women so it’s instant lesbian bed death. Until she decides to date a man and suddenly she’s not a lesbian anymore. I’ve seen this amongst a few women in their 40s.
 
My husband was emotionally abusive= he forgot my birthday 4 years ago and only apologized after I reminded him it was my birthday.

Torture porn= fifty shades of grey

The story in a nutshell:

My husband was emotionally abusive (see above) I divorced him and now live in a shitty apartment next to niggers because all my value as a human being was as a wife and mother and I have no actual skills because even though my son is grown and out of the house I am effectively an emotionally needy paperweight instead of an adult woman with a job or purpose; which I never realized as my husband paid the mortgage. I honestly never even knew he paid mortgage, I figured he was working in the salt mine 60 hours a week for fun and the house magically paid itself off and my credit card was also magic because every time I used it the clerk said I paid them? I felt abandoned after reading nonsense online from other dumb cunts just like myself about how I have been abused for decades and never even knew it. My therapist totally agreed I am the victim and not my ex husband and she told me I need years of therapy to overcome the abuse I received and she was so nice she even gave me a half price deal if I paid $5,000 upfront for the next year of my therapy sessions once a week. I then went through a man's laptop I was dating who trusted me not to violate his privacy and found pornography I was offended by but that's not interesting so I made up the name "Theo" and the "torture/rape" part and the part about him blaming my son which totally happened. I also diagnosed a man a barely knew as having a pornography addiction because that's what it's called when a man has more than one porn site in his browsing history. I went to Al-anon meeting because I need to trauma dump and be the victim out loud to strangers and then a man hugged me and said something boastful which was practically rape if you think about it. I am writing this because I am angry at men because that is easier than recognizing I made a massive fucking mistake divorcing my husband and moving to niggerville. I am even angrier I have to work for a living like a functional adult, I hope this story inspires all women just like me to realize all men are scum, and a husband who asks you to turn the TV volume down so he can sleep is actually emotionally abusive because misery fucking loves company.


Someone email her a link to this thread.
 
“Torture Porn” is Eli Roth shit and maybe the Saw films. Not “generic as hell Kink.com video involving loose rope bondage”.

Woman sounds fat.
 
All our previous meetings had been arranged via text or calls. We didn’t yet have that drop-in-any-time informality between us. Surprised to see him, he excitedly wanted to show me a movie trailer for our next movie night. He was running late for a yoga class and after planning our next Saturday movie, dashed out the door, leaving his laptop behind.

When I saw it still on my kitchen table, I closed the lid, thinking I would drop it off in the morning before picking up some groceries. I turned to write out some lesson plans, but before I sat down, that nagging voice nudged me once again.

Was there something amiss with Theo? Why was I having cautionary thoughts about him?

I waited. I couldn’t focus on any lesson plans. So, I got up and did what I am ashamed to have done, but I clicked on his search history, waiting to see pages about enlightenment open.
Assuming any of this is true, how disgusting to invade this man's privacy like that. Also what retard doesn't put a password on their shit or gives it away that early on?
 
I’ll be honest, but I did actually enjoy the time I intentionally didn’t date anyone between the breakup with my ex and dating my husband. I got a chance to really work on myself and figure out what I wanted in life. There’s no need to rush into relationships, and I think that intentionally putting relationships on pause can be beneficial if it involves self reflection and self improvement. This goes for both men and women.
Does your husband know you post femcel bait threads on kiwi farms?
 
Assuming any of this is true, how disgusting to invade this man's privacy like that. Also what retard doesn't put a password on their shit or gives it away that early on?
Passwords are annoying and I assume if someone has physical access to the machine they can get in anyway. The real question is how did this poor guy not know about private browsing or clearing his history?
 
Here's the thing though: she's probably got the same problem as me. Which is: it's not that we don't know where the good men are gone. The good men are married to other women, and everyone left is single for good fucking reason.
That goes for men and women though. Everyone who's unmarried at 40-50 is unmarried for a damn good reason, barring widows. The reality is though men found out the solution. Date younger women. Men can date younger women. Women cannot date younger men as easily for two main reasons: kids (self explanatory) and maturity. Women value maturity more than men. Its a lot harder for women to maintain a long term relationship with a younger man than it is for a man with a younger woman.
 
Seems more like incel bait based on the comments the articles get. It just makes me glad I’m not on the market anymore because guys online can be really disappointing.
I blame the narcissistic generations of women for the current dating market. Feminism and it's consequences have been devastating for the community.

I also blame social media for creating these narcissists. No teen with self esteem issues is gonna survive having the drugs of validation and attention shoved down their throat.
 
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