Failing in Marriage Does Not Mean Failing at Marriage
I was talking with my wife, and we were both thinking about why I have been so hard to handle lately. It seems like I get angry and frustrated easily most of the time, and when I do I get upset and hurt in various ways. This has been a problem for me for a long time, and was something that I did not intend to happen. I was not thinking about it at the time, and as I started to think more and more about it, it began to affect my ability to be in a relationship.
Failing At Your Relationship
Most married people who have kids struggle with marriage, while most divorced people struggle with divorce. I have been able to live with this struggle, but after two years of marriage I think it is time to try and figure out what has been going on.
About a year ago, my wife and I both thought that when divorce happened we would get to do things the same way as before. My wife thought that when she had her first baby that she would get a divorce and we would share the responsibilities of raising her children. We were wrong, in the long run it made for a better life to stay married, to make decisions together, and for us to take on the burden of the marriage at a time when I was not ready. I think that we would have done better to have both babies at the same time, but since we were already planning on having two babies in the next year, we decided we were going to put that off. That did not work out very well, in fact it was even worse than if we would have left when he was born and had to go through a second pregnancy.
How Did Failure Create Failure?
We are going to have to talk about failure. The problem with failure is that it causes the people who fail in life to become the people who fail in their relationships. This is not to say that I think that I am a failure in my marriage, but it is true that failure in one makes the person who fails in relationships more likely to fail in life.
Failure Has Many Reasons
Failure