BaronPete
Jaw Harp Troubadour
A few comments before I start:
1) I'm not a commercial pilot.
2) I'm not depressed.
3) I'm married without children.
I realize this may be an awkward time to bring up such questions with the Germanwings tragedy, but what options does one have regarding family counseling without jepordizing their medical? Counseling may not even be the right word. As I mentioned above, I'm not depressed, but have been having some thoughts on the current trajectory of my marriage and how it intertwines with career and life ambitions.
The seemingly obvious answer would be marriage counseling, but I haven't pulled that trigger yet. My primary concern is that my wife, who I DO consider to be my best friend, and I seem to have differing paths on how we want to pursue our lives. We've been together for 7 years and married for nearly 4. I read somewhere once that the three biggest causes for divorce are money, kids and religion. I fully believe that people continue to grow as they age and life experiences shape them and I feel like I'm growing apart from her or, at the very least, will be responsible for her being unable to fulfill her goals.
She wants kids; I don't (yet, at least)
She wants to pursue certain lifestyles; I don't. (Several layers to this onion)
She needs XYZ to pursue her career; those aren't conducive for my reaching my career goals.
She's been extremely supportive of my flying ambitions and the financial strain that it can cause. I guess what I'm most worried about is dragging her along while I pursue a career only to end up ruining her own right to pursue happiness.
I hate that we didn't talk about these sorts of things more when we dated, but how often does that happen? "I'm in love with you, but the rational decision based on XYZ is for us to cut ties right now. Kthxbye."
I'm not looking for an "out" and I suppose this can come off as selfish, but I mostly just want to get it off my chest and say it outloud without some doc trying to prescribe someone Prozac. Parents are usually great for advice, but they'd just worry. Sadly, I don't have a truly close friend these days that I would lay this stuff out for (other than my wife).
Lastly, I realize it's unfair to keep these types of things away from your partner, but I do fully intend to involve her in my feelings when I get them straight.
Thanks for reading?
1) I'm not a commercial pilot.
2) I'm not depressed.
3) I'm married without children.
I realize this may be an awkward time to bring up such questions with the Germanwings tragedy, but what options does one have regarding family counseling without jepordizing their medical? Counseling may not even be the right word. As I mentioned above, I'm not depressed, but have been having some thoughts on the current trajectory of my marriage and how it intertwines with career and life ambitions.
The seemingly obvious answer would be marriage counseling, but I haven't pulled that trigger yet. My primary concern is that my wife, who I DO consider to be my best friend, and I seem to have differing paths on how we want to pursue our lives. We've been together for 7 years and married for nearly 4. I read somewhere once that the three biggest causes for divorce are money, kids and religion. I fully believe that people continue to grow as they age and life experiences shape them and I feel like I'm growing apart from her or, at the very least, will be responsible for her being unable to fulfill her goals.
She wants kids; I don't (yet, at least)
She wants to pursue certain lifestyles; I don't. (Several layers to this onion)
She needs XYZ to pursue her career; those aren't conducive for my reaching my career goals.
She's been extremely supportive of my flying ambitions and the financial strain that it can cause. I guess what I'm most worried about is dragging her along while I pursue a career only to end up ruining her own right to pursue happiness.
I hate that we didn't talk about these sorts of things more when we dated, but how often does that happen? "I'm in love with you, but the rational decision based on XYZ is for us to cut ties right now. Kthxbye."
I'm not looking for an "out" and I suppose this can come off as selfish, but I mostly just want to get it off my chest and say it outloud without some doc trying to prescribe someone Prozac. Parents are usually great for advice, but they'd just worry. Sadly, I don't have a truly close friend these days that I would lay this stuff out for (other than my wife).
Lastly, I realize it's unfair to keep these types of things away from your partner, but I do fully intend to involve her in my feelings when I get them straight.
Thanks for reading?