Young husband regrets marrying older wife
Eight years ago I married a woman who is 10 years older than me. At the time I was certain about my decision. I admired her wisdom, her stability, and the connection we shared. I thought I was ready to commit to her and the life we envisioned together, despite the differences in our age and life stages. As time has passed, however, I’ve started to feel regret. Our goals, interests, and energy levels have begun to drift apart. What once felt exciting and grounding now feels like a source of tension and distance. I’ve realised that I may have overlooked some important differences when we first got together, or perhaps I wasn’t fully honest with myself about what I wanted in a lifelong partner.
I feel guilty even admitting this. She is a kind and supportive person, and I know she loves me deeply. But I can’t ignore the growing sense that we are no longer compatible in the ways that matter most. Worse, she has given me only one child, and I want more, and she can’t have any. I worry about hurting her or being seen as selfish for wanting something different at this stage in my life. I don’t know how to have that conversation without causing significant pain, and I’m unsure whether my feelings are a phase or a sign that I need to make a difficult but necessary change.
So you married a woman 10 years your senior and now you’re feeling the factors of your age difference. Bro! To change the “deal” now is to “defraud” her. You say you were “certain about your decision”. It isn’t right to now say that you’ve become uncertain, and now certain that this is no longer what you want. Life and time are the most valuable commodity we’ve got. And it seems she’s invested hers into you. Hold up!
I hear you and perceive the challenge you’re facing. But the reality is marriage really is “big people’s business” and has consequences.
To leave her now would be very unfair to her, unless she also wants a change. But if not, what will she do now that she’s older, and you’re heading off into the sunset to chase your next “certainty”! She’s had a child with you, and I’m certain she’s invested in you and helped you become who you are now. I know there are those that think that you deserve to do whatever feels best for you. But when you get married, as the Bible says, “The two become one” (See Mark 10:8-9). You have to think of and do what’s best for both of you!
My advice:
Speak to her: Let her know how you are feeling and what your challenges are. Let her know that you want to try some new things that might help you feel differently. Then be creative!
Refuel the marriage: Find novel ways to fire up what you have. Do new things together — travel to new places, work on a new business project, work out, learn something new. Seek to spend more time together. The hope is that you will remember the person you were so certain about and fall in love deeply again.
Hang out with friends: Make sure you are doing activities with peers. Play a sport, have a weekly guy’s night out, take up a social project, burn energy. Spend time productively with decent friends.
Consider adopting: You want another child — there are beautiful children in state care waiting, wanting and praying for parents. Be the answered to their prayers. Adoption is a powerful opportunity to honourably have the child that “you chose”.
Get help: Schedule counselling sessions so that you both can stay accountable to the goal of meeting each other’s needs. There are exercises and tools to be deployed that can make the changes happening more tolerable and even adventurous, in every way.
Honour your younger self, that guy that appreciated and loved her as she was. I pray for your happiness and God’s guidance for you both.
Get on The Counsellor’s Couch with Rev Christopher Brodber, who is a counsellor and minister of religion. E-mail questions to allwoman@jamaicaobserver.com.