I'm so glad you're in a relationship like that, Meeko! I've learned the hard way that adults with my husband's condition create a "parent/child" dynamic in their marriages, turning themselves into a passive member of the relationship.
And others grew up in more traditional families where the woman is basically a housekeeper/nanny and has no income, no access to bank accounts, no say in how the family operates. Back when my husband worked as a bank teller, he saw a lot of older widows and women whose husbands were in nursing homes; they had never even written a check before or paid a bill, and were helpless.
I think, in order to have a healthy marriage, it must take two people who were healthy to begin with--not in the relationship in order to control another person or to have another person control everything for them--and who put in a lot of effort with the mindset that they'll always be working to improve themselves. It's easy to get into a routine and build resentment without realizing your partner is also suffering.
And others grew up in more traditional families where the woman is basically a housekeeper/nanny and has no income, no access to bank accounts, no say in how the family operates. Back when my husband worked as a bank teller, he saw a lot of older widows and women whose husbands were in nursing homes; they had never even written a check before or paid a bill, and were helpless.

I think, in order to have a healthy marriage, it must take two people who were healthy to begin with--not in the relationship in order to control another person or to have another person control everything for them--and who put in a lot of effort with the mindset that they'll always be working to improve themselves. It's easy to get into a routine and build resentment without realizing your partner is also suffering.
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