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Room for online sex video chat TheePrettyNerd
Model from: us
Languages: en
Birth Date: 2000-04-26
Body Type: bodyTypeAverage
Ethnicity: ethnicityEbony
Hair color: hairColorOther
Eyes color: eyeColorBrown
Subculture: subcultureHousewives
Date: October 14, 2022
As they say, it's better to rip that bandaid off quickly rather than slowly.
You are allowed to not want a relationship where you are ignored all the time and feel sad and lonely.
It sounds like she's been nice to you in many ways and has helped you improve your life by giving you a place to live. That's great. It doesn't mean you owe it to her to stay in a relationship that doesn't make you happy.
She probably didn't do those things because she thought it would force you to stay with her forever even if you were unhappy. If she did, that would make her a huge asshole. Why would she want you to stay in a situation that isn't meeting your needs?
Ending this relationship would not be a horrible, mean, selfish act to punish someone who has helped you. Ending the relationship would be you deciding that this isn't the right situation for you.
Again: You do not owe it to her to be unhappy.
Wtf is your life lol
I just want to wish you good luck with this conversation.
I’m not going to give you relationship advice, but listen to this: I have autoimmune issues that are hard to diagnose but made drastically worse with weight gain and a sedentary lifestyle. These are diagnosed. Outside of diet and meds, losing weight is a huge part of my treatment because even the 20lv extra I’m caring is taking a huge toll. If I wasn’t being proactive about making sure I’m seeing doctors and actually trying to lose weight, I would not expect my husband to do everything you are doing for your wife. It’s too much.
You need a second medical opinion and an actual diagnosis before deciding where to go with this. What you are dealing with is absolutely not fair to you. If she doesn’t qualify for disability, it’s because she’s either not actually disabled or she is and the doc hasn’t found a diagnosis they can treat. The key here is her willingness to be proactive about her health. Is she doing whatever is in her capacity to actually help herself? Or is the onus of that also falling on you?