141 - Cheaper to Keep Her

MGTOW Sandman Quotes - Podcast tekijän mukaan Mgtow

What happens if you take the red pill when you turn forty, fifty, sixty or even seventy years old? What happens when you've already raised a family or are finishing up the process when you realize how gynocentric culture works and that your wife will never change? And that for the rest of your married life you will have to listen to her, deal with her outrageous demands and accept it otherwise you'll have to go through a messy divorce, lost more then half of your assets and most likely spend the remainder of your life explaining away to your children that you left your mother because you took the red pill and saw the light. Do you really think your children are going to forgive you for leaving their mother or for spending their inheritance on lawyers to leave your mother? Especially if there is no real reason for you to leave. So many men in this position figure out that it's just cheaper to keeper. Staying in an unhappy and unfulfilled relationship for the sake of keeping your money, your friends and your children around are fair trade offs for many men that consider leaving their wives later in life. It takes a lot of guts to leave someone after a decade or two or more of marriage. You know that you will lose a lot and what you have to gain might not be worth it. So at this point in your life like I mentioned it's "Cheaper to Keeper." Then there's the issue of grand children as well. This is yet another guilt trip to keep you from leaving. A lot of people assume that it's all about money when leaving a woman you've been married to for twenty or thirty years. A lot also has to do with the emotional toll. Imagine the guilt trips from close family members, friends, relatives and the fact that society makes you feel like you're going to die all alone. But it's not like the nursing homes and the hospitals are going to turn you away just because you're divorced. I think the real reason people say it's cheaper to keep her is because it's an excuse. You don't want to uproot your life this late in the games and start all over again. In many cases it's too late to start all over again. I pull the eject button on my last relationship after ten years because there was no future for that relationship because I wanted a family and wasn't going to get one. So it was time to leave and luckily I managed to stumble into the red pill. In my case it was more expensive to stay. I felt I could still salvage my life, have a family and meet someone new. Now I don't want that anymore. The most I feel I want at this point is a child through surrogacy. Someone to raise and provide all the emotional support I never got when I was younger. Not a child to treat like a possession or a commodity. And I'm acquainted with loss at this point in my life and am willing to let that child go and live for themselves when they don't need me anymore.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/mgtow/donationsAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy

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