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	<title>Couples &#8211; The Not Wife Life</title>
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	<description>The highs, lows and crazy brain ramblings of an unmarried military spouse</description>
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		<title>The Crazy World of Dating</title>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[TheNotWife]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sun, 12 Mar 2023 00:37:47 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Life]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Couples]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>Our 17 year old recently discovered that her dad and I met online and she was &#8216;amused, with a hint of confused&#8217;. She asked, &#8220;Why online? Why can&#8217;t you just meet people &#8216;normally&#8217;?.&#8221; Now I was the one finding it odd, as this was coming from someone whose entire generation lives online! I don&#8217;t know about you, but how many times have you been out somewhere and randomly bumped into someone who might just be the love of your life?! I&#8217;m pretty sure that only happens in films (do let me know if you met that way!). I asked her how her dream meeting would go and she reeled off what could have been a scene from a RomCom. She said she&#8217;d like to be standing in line for a coffee and have the man of her dreams bump into her, causing her to drop her pile of books on the floor, which he would then, as the gentleman, pick up, and their eyes would meet. The End. Sounds lovely, doesn&#8217;t it?! So how do people meet &#8216;normally&#8217;, as my lovely step-daughter puts it? Well, the obvious one is meeting in a bar/pub/club, right? That&#8217;s the stereotypical place to find a date, isn&#8217;t it? But how many of us approach someone in said bar and end up life-long partners? (Again, do let me know if this is you!). Particularly in a time that appears to be labelling men as all sorts if they dare so much as to pay a lady a compliment&#8230;but let&#8217;s not get into that. Besides, bars and nightclubs are a far cry from the dance halls of yesteryear where our grandparent&#8217;s generation would have met. Society has also changed over the last couple of decades with the ever-growing technological world at our finger tips. People no longer need to make small talk at a bus stop, or on a train. It&#8217;s so easy to be listening to a podcast, or an audio book, or catching up with emails, or updating social media, that people aren&#8217;t passing the time with one another socially. I remember a taxi journey home from work at 5am, about 14 years ago or so. I had the most fascinating conversation with the driver about the political situation in Egypt at that time, and I thoroughly enjoyed it! (I&#8217;m totally boring, I know!) But, it&#8217;s those types of spontaneous interactions that fall away when technology moves in to fill those gaps. Then there&#8217;s your work place, which although can be great for meeting someone you have things in common with, it can end up being incredibly awkward, especially if you don&#8217;t work out. Once upon a time, my work place also happened to be a nightclub, and trust me, dating and breaking it off with someone you work with, whilst practically living in a venue with alcohol to drown your sorrows, isn&#8217;t a good mix. Of course the upside to dating in your social circle, or within your workplace is that it gives you an opportunity to see one another in your &#8216;natural habitat&#8217;, shall we say: witness how one another behaves without the pressures of it being a date, or trying to impress anyone. This is something I think online dating doesn&#8217;t have: the ability to get to know one another from afar&#8230;but not in a stalker kinda way, just in an admirer sense. In my view, online dating brings its own pressures to showcase the best bits, or the highlight reel of your life. The perfect version of you. It&#8217;s said that people make an instant judgement when they see someone and that&#8217;s obviously what dating apps like Tinder are based on. You see a picture or three, and a few lines of writing, and make your decision to swipe one way, or the other. So let&#8217;s be honest, in that few seconds that you have to show who you are, you&#8217;re only going to put your best photos and a glowing write up, aren&#8217;t you? No one wants to highlight their flaws, do they? Could you imagine some people&#8217;s profile if they wrote their reality on their bio?! &#8220;Bit of a nag, takes forever to get ready, will Facebook stalk your ex-girlfriend and can&#8217;t cook.&#8221; Or, &#8220;Ladies man, likes to flirt, will not respond to texts and leaves dirty pants on the floor &#8211; wash that love&#8221;. (Let me just point out that these are entirely fictional and not based on any real people. Any likeness is a coincidence!) But you get my point. So perhaps online dating is less genuine to begin with? I thought I&#8217;d give it a go&#8230; In 2015 after the break up of a long term relationship the previous year, I was living in the ar*e end of nowhere, working 13hr shifts at the local hospital, so my opportunity for for meeting someone socially was limited. I occasionally visited the village pub with my neighbour, but let&#8217;s be honest, anyone you meet in your local has probably dated six others in the village, and no one wants exes on their doorstep, do they?! Online dating seemed the way to go. It was a bit crazy to begin with. I started getting messages from all kinds of people. Many of whom I had absolutely no interest in, whatsoever. The Internet is a weird place! From that experience, I moved platforms to one where you can only connect with others if you &#8216;match&#8217; and that seemed to make much more sense to me. Filter out all the nonsense and be introduced to people who are interested in, and are looking for, similar things to yourself. In summer of 2015, (pre-not-husband) I began seeing a guy who was also in the forces (I don&#8217;t have a type, honest!) He was being posted to America, so we quit whilst we were ahead, and called it a day after a couple of months. After a month or so, I had another little look to see what other fish there were in the sea, and along came my now not-husband. Here I&#8217;ll add a mildly amusing story. When it came to visiting my not-husband on camp in those early days, he told me how I&#8217;d have to go to the pass office and have my photo taken, take my ID, blah-blah, as I had not been before. Of course, I had to confess all at this point! I was already on the system as the previous guy was on the same base. Because of this, I&#8217;m pretty sure he thought I was just a serial military-man dater. Let me add to that, one flies helicopters, and the other fixes them. (It also turned out that they were living in opposite blocks on camp) It was a total coincidence, I promise! But I do believe in everything happening for a reason so perhaps that was just the trial run pushing me to where I needed to be? Who knows?! My not-husband had joined the crazy world of online dating after the breakup of his marriage and unfortunately landed himself with me! When using the filters online, I had always gone for the &#8216;without children&#8217; option because I just wasn&#8217;t interested in taking on a family (or anyone else&#8217;s &#8216;baggage&#8217; &#8211; read that as &#8216;ex-wife&#8217;). For some reason, I hadn&#8217;t selected that option this time round, and I &#8216;matched&#8217; with my not-husband who had 2 children from said marriage. At the time, I was chatting to him and one other; a doctor without children (or an ex-wife) but luckily for my not-husband, something just clicked with him and I binned off the doctor. The Teenage World of Dating&#8230;. As my two stepdaughters are now of an age where they themselves are dating (15 &#38; 17), I was curious to hear their take on it. Currently for them, it&#8217;s still very much &#8216;people you meet at school&#8217; or the &#8216;my friend likes your friend&#8217; approach, but I asked them about the future and their thoughts on using the internet for finding love. Miss Seventeen is adamant she will never use online dating! I have noted our conversation and told her I&#8217;ll remind her of it in a few years time when she&#8217;s swiping her way through suitors! For now she has a steady boyfriend she met in school and they&#8217;re now in college together. However, I found it really weird to hear someone of her generation so against an online based service, when everything they do seems to be online, including their entire school day. (I despise this! But that&#8217;s a rant for another day.) Technology is a huge part of their world, but perhaps that&#8217;s exactly why she&#8217;s opposed to it? The art of human connection is such a personal thing, perhaps it is more authentic and natural to begin a relationship by meeting in person? Yet some people are not very good at the whole social interaction thing, especially not in a romantic sense. Anxiety makes sure of that! So perhaps for those people, the removal of those pressures is actually creating stronger connections, by providing the opportunity to get to know one another better, without self-confidence or social skills in the mix. In my old job, one of my clients &#8211; a lady in her &#8216;twilight years&#8217; we&#8217;ll call them &#8211; told me a wonderful story of how she met her husband, many moons ago. As a young lady, her mother forbid her from attending a local dance hall, &#8220;because that&#8217;s where all those squaddies hang out&#8221;. Well, I don&#8217;t know about you, but that sounds like a great place to be! She thought so too. Her and her sister snuck out and visited said dance, where she met a lovely young RAF man. A week later, he asked her to marry him and she accepted! (Much to her mother&#8217;s horror, of course!) BUT, decades later, here I am sitting with her, she has severe dementia and the aforementioned RAF man out at an aviation lecture for the evening. It just goes to show, even when your mind is slowly letting you down, it&#8217;s sometimes the simplest of things that stay with you forever! So perhaps the way in which we meet people has a longer lasting impact than we think. Dating comes in so many forms these days and at so many different stages of people&#8217;s lives. Couples divorce, spouses pass away long before their time, and some people choose to stay single, only looking for love in later years. Whatever your situation, dating can be a daunting prospect. It can also be an exciting one too. Online, offline, or not at all &#8211; the choice is yours! Over and out, The Not Wife</p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/dating/">The Crazy World of Dating</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk">The Not Wife Life</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[
<p>Our 17 year old recently discovered that her dad and I met online and she was &#8216;amused, with a hint of confused&#8217;. She asked, &#8220;Why online? Why can&#8217;t you just meet people &#8216;normally&#8217;?.&#8221;  Now I was the one finding it odd, as this was coming from someone whose entire generation lives online!</p>



<p>I don&#8217;t know about you, but how many times have you been out somewhere and randomly bumped into someone who might just be the love of your life?! I&#8217;m pretty sure that only happens in films (do let me know if you met that way!).</p>



<p>I asked her how her dream meeting would go and she reeled off what could have been a scene from a RomCom. She said she&#8217;d like to be standing in line for a coffee and have the man of her dreams bump into her, causing her to drop her pile of books on the floor, which he would then, as the gentleman, pick up, and their eyes would meet. The End.</p>



<p>Sounds lovely, doesn&#8217;t it?! </p>



<h5>So how do people meet &#8216;normally&#8217;, as my lovely step-daughter puts it?</h5>



<p>Well, the obvious one is meeting in a bar/pub/club, right? That&#8217;s the stereotypical place to find a date, isn&#8217;t it? But how many of us approach someone in said bar and end up life-long partners? (Again, do let me know if this is you!). Particularly in a time that appears to be labelling men as all sorts if they dare so much as to pay a lady a compliment&#8230;but let&#8217;s not get into that. Besides, bars and nightclubs are a far cry from the dance halls of yesteryear where our grandparent&#8217;s generation would have met. </p>



<p>Society has also changed over the last couple of decades with the ever-growing technological world at our finger tips. People no longer need to make small talk at a bus stop, or on a train. It&#8217;s so easy to be listening to a podcast, or an audio book, or catching up with emails, or updating social media, that people aren&#8217;t passing the time with one another socially. I remember a taxi journey home from work at 5am, about 14 years ago or so. I had the most fascinating conversation with the driver about the political situation in Egypt at that time, and I thoroughly enjoyed it! (I&#8217;m totally boring, I know!) But, it&#8217;s those types of spontaneous interactions that fall away when technology moves in to fill those gaps. </p>



<p>Then there&#8217;s your work place, which although can be great for meeting someone you have things in common with, it can end up being incredibly awkward, especially if you don&#8217;t work out. Once upon a time, my work place also happened to be a nightclub, and trust me, dating and breaking it off with someone you work with, whilst practically living in a venue with alcohol to drown your sorrows, isn&#8217;t a good mix. </p>



<p>Of course the upside to dating in your social circle, or within your workplace is that it gives you an opportunity to see one another in your &#8216;natural habitat&#8217;, shall we say: witness how one another behaves without the pressures of it being a date, or trying to impress anyone. This is something I think online dating doesn&#8217;t have: the ability to get to know one another from afar&#8230;but not in a stalker kinda way, just in an admirer sense.</p>



<p>In my view, online dating brings its own pressures to showcase the best bits, or the highlight reel of your life. The perfect version of you. It&#8217;s said that people make an instant judgement when they see someone and that&#8217;s obviously what dating apps like Tinder are based on. You see a picture or three, and a few lines of writing, and make your decision to swipe one way, or the other.</p>



<p>So let&#8217;s be honest, in that few seconds that you have to show who you are, you&#8217;re only going to put your best photos and a glowing write up, aren&#8217;t you? No one wants to highlight their flaws, do they? Could you imagine some people&#8217;s profile if they wrote their reality on their bio?! &#8220;Bit of a nag, takes forever to get ready, will Facebook stalk your ex-girlfriend and can&#8217;t cook.&#8221; Or, &#8220;Ladies man, likes to flirt, will not respond to texts and leaves dirty pants on the floor &#8211; wash that love&#8221;. (Let me just point out that these are entirely fictional and not based on any real people. Any likeness is a coincidence!) But you get my point. So perhaps online dating is less genuine to begin with?</p>



<h3>I thought I&#8217;d give it a go&#8230;</h3>



<p>In 2015 after the break up of a long term relationship the previous year, I was living in the ar*e end of nowhere, working 13hr shifts at the local hospital, so my opportunity for for meeting someone socially was limited. I occasionally visited the village pub with my neighbour, but let&#8217;s be honest, anyone you meet in your local has probably dated six others in the village, and no one wants exes on their doorstep, do they?!</p>



<p>Online dating seemed the way to go. It was a bit crazy to begin with. I started getting messages from all kinds of people. Many of whom I had absolutely no interest in, whatsoever. The Internet is a weird place! From that experience, I moved platforms to one where you can only connect with others if you &#8216;match&#8217; and that seemed to make much more sense to me. Filter out all the nonsense and be introduced to people who are interested in, and are looking for, similar things to yourself. </p>



<p>In summer of 2015, (pre-not-husband) I began seeing a guy who was also in the forces (I don&#8217;t have a type, honest!) He was being posted to America, so we quit whilst we were ahead, and called it a day after a couple of months. After a month or so, I had another little look to see what other fish there were in the sea, and along came my now not-husband. </p>



<p>Here I&#8217;ll add a mildly amusing story. When it came to visiting my not-husband on camp in those early days, he told me how I&#8217;d have to go to the pass office and have my photo taken, take my ID, blah-blah, as  I had not been before. Of course, I had to confess all at this point! I was already on the system as the previous guy was on the same base. Because of this, I&#8217;m pretty sure he thought I was just a serial military-man dater. Let me add to that, one flies helicopters, and the other fixes them. (It also turned out that they were living in opposite blocks on camp) It was a total coincidence, I promise! But I do believe in everything happening for a reason so perhaps that was just the trial run pushing me to where I needed to be? Who knows?! </p>



<p>My not-husband had joined the crazy world of online dating after the breakup of his marriage and unfortunately landed himself with me! When using the filters online, I had always gone for the &#8216;without children&#8217; option because I just wasn&#8217;t interested in taking on a family (or anyone else&#8217;s &#8216;baggage&#8217; &#8211; read that as &#8216;ex-wife&#8217;). For some reason, I hadn&#8217;t selected that option this time round, and I &#8216;matched&#8217; with my not-husband who had 2 children from said marriage. At the time, I was chatting to him and one other; a doctor without children (or an ex-wife) but luckily for my not-husband, something just clicked with him and I binned off the doctor.</p>



<h4>The Teenage World of Dating&#8230;.</h4>



<p>As my two stepdaughters are now of an age where they themselves are dating (15 &amp; 17), I was curious to hear their take on it.</p>



<p>Currently for them, it&#8217;s still very much &#8216;people you meet at school&#8217; or the &#8216;my friend likes your friend&#8217; approach, but I asked them about the future and their thoughts on using the internet for finding love. Miss Seventeen is adamant she will never use online dating! I have noted our conversation and told her I&#8217;ll remind her of it in a few years time when she&#8217;s swiping her way through suitors! For now she has a steady boyfriend she met in school and they&#8217;re now in college together. </p>



<p>However, I found it really weird to hear someone of her generation so against an online based service, when everything they do seems to be online, including their entire school day. (I despise this! But that&#8217;s a rant for another day.) Technology is a huge part of their world, but perhaps that&#8217;s exactly why she&#8217;s opposed to it? The art of human connection is such a personal thing, perhaps it is more authentic and natural to begin a relationship by meeting in person? </p>



<p>Yet some people are not very good at the whole social interaction thing, especially not in a romantic sense. Anxiety makes sure of that! So perhaps for those people, the removal of those pressures is actually creating stronger connections, by providing the opportunity to get to know one another better, without self-confidence or social skills in the mix.</p>



<p>In my old job, one of my clients &#8211; a lady in her &#8216;twilight years&#8217; we&#8217;ll call them &#8211; told me a wonderful story of how she met her husband, many moons ago. As a young lady, her mother forbid her from attending a local dance hall, &#8220;because that&#8217;s where all those squaddies hang out&#8221;. Well, I don&#8217;t know about you, but that sounds like a great place to be! She thought so too. Her and her sister snuck out and visited said dance, where she met a lovely young RAF man. A week later, he asked her to marry him and she accepted! (Much to her mother&#8217;s horror, of course!) BUT, decades later, here I am sitting with her, she has severe dementia and the aforementioned RAF man out at an aviation lecture for the evening. It just goes to show, even when your mind is slowly letting you down, it&#8217;s sometimes the simplest of things that stay with you forever!</p>



<p>So perhaps the way in which we meet people has a longer lasting impact than we think. Dating comes in so many forms these days and at so many different stages of people&#8217;s lives. Couples divorce, spouses pass away long before their time, and some people choose to stay single, only looking for love in later years. Whatever your situation, dating can be a daunting prospect. It can also be an exciting one too.</p>



<p>Online, offline, or not at all &#8211; the choice is yours!</p>



<p><strong><span class="has-inline-color has-pale-pink-color">Over and out, </span></strong></p>



<h2><strong><span class="has-inline-color has-vivid-purple-color">The Not Wife</span></strong> </h2>



<p></p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/dating/">The Crazy World of Dating</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk">The Not Wife Life</a>.</p>
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		<title>Unexpectedly Expecting</title>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[TheNotWife]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 12 Jun 2020 22:14:00 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/?p=842</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Erm&#8230;so this happened! We&#8217;re expecting a baby boy in September! Somewhat of a surprise but I believe everything happens for a reason. Rewind&#8230; Let me take you back to a previous blog post not so long ago. Our story of an early miscarriage. If you haven&#8217;t got time to read the full post, here&#8217;s a quick recap. In November 2019 we found out we were pregnant, but after only a few days, a doctor confirmed a miscarriage. It was super early but that didn&#8217;t mean it didn&#8217;t affect us. We were devastated, after just getting our heads around expecting a baby, straight into being told we&#8217;d lost it. Fast forward to January 2020 when we discovered we&#8217;d conceived AGAIN! Much to our amazement &#8211; although we&#8217;re perfectly aware of how babies are made. As my previous post describes, we weren&#8217;t trying to conceive but we also weren&#8217;t making much effort to avoid it either. We followed my cycles but this isn&#8217;t foolproof. Following the miscarriage my cycles weren&#8217;t as they were, and with it being Christmas and New Year, we weren&#8217;t really paying much attention. We were enjoying family time, being at home and just generally relaxing after what was an awful year. We&#8217;d lost my Dad in the April, so life was a little upside down for a while. If it&#8217;s of interest, I wrote about my journey through grief here. That&#8217;s definitely positive! The week we found out, I&#8217;d not felt good. I even had to leave work early on the Friday as I felt really unwell at lunch. I&#8217;d missed breakfast and suddenly felt faint, dizzy and like I could just throw up. REALLY weird! Skipping a meal had never affected me like this before! I spent the next day or so feeling nauseous and &#8216;off&#8217;, and struggled with the bizarre need to constantly eat just to feel &#8216;well&#8217;. Something wasn&#8217;t right and I just had an inkling that perhaps I was pregnant again&#8230;? Back in November I&#8217;d gone for a job in a local prison and found out I was pregnant the day before the interview. The news was a massive distraction and I didn&#8217;t perform as well as I could have. Needless to say, I didn&#8217;t get the job. The same job came up in January and I reapplied. We&#8217;d joked about it happening again but never thought it actually would! It did! 26th January I took the test &#8211; a lovely quiet Sunday morning and I had the interview coming up on the Tuesday! What&#8217;re the chances?! Same job, same situation! So that Sunday morning, I followed my instincts and took a test. The second my pee hit the stick, it started to show a positive line! I remember looking at it in disbelief, thinking &#8220;how could it work THAT quick?!&#8221;. Unlike last time when we had a faint positive at first, this one was screaming out PREGNANT!! I took the test into my not-husband and said &#8220;Erm, you know how we joked about the same situation happening again? Well&#8230;&#8221; and gave him the test to see for himself. He was just as surprised as I was! I can&#8217;t recall the exact conversation as it&#8217;s all a bit of a blur, but I do remember him being a lot more chilled about it than me. I was still silently freaking out about having a baby!! Mixed emotions about a baby&#8230; Now, this blog is my place to be honest. So here it is. I absolutely had mixed feelings knowing I was pregnant again. My first reaction wasn&#8217;t like you see on TV, I didn&#8217;t jump for joy, I wasn&#8217;t excited. In fact I felt the opposite! I think I almost felt dread and disappointment, which sounds awful to say but in that moment, I felt this was completely the wrong timing. We&#8217;d lost our first in November and that gave us a glimpse at a possible future. The life we began to envisage was taken away and it hurt. I like to try and find the positives of any situation and I felt perhaps it was an opportunity to work on myself for a while. I had struggled a lot over the last year or so with &#8220;what&#8217;s my purpose?!&#8220;. I&#8217;d given up my business, cared for my dad who was just 60 when he passed away and I&#8217;d just started embarking on a counselling career. My confidence had taken a nose dive in recent months, I just wasn&#8217;t &#8216;me&#8216; anymore, so after the loss (and all the &#8216;I failed as a woman&#8217; thoughts), I felt I should take the time to build myself back up. Hence the initial mixed feelings I experienced. I felt terrible for feeling this way! I thought of women who long to be pregnant! But I was also petrified we&#8217;d lose this one too and have to go through it all again. I didn&#8217;t want anything bad to happen to this little one, which made me feel worse about how I felt. I desperately wanted this pregnancy and baby to be healthy. Let&#8217;s just say&#8230;I was a bit of a mess inside! My not-husband was amazing. He was on the &#8220;it&#8217;ll all be fine&#8221; bus. Of course he had the same fears as I did after our previous loss but he didn&#8217;t let me see, he just let me know he was there and that whatever happened we would get through it. I have to tell someone! That afternoon I&#8217;d arranged to meet my friend (I&#8217;ve mentioned her before&#8230;I cried at her wedding in the run up to losing my Dad!) for a coffee and a catch up. I still went and didn&#8217;t plan on telling her our news. As we caught up, she was asking how I was feeling (emotionally) since the miscarriage. If she&#8217;d have asked the day before, I&#8217;d have told her how I was feeling better but still consumed by thoughts of why it happened, what life would be like going forward, how I felt about &#8216;children&#8217; as a whole. In my previous posts I&#8217;ve talked about how I&#8217;ve never been the type of person to WANT kids. I didn&#8217;t feel like being maternal had ever been in my instincts, although I have two stepdaughters (nearly 13 &#38; 15) who I have a great relationship with. My not-husband had always said he didn&#8217;t want any more children; although, he&#8217;d also said, if it happened, it would be a good thing (confusing I know!) so it was never on the cards for us, hence we never REALLY talked about it seriously. My feelings changed after the miscarriage though and I felt like I DID want this (but not yet!)&#8230; Just to throw in some extra confusion! So when my friend asked me that, I couldn&#8217;t answer. I didn&#8217;t know anymore! &#8220;I&#8217;ve got to tell you because if I don&#8217;t tell someone, I&#8217;m going to go mad!&#8221; and proceeded to tell her about the test I&#8217;d taken a few hours earlier. She was so excited for us! She jumped out of her chair (7 months pregnant herself by this point!) and gave me a hug. It felt like a huge relief to tell her and talk through my fears. She totally understood and made me feel slightly less crazy. She too was on the &#8220;it&#8217;ll all be fine&#8221; bus with my not-husband. Acceptance It wasn&#8217;t until week 11 that I finally felt like I&#8217;d accepted what was happening. That this baby was happening and my life was changing! Up until that point I&#8217;d had an awful time &#8211; I was so unwell I hated being pregnant! (that&#8217;s a post for another day!) The sickness and headaches lasted up until around 18 weeks which made me feel so rotten! I can&#8217;t even begin to list all the emotions I went through, I felt everything! We had a scan at nine weeks due to my anxiety and fear of another miscarriage and luckily all was absolutely fine with baby. I think that helped shift my thoughts after seeing our little tiny human on a screen for the first time. It kind of hit me that day, it was real and not just in my head, but it still all seemed so surreal and I almost felt in denial. I really struggled to connect with this baby inside me and it wasn&#8217;t easy to admit! As I write this, we&#8217;re now at 25 weeks and all is well. It certainly hasn&#8217;t been easy and I&#8217;m sure there&#8217;s plenty more to come. But for now, baby is healthy, I am nine-tenths human and life isn&#8217;t looking so gloomy! No matter what you&#8217;re feeling, it&#8217;s absolutely fine and normal to be experiencing it. Whether you have children or stepchildren already, or you&#8217;re pregnant, or trying to conceive, or maybe you&#8217;re totally against ever having children&#8230;each decision you make is your own and however you feel about it is okay! Remember to reach out, you might be surprised at how many others feel the same way as you do. Over and Out, The Not Wife X JOIN ME ON INSTAGRAM &#8211; CLICK HERE</p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/baby/">Unexpectedly Expecting</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk">The Not Wife Life</a>.</p>
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<h4 class="has-text-align-center">Erm&#8230;so this happened! We&#8217;re expecting a baby boy in September! Somewhat of a surprise but I believe everything happens for a reason. </h4>



<h3>Rewind&#8230;</h3>



<p>Let me take you back to a previous blog post not so long ago. Our story of an <a href="http://Thenotwifelife.co.uk/miscarriage">early miscarriage.</a> If you haven&#8217;t got time to read the full post, here&#8217;s a quick recap. </p>



<p>In November 2019 we found out we were pregnant, but after only a few days, a doctor confirmed a miscarriage. It was super early but that didn&#8217;t mean it didn&#8217;t affect us. We were devastated, after just getting our heads around expecting a baby, straight into being told we&#8217;d lost it.</p>



<p>Fast forward to January 2020 when we discovered we&#8217;d conceived <strong>AGAIN</strong>! Much to our amazement &#8211; although we&#8217;re perfectly aware of how babies are made. As my <a href="http://Thenotwifelife.co.uk/miscarriage">previous post</a> describes, we weren&#8217;t trying to conceive but we also weren&#8217;t making much effort to avoid it either. We followed my cycles but this isn&#8217;t foolproof. Following the miscarriage my cycles weren&#8217;t as they were, and with it being Christmas and New Year, we weren&#8217;t really paying much attention. We were enjoying family time, being at home and just generally relaxing after what was an awful year. We&#8217;d lost my Dad in the April, so life was a little upside down for a while. If it&#8217;s of interest, I wrote about <a href="http://Thenotwifelife.co.uk/loss">my journey through grief here</a>.</p>



<h3>That&#8217;s definitely positive!</h3>



<p>The week we found out, I&#8217;d not felt good. I even had to leave work early on the Friday as I felt really unwell at lunch. I&#8217;d missed breakfast and suddenly felt faint, dizzy and like I could just throw up. <em><strong>REALLY weird!</strong></em> Skipping a meal had never affected me like this before! I spent the next day or so feeling nauseous and &#8216;off&#8217;, and struggled with the bizarre need to constantly eat just to feel &#8216;well&#8217;. </p>



<p>Something wasn&#8217;t right and I just had an inkling that perhaps I was pregnant again&#8230;? Back in November I&#8217;d gone for a job in a local prison and found out I was pregnant the day before the interview. The news was a massive distraction and I didn&#8217;t perform as well as I could have. Needless to say, I didn&#8217;t get the job. The same job came up in January and I reapplied. We&#8217;d joked about it happening again but never thought it actually would!</p>



<h4>It did! </h4>



<div class="wp-block-image is-style-circle-mask"><figure class="alignright size-medium is-resized"><img loading="lazy" src="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/IMG_20200615_232128-300x300.jpg" alt="Positive pregnancy test - Rainbow baby" class="wp-image-859" width="225" height="225" srcset="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/IMG_20200615_232128-300x300.jpg 300w, https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/IMG_20200615_232128-1024x1024.jpg 1024w, https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/IMG_20200615_232128-150x150.jpg 150w, https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/IMG_20200615_232128-768x767.jpg 768w, https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/IMG_20200615_232128-1536x1534.jpg 1536w, https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/IMG_20200615_232128-1140x1138.jpg 1140w, https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/IMG_20200615_232128-75x75.jpg 75w" sizes="(max-width: 225px) 100vw, 225px" /><figcaption><em>Unexpectedly expecting!</em></figcaption></figure></div>



<p>26th January I took the test &#8211; a lovely quiet Sunday morning and I had the interview coming up on the Tuesday! What&#8217;re the chances?! Same job, same situation!</p>



<p>So that Sunday morning, I followed my instincts and took a test. The second my pee hit the stick, it started to show a positive line! I remember looking at it in disbelief, thinking &#8220;how could it work THAT quick?!&#8221;. Unlike last time when we had a faint positive at first, this one was screaming out PREGNANT!!</p>



<p>I took the test into my not-husband and said &#8220;Erm, you know how we joked about the same situation happening again? Well&#8230;&#8221; and gave him the test to see for himself. He was just as surprised as I was! I can&#8217;t recall the exact conversation as it&#8217;s all a bit of a blur, but I do remember him being a lot more chilled about it than me.</p>



<p class="has-medium-font-size"><em>I was still silently freaking out about having a baby!!</em></p>



<h2>Mixed emotions about a baby&#8230;</h2>



<p>Now, this blog is my place to be honest. So here it is. I absolutely had mixed feelings knowing I was pregnant again. My first reaction wasn&#8217;t like you see on TV, I didn&#8217;t jump for joy, I wasn&#8217;t excited. In fact I felt the opposite! I think I almost felt dread and disappointment, which sounds awful to say but in that moment, I felt this was completely the wrong timing.</p>



<p>We&#8217;d lost our first in November and that gave us a glimpse at a possible future. The life we began to envisage was taken away and it hurt. I like to try and find the positives of any situation and I felt perhaps it was an opportunity to work on myself for a while. I had struggled a lot over the last year or so with &#8220;<em>what&#8217;s my purpose?!</em>&#8220;. I&#8217;d given up my business, cared for my dad who was just <a href="http://Thenotwifelife.co.uk/loss">60 when he passed away</a> and I&#8217;d just started embarking on a counselling career.</p>



<p>My confidence had taken a nose dive in recent months, I just wasn&#8217;t &#8216;<em>me</em>&#8216; anymore, so after the loss (and all the <em>&#8216;I failed as a woman&#8217;</em> thoughts), I felt I should take the time to build myself back up. Hence the initial mixed feelings I experienced. I felt terrible for feeling this way! I thought of women who long to be pregnant! But I was also petrified we&#8217;d lose this one too and have to go through it all again. I didn&#8217;t want anything bad to happen to this little one, which made me feel worse about how I felt. I desperately wanted this pregnancy and baby to be healthy. </p>



<h4><strong>Let&#8217;s just say&#8230;I was a bit of a mess inside! </strong></h4>



<p>My not-husband was amazing. He was on the &#8220;<em>it&#8217;ll all be fine</em>&#8221; bus. Of course he had the same fears as I did after our previous loss but he didn&#8217;t let me see, he just let me know he was there and that whatever happened we would get through it.</p>



<h2>I have to tell someone! </h2>



<p>That afternoon I&#8217;d arranged to meet my friend (I&#8217;ve mentioned her before&#8230;I cried at her wedding in the run up to losing my Dad!) for a coffee and a catch up. I still went and didn&#8217;t plan on telling her our news. As we caught up, she was asking how I was feeling (emotionally) since the miscarriage. If she&#8217;d have asked the day before, I&#8217;d have told her how I was feeling better but still consumed by thoughts of why it happened, what life would be like going forward, how I felt about &#8216;children&#8217; as a whole. </p>



<p>In my previous posts I&#8217;ve talked about how I&#8217;ve never been the type of person to WANT kids. I didn&#8217;t feel like being maternal had ever been in my instincts, although I have two stepdaughters (nearly 13 &amp; 15) who I have a great relationship with.  My not-husband had always said he didn&#8217;t want any more children; although, he&#8217;d also said, if it happened, it would be a good thing (confusing I know!) so it was never on the cards for us, hence we never REALLY talked about it seriously. My feelings changed after the miscarriage though and I felt like I DID want this (<em>but not yet</em>!)&#8230; Just to throw in some extra confusion!</p>



<p>So when my friend asked me that, I couldn&#8217;t answer. I didn&#8217;t know anymore! &#8220;<em>I&#8217;ve got to tell you because if I don&#8217;t tell someone, I&#8217;m going to go mad!</em>&#8221; and proceeded to tell her about the test I&#8217;d taken a few hours earlier. She was so excited for us! She jumped out of her chair (7 months pregnant herself by this point!) and gave me a hug. It felt like a huge relief to tell her and talk through my fears. She totally understood and made me feel slightly less crazy. She too was on the &#8220;<em>it&#8217;ll all be fine</em>&#8221; bus with my not-husband. </p>



<h3>Acceptance</h3>



<p>It wasn&#8217;t until week 11 that I finally felt like I&#8217;d accepted what was happening. That this baby was happening and my life was changing! Up until that point I&#8217;d had an awful time &#8211; I was so unwell I hated being pregnant! (<a href="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/pregnancy/" data-type="post" data-id="839">that&#8217;s a post for another day!</a>) The sickness and headaches lasted up until around 18 weeks which made me feel so rotten! I can&#8217;t even begin to list all the emotions I went through, I felt everything!</p>



<p>We had a scan at nine weeks due to my anxiety and fear of another miscarriage and luckily all was absolutely fine with baby. I think that helped shift my thoughts after seeing our little tiny human on a screen for the first time. It kind of hit me that day, it was real and not just in my head, but it still all seemed so surreal and I almost felt in denial. I really struggled to connect with this baby inside me and it wasn&#8217;t easy to admit! </p>



<p>As I write this, we&#8217;re now at 25 weeks and all is well. It certainly hasn&#8217;t been easy and I&#8217;m sure there&#8217;s plenty more to come. But for now, baby is healthy, I am nine-tenths human and life isn&#8217;t looking so gloomy!</p>



<div class="wp-block-image is-style-default"><figure class="alignleft size-medium"><img loading="lazy" width="300" height="213" src="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/IMG_20200617_230116-300x213.jpg" alt="12 Week scan - pregnancy - Our baby" class="wp-image-885" srcset="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/IMG_20200617_230116-300x213.jpg 300w, https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/IMG_20200617_230116-1024x728.jpg 1024w, https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/IMG_20200617_230116-768x546.jpg 768w, https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/IMG_20200617_230116-1536x1091.jpg 1536w, https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/IMG_20200617_230116-1140x810.jpg 1140w, https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/IMG_20200617_230116.jpg 1700w" sizes="(max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px" /><figcaption><em>Our baby boy at 12 weeks</em></figcaption></figure></div>



<p>No matter what you&#8217;re feeling, it&#8217;s absolutely fine and normal to be experiencing it. Whether you have children or stepchildren already, or you&#8217;re pregnant, or trying to conceive, or maybe you&#8217;re totally against ever having children&#8230;each decision you make is your own and however you feel about it is okay!  Remember to reach out, you might be surprised at how many others feel the same way as you do.</p>



<p></p>



<p></p>



<p class="has-pale-pink-color has-text-color has-medium-font-size"><strong>Over and Out, </strong></p>



<p class="has-text-align-center has-text-color has-large-font-size" style="color:#ee0aad"><strong>The Not Wife </strong></p>



<p class="has-text-align-center has-text-color has-medium-font-size" style="color:#d10686"><strong>X</strong></p>



<p class="has-text-align-center has-vivid-cyan-blue-color has-text-color" style="font-size:25px"><a href="http://instagram.com/thenotwifelife"><strong>JOIN ME ON INSTAGRAM &#8211; CLICK HERE</strong></a></p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/baby/">Unexpectedly Expecting</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk">The Not Wife Life</a>.</p>
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		<title>The Crazy World of Adulting!</title>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[TheNotWife]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 07 Sep 2019 11:00:49 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Life]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>Do you feel like an adult yet? I think we&#8217;ve all questioned this at some point. Haven&#8217;t we?! &#8220;Are we &#8216;adulting&#8217; correctly?!&#8221; I glanced over at the birthday card on the fireplace whilst sipping my morning tea and it hit me! Right there, right then. I am an actual adult! Sharing my story because I feel we all question ourselves sometimes and yet we&#8217;re all doing just fine! The birthday card was &#8220;To my wonderful (not) Wife and Best Friend&#8221;. It suddenly dawned on me. This person in my life &#8211; my amazing not-husband &#8211; thinks the world of me. He thinks I&#8217;m great and appreciates all I do! Who&#8217;d have thought it?! Next to his card and flowers were cards from both his children, sending their love to me on my birthday, even though I wouldn&#8217;t be seeing them for another week. I look around and our house was in chaos because of renovations, but it&#8217;s OURS! Craziness! I am an actual adult, living a grown up life! &#8220;The practice of behaving in a way characteristic of a responsible adult&#8230;&#8221; Definition of &#8216;adulting&#8217; I&#8217;ve never paid attention to it before &#8211; the adult part to my life. I have always felt inadequate, behind somehow or just not doing it right. Society has such pressures; increasingly so with social media and it&#8217;s more important than ever to not fall foul of those. Society suggests there are certain time frames for reaching life&#8217;s milestones or an idea of how we should be living as adults. Stereotypes and expectations suggest when we should be marrying, what type of career aspirations we should have or what age we should be having children. But times are changing!! Firstly, stop comparing yourself! Comparing yourselves to others is one of the worst things you can do. Everyone is different and just because you&#8217;re not doing the same thing or at the same age doesn&#8217;t mean you&#8217;re failing. Take me for example; 31, unmarried with 2 step children (never was that the plan, I can tell you!) Then I look at two of my friends; both married to military men, both at similar life stages, but totally different ages. The first couple are mid-twenties, married, bought a house, have the most beautiful dog and now a newborn. The perfect life, right?! The second is one of my closest friends, 39, step-mum to her husband&#8217;s daughter and now expecting their first baby together! They married earlier this year &#8211; the wedding I mentioned in my &#8216;Loss&#8217; blog post and I couldn&#8217;t be happier for them! I use these two friends as examples because we are all guilty of comparing ourselves to others, me included. Judging our successes by what we think we should be doing. My point here is, whether you&#8217;re 26 or 39, there&#8217;s no &#8216;right&#8217; age. Secondly, only you know what&#8217;s right for you! Pressures will always be there; whether it&#8217;s pressure to get a &#8216;good job&#8217; or to find a nice partner, or even provide your parents with grandchildren. If I had a pound for every time my Mum asked me when she&#8217;s going to be a Nanny again, I could probably pay off the mortgage in one swift whack! Does this concern me? Nope! What about those nudges at weddings&#8230;? &#8220;You&#8217;re next!&#8221; or &#8220;Come on, I need a new hat!&#8220;. We can then go to the other end of the scale, which I know a lot of military wives get. &#8220;Aren&#8217;t you too young to be getting married?!&#8221; If it feels right for you then that&#8217;s all that matters! Society doesn&#8217;t need an opinion on our lives and how we live them. A &#8216;responsible&#8217; adult, &#8216;adulting&#8217;? According to various informal definitions, &#8216;adulting&#8217; is the actions characteristic of someone responsible. Scary hey?! The word &#8216;adulting&#8217; is often miused (if a made up word can be so) and is used to describe mundane but necessary tasks like cooking or cleaning, as being &#8216;adulting&#8217;. Being a responsible adult is a very different thing, or at least it is in my view. I certainly hadn&#8217;t felt much like a responsible adult for the most part of my twenties &#8211; despite leaving home at 18. By my mid-twenties, I had lived alone, been to uni, had various jobs; yet I still didn&#8217;t feel like I was an adult and definitely not &#8216;adulting&#8217; &#8211; whatever that was! So at 27 when I became a step-mum to 2 pre-teen girls. (Yes, that IS as bad as it sounds!) I didn&#8217;t think I was prepared for this life at all! Never, ever, did I think I would even consider this as a way of life! I met my wonderful not-husband, &#8216;Mr S&#8217; online (as many of us do these days) and had vowed not to date anyone with children (or an ex-wife). Well I royally f****d that one up didn&#8217;t I?! But everything happens for a reason, right?! I wanted an easy life. One with potential to go somewhere. My head said, &#8220;Don&#8217;t go there!&#8220;, my heart said &#8220;Give it a chance!&#8220;. I went there! We saw each other a fair bit (when he wasn&#8217;t away on exercise or something more interesting!), we spent various weekends together on and off base, making the most of the time he was around. After a while, I met his kids. I was bricking it if I&#8217;m honest! I really liked this guy but, &#8220;what if his kids hated me?&#8221; &#8220;What if they couldn&#8217;t accept their dad being with someone who wasn&#8217;t their mum?!&#8221;. The many scenarios went through my mind. How we&#8217;d have to end this whole thing, or keep our lives separate from the kids, or see one another in secret. I think I feared the rejection from them more than anything! But, they were amazing and so accepting of me. They were just happy to see their dad happy for once and at 8 &#38; 9, I thought that was very grown up of them too! All was going well then 9 months in &#8211; Bang! Our first deployment arrived, ready to try and destroy us. Absolutely not! We were already incredibly strong and knew we&#8217;d make this work. Summer 2016, I was handling a deployment, maintaining bonds with my not-husband&#8217;s kids and his parents, planning stuff for when Mr S returned, putting money aside for various things&#8230;Was THIS &#8216;adulting&#8217;? I had doubted this relationship and its lifestyle from the start, but it was working! More than working, we were smashing it! So how about now?! By late 2016, we were into our second deployment (yep, another one straight after!) and we&#8217;d been looking to buy a house together. That&#8217;s pretty adult, right? We&#8217;d looked at so many properties online and nothing was grabbing us, although we weren&#8217;t in a rush, we were craving our own space. I&#8217;d moved back with my parents to save some money and when not away, he was living on base. Whilst in Canada, Mr S sent me a link for a house and asked me to check it out. Long story short, we now live in it! (See deployment post for the full story) Buying a house whilst he was deployed had its own problems, most notable &#8211; the time difference. He was 7 hours behind which meant any correspondence was an extra working day. By the time I&#8217;d spoken to him, the estate agent/solicitors/surveyors had closed for the day and so it continued. Mr S was in a front line squadron so he was away A LOT, leaving me to handle home life alone. When Mr S returned, we exchanged and moved in March 2017. Now here&#8217;s where life changed dramatically for me. I was now doing school runs Friday evenings and Monday mornings. I&#8217;d find myself cooking for three or four (as opposed to cereal for dinner), ironing uniforms or sat watching a school play without my not-husband. He&#8217;d be overseas and I&#8217;d be sat in an awful assembly wondering how my life got to this point?! How much more adult can you get?! Surely THIS was adulting? Yet I STILL doubt myself! A couple of weeks back, I was holding &#8216;stuff&#8217; (aka jumpers they refuse to wear, a rock they took a liking to in the car park and what was left of my sanity) whilst the kids took part in a Harry Potter broomstick &#8216;flying&#8217; lesson, being told to &#8216;ooh&#8216; and &#8216;aah&#8216; by the crazy lady leading it! &#8220;HOW ON EARTH DID I END UP HERE?!&#8220; That was one of those moments where I questioned everything &#8211; just for a second! If you&#8217;d have asked me four years ago, if I&#8217;d be standing at a Harry Potter event (totally not my thing), &#8216;oohing and aahing&#8217; at a fake flying lesson&#8230;I&#8217;d have told you not to be so ridiculous! Being a step-mum was never something I planned for. I had no idea about being a parent, never mind being one to TWO hormonal pre-teen girls! BUT! We&#8217;re now just a normal family, I don&#8217;t see them as &#8216;his kids&#8217; (unless they&#8217;re channelling their inner tw*t, then they can be HIS!). They&#8217;re OUR kids and we do normal family stuff. Hearing the kids say to their friends, &#8220;this is my step-mum&#8220;, still freaks me out a bit, but I feel honoured to have been accepted into their lives so readily. I question if I&#8217;m actually &#8216;adulting&#8217;, but I must be? I keep these teenagers alive, Mr S hasn&#8217;t left me for a more competent human and I haven&#8217;t burnt the house down&#8230;yet! Statistics&#8230;do these show us as nation to be &#8216;adulting&#8217;? If you take a look at the graphic here, the UK ranks slightly below the EU average for age to leave home. The statistic for men vs woman is aged 27.6 and 25.2 respectively. By that stat, I was way ahead as I left home at 18. We could go one further and compare this to the 1960&#8217;s, where 62% of 18-34 year olds were living as married or co-habiting in their own home, compared to just 31% now. Of course many social and economic factors play a role but let&#8217;s not get too deep here. Compare all this alongside ages for having children and we see more people now than ever aren&#8217;t having their first children until their thirties. In the early 1990&#8217;s, my Mum was horrified to be pregnant again (her 3rd, my brother) at the age of 30! She felt people would think &#8220;she should know better!&#8221; for being an &#8216;older&#8217; mother. But how normal is it now, that my friend at 39 is having her first. Society is fluid and opinions change over time. It is no longer seen as &#8216;older mother&#8217; past 30, more &#8216;the norm&#8217; (since writing this, I became a mother at 32). Just because society suggests one opinion right now, doesn&#8217;t mean it will stay that way! What makes you feel like an adult? Do you feel like you&#8217;ve nailed the art of &#8216;adulting&#8217;? Are you expecting a baby but don&#8217;t feel like a &#8216;real grown-up&#8217; yet? I&#8217;d love to hear from you! Over and Out, The Not Wife X JOIN ME ON INSTAGRAM &#8211; CLICK HERE</p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/adulting/">The Crazy World of Adulting!</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk">The Not Wife Life</a>.</p>
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<h3 class="has-text-align-center">Do you feel like an adult yet?</h3>



<p class="has-text-align-center has-medium-font-size">I think we&#8217;ve all questioned this at some point. Haven&#8217;t we?! <em>&#8220;Are we &#8216;adulting&#8217; correctly?!&#8221;</em></p>



<p class="has-text-align-left">I glanced over at the birthday card on the fireplace whilst sipping my morning tea and it hit me! Right there, right then.</p>



<p><strong>I am an actual adult! </strong>Sharing my story because I feel we all question ourselves sometimes and yet we&#8217;re all doing just fine! </p>



<p>The birthday card was &#8220;To my wonderful (not) Wife and Best Friend&#8221;. It suddenly dawned on me. This person in my life &#8211; my amazing not-husband &#8211; thinks the world of me. He thinks I&#8217;m great and appreciates all I do! Who&#8217;d have thought it?!</p>



<div class="wp-block-image"><figure class="alignleft is-resized"><img loading="lazy" src="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/IMG_20190830_092703-300x300.jpg" alt="Birthday card reads for my wonderful (not) wife and best friend. Am I adulting?" class="wp-image-526" width="225" height="225" srcset="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/IMG_20190830_092703-300x300.jpg 300w, https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/IMG_20190830_092703-150x150.jpg 150w, https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/IMG_20190830_092703-768x768.jpg 768w, https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/IMG_20190830_092703-1024x1024.jpg 1024w, https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/IMG_20190830_092703-1140x1139.jpg 1140w, https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/IMG_20190830_092703-75x75.jpg 75w, https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/IMG_20190830_092703.jpg 2048w" sizes="(max-width: 225px) 100vw, 225px" /></figure></div>



<p>Next to his card and flowers were cards from both his children, sending their love to me on my birthday, even though I wouldn&#8217;t be seeing them for another week. </p>



<p>I look around and our house was in chaos because of renovations, but it&#8217;s OURS! Craziness!</p>



<p class="has-text-align-center"><em><strong>I am an actual adult, living a grown up life!</strong></em></p>



<blockquote class="wp-block-quote has-text-align-center"><p>&#8220;The practice of behaving in a way characteristic of a responsible adult&#8230;&#8221; </p><cite><a href="https://www.lexico.com/en/definition/adulting">Definition of &#8216;adulting&#8217;</a></cite></blockquote>



<p>I&#8217;ve never paid attention to it before &#8211; the adult part to my life. I have always felt inadequate, behind somehow or just not doing it right. Society has such pressures; increasingly so with social media and it&#8217;s more important than ever to not fall foul of those.</p>



<p>Society suggests there are certain time frames for reaching life&#8217;s milestones or an idea of how we should be living as adults. Stereotypes and expectations suggest when we should be marrying, what type of career aspirations we should have or what age we should be having children. </p>



<p class="has-text-align-center has-medium-font-size"><strong>But times are changing!! </strong></p>



<h3>Firstly, stop comparing yourself! </h3>



<p>Comparing yourselves to others is one of the worst things you can do. Everyone is different and just because you&#8217;re not doing the same thing or at the same age doesn&#8217;t mean you&#8217;re failing. </p>



<p>Take me for example; 31, unmarried with 2 step children (never was that the plan, I can tell you!) Then I look at two of my friends; both married to military men, both at similar life stages, but totally  different ages. </p>



<p>The first couple are mid-twenties, married, bought a house, have the most beautiful dog and now a newborn. The perfect life, right?! </p>



<p class="has-very-dark-gray-color has-text-color">The second is one of my closest friends, 39, step-mum to her husband&#8217;s daughter and now expecting their first baby together! They married earlier this year &#8211; the wedding I mentioned in my <span style="text-decoration: underline;">&#8216;</span><a href="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/loss"><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Loss&#8217;</span> blog post</a> and I couldn&#8217;t be happier for them!</p>



<p>I use these two friends as examples because we are all guilty of comparing ourselves to others, me included. Judging our successes by what we think we should be doing. <strong>My point here is, whether you&#8217;re 26 or 39, there&#8217;s no &#8216;right&#8217; age. </strong></p>



<h3>Secondly, only you know what&#8217;s right for you! </h3>



<p>Pressures will always be there; whether it&#8217;s pressure to get a &#8216;good job&#8217; or to find a nice partner, or even provide your parents with grandchildren.</p>



<p>If I had a pound for every time my Mum asked me when she&#8217;s going to be a Nanny again, I could probably pay off the mortgage in one swift whack!</p>



<p>Does this concern me? Nope! </p>



<p>What about those nudges at weddings&#8230;? &#8220;<em>You&#8217;re next!</em>&#8221; or &#8220;<em>Come on, I need a new hat!</em>&#8220;. </p>



<p>We can then go to the other end of the scale, which I know a lot of military wives get. &#8220;<em>Aren&#8217;t you too young to be getting married?!</em>&#8221; </p>



<p>If it feels right for you then that&#8217;s all that matters! Society doesn&#8217;t need an opinion on our lives and how we live them.</p>



<h3>A &#8216;responsible&#8217; adult, &#8216;adulting&#8217;?</h3>



<p>According to various informal definitions, &#8216;adulting&#8217; is the <strong><em>actions characteristic of someone responsible</em></strong>. Scary hey?!</p>



<p>The word &#8216;adulting&#8217; is often miused (if a made up word can be so) and is used to describe mundane but necessary tasks like cooking or cleaning, as being &#8216;adulting&#8217;. Being a responsible adult is a very different thing, or at least it is in my view. </p>



<p>I certainly hadn&#8217;t felt much like a responsible adult for the most part of my twenties &#8211; despite leaving home at 18. By my mid-twenties, I had lived alone, been to uni, had various jobs; yet I still didn&#8217;t feel like I was an adult and definitely not &#8216;adulting&#8217; &#8211; whatever that was!</p>



<p>So at 27 when I became a step-mum to 2 pre-teen girls. (Yes, that IS as bad as it sounds!) I didn&#8217;t think I was prepared for this life at all! Never, ever, did I think I would even consider this as a way of life! </p>



<p>I met my wonderful not-husband, &#8216;Mr S&#8217; online (as many of us do these days) and had vowed not to date anyone with children (or an ex-wife). </p>



<p class="has-text-align-center"><strong><em>Well I royally f****d that one up didn&#8217;t I?!</em></strong></p>



<h3>But everything happens for a reason, right?! </h3>



<p>I wanted an easy life. One with potential to go somewhere. My head said, &#8220;<em>Don&#8217;t go there!</em>&#8220;, my heart said &#8220;<em>Give it a chance!</em>&#8220;. </p>



<h4><strong>I went there!</strong></h4>



<p>We saw each other a fair bit (when he wasn&#8217;t away on exercise or something more interesting!), we spent various weekends together on and off base, making the most of the time he was around. </p>



<p>After a while, I met his kids. I was bricking it if I&#8217;m honest! I really liked this guy but,<i> &#8220;what if his kids hated me?&#8221; &#8220;What if they couldn&#8217;t accept their dad being with someone who wasn&#8217;t their mum?!&#8221;</i>.  The many scenarios went through my mind. How we&#8217;d have to end this whole thing, or keep our lives separate from the kids, or see one another in secret. I think I feared the rejection from them more than anything! </p>



<p>But, they were amazing and so accepting of me. They were just happy to see their dad happy for once and at 8 &amp; 9, I thought that was very grown up of them too! </p>



<p>All was going well then 9 months in &#8211; Bang! Our first deployment arrived, ready to try and destroy us. Absolutely not! We were already incredibly strong and knew we&#8217;d make this work.</p>



<p><strong>Summer 2016,</strong> I was handling a deployment, maintaining bonds with my not-husband&#8217;s kids and his parents, planning stuff for when Mr S returned, putting money aside for various things&#8230;Was<strong> THIS</strong> &#8216;adulting&#8217;? </p>



<p class="has-text-align-center"><strong>I had doubted this relationship and its lifestyle from the start, but it was working! More than working, we were smashing it!</strong></p>



<h3>So how about now?! </h3>



<p>By late 2016, we were into our second deployment (yep, another one straight after!) and we&#8217;d been looking to buy a house together. <em>That&#8217;s pretty adult, right?</em></p>



<p>We&#8217;d looked at so many properties online and nothing was grabbing us, although we weren&#8217;t in a rush, we were craving our own space. I&#8217;d moved back with my parents to save some money and when not away, he was living on base. Whilst in Canada, Mr S sent me a link for a house and asked me to check it out. Long story short, we now live in it! (<a href="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/deploymentlife/" data-type="post" data-id="653">See deployment post for the full story</a>) </p>



<p>Buying a house whilst he was deployed had its own problems, most notable &#8211; the time difference. He was 7 hours behind which meant any correspondence was an extra working day. By the time I&#8217;d spoken to him, the estate agent/solicitors/surveyors had closed for the day and so it continued.</p>



<div class="wp-block-image"><figure class="alignright is-resized"><img loading="lazy" src="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/Weekending--300x200.jpg" alt="The Not Wife - Deployment - Military Wife" class="wp-image-601" width="300" height="200" srcset="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/Weekending--300x200.jpg 300w, https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/Weekending-.jpg 750w" sizes="(max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px" /></figure></div>



<p>Mr S was in a front line squadron so he was away A LOT, leaving me to handle home life alone. </p>



<p>When Mr S returned, we exchanged and moved in March 2017. Now here&#8217;s where life changed dramatically for me. I was now doing school runs Friday evenings and Monday mornings. I&#8217;d find myself cooking for three or four (as opposed to<a href="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/weekending/"> cereal for dinner</a>), ironing uniforms or sat watching a school play <strong><em>without</em></strong> my not-husband. He&#8217;d be overseas and I&#8217;d be sat in an <s>awful</s> assembly wondering how my life got to this point?!</p>



<p><strong>How much more adult can you get?! Surely <em>THIS</em> was adulting?</strong> </p>



<h4>Yet I STILL doubt myself! </h4>



<p>A couple of weeks back, I was holding &#8216;stuff&#8217; (<em><s>aka jumpers they refuse to wear, a rock they took a liking to in the car park and what was left of my sanity</s></em>) whilst the kids took part in a Harry Potter broomstick &#8216;flying&#8217; lesson, being told to &#8216;<em>ooh</em>&#8216; and &#8216;<em>aah</em>&#8216; by the crazy lady leading it! </p>



<p class="has-text-align-center has-medium-font-size">&#8220;<strong>HOW ON EARTH DID I END UP HERE?!</strong>&#8220;</p>



<p>That was one of those moments where I questioned everything &#8211; just for a second! If you&#8217;d have asked me four years ago, if I&#8217;d be standing at a Harry Potter event (totally not my thing), &#8216;oohing and aahing&#8217; at a fake flying lesson&#8230;I&#8217;d have told you not to be so ridiculous!</p>



<p>Being a step-mum was never something I planned for. I had no idea about being a parent, never mind being one to TWO hormonal pre-teen girls!</p>



<p>BUT! We&#8217;re now just a normal family, I don&#8217;t see them as &#8216;his kids&#8217; (<s>unless they&#8217;re channelling their inner tw*t, then they can be HIS!</s>). They&#8217;re OUR kids and we do normal family stuff. Hearing the kids say to their friends, <em>&#8220;this is my step-mum</em>&#8220;, still freaks me out a bit, but I feel honoured to have been accepted into their lives so readily.</p>



<p>I question if I&#8217;m actually &#8216;adulting&#8217;, but I must be? I keep these teenagers alive, Mr S hasn&#8217;t left me for a more competent human and I haven&#8217;t burnt the house down&#8230;yet! </p>



<h2>Statistics&#8230;do these show us as nation to be &#8216;adulting&#8217;?</h2>



<div class="wp-block-image"><figure class="alignright"><a href="https://www.statista.com/chart/13885/when-europeans-fly-the-nest/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"><img loading="lazy" width="300" height="216" src="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/large_6FDx84I8Llk8_Q52lzjn79EBnMR78fQc0Cjd6KTA4Hw-300x216.png" alt="Leaving home average ages. Adult life. Adulting" class="wp-image-554" srcset="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/large_6FDx84I8Llk8_Q52lzjn79EBnMR78fQc0Cjd6KTA4Hw-300x216.png 300w, https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/large_6FDx84I8Llk8_Q52lzjn79EBnMR78fQc0Cjd6KTA4Hw-768x553.png 768w, https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/large_6FDx84I8Llk8_Q52lzjn79EBnMR78fQc0Cjd6KTA4Hw.png 850w" sizes="(max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px" /></a><figcaption><a href="https://www.statista.com/chart/13885/when-europeans-fly-the-nest/">Average age young people leave their parent&#8217;s home</a></figcaption></figure></div>



<p>If you take a look at the graphic here, the UK ranks slightly below the EU average for age to leave home. The statistic for men vs woman is aged 27.6 and 25.2 respectively. By that stat, I was way ahead as I left home at 18. </p>



<p>We could go one further and compare this to the 1960&#8217;s, where <a href="https://www.pewsocialtrends.org/2016/05/24/for-first-time-in-modern-era-living-with-parents-edges-out-other-living-arrangements-for-18-to-34-year-olds/">62% of 18-34 year old</a>s were living as married or co-habiting in their own home, compared to just 31% now. Of course many social and economic factors play a role but let&#8217;s not get too deep here. </p>



<div class="wp-block-image"><figure class="alignleft is-resized"><a href="https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/birthsdeathsandmarriages/livebirths/bulletins/birthcharacteristicsinenglandandwales/2017#average-ages-of-mothers-and-fathers-of-all-babies-have-continued-to-rise" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"><img loading="lazy" src="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Screenshot_20190830_114337-300x296.jpg" alt="Ages for becoming parents - ONS. Adult life. Adulting" class="wp-image-555" width="225" height="222" srcset="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Screenshot_20190830_114337-300x296.jpg 300w, https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Screenshot_20190830_114337-768x757.jpg 768w, https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Screenshot_20190830_114337-1024x1010.jpg 1024w, https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Screenshot_20190830_114337-75x75.jpg 75w, https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Screenshot_20190830_114337.jpg 1080w" sizes="(max-width: 225px) 100vw, 225px" /></a><figcaption><a href="https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/birthsdeathsandmarriages/livebirths/bulletins/birthcharacteristicsinenglandandwales/2017#average-ages-of-mothers-and-fathers-of-all-babies-have-continued-to-rise">Average age of first time parents</a></figcaption></figure></div>



<p>Compare all this alongside ages for having children and we see more people now than ever aren&#8217;t having their first children until their thirties. In the early 1990&#8217;s, my Mum was horrified to be pregnant again (her 3rd, my brother) at the age of 30! She felt people would think &#8220;<em>she should know better!</em>&#8221; for being an &#8216;older&#8217; mother.</p>



<p>But how <strong><a href="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/normal/">normal</a></strong> is it now, that my friend at 39 is having her first. Society is fluid and opinions change over time. It is no longer seen as &#8216;older mother&#8217; past 30, more &#8216;the norm&#8217; (since writing this, I became a mother at 32). Just because society suggests one opinion right now, doesn&#8217;t mean it will stay that way! </p>



<p>What makes you feel like an adult? Do you feel like you&#8217;ve nailed the art of &#8216;adulting&#8217;? Are you expecting a baby but don&#8217;t feel like a &#8216;real grown-up&#8217; yet? I&#8217;d love to hear from you!</p>



<p class="has-pale-pink-color has-text-color has-medium-font-size"><strong><em>Over and Out, </em></strong></p>



<p class="has-text-align-center has-pale-pink-color has-text-color has-large-font-size"><strong><a href="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/military-spouse/"><em>The Not Wife</em></a></strong></p>



<p class="has-text-align-center has-pale-pink-color has-text-color has-medium-font-size"><strong>X</strong></p>



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<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/adulting/">The Crazy World of Adulting!</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk">The Not Wife Life</a>.</p>
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		<title>So Who Am I? &#8211; The Unmarried Military Spouse</title>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[TheNotWife]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 13 May 2019 10:29:55 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>I&#8217;m just an ordinary unmarried military spouse trying to adult my way through life, with a hint of what I like to call &#8216;a crazy brain&#8216;. You know, those weird ass, mostly nonsense thoughts you have sometimes, where you wonder if anyone else thinks these things&#8230; Well I&#8217;m here to tell you they do! It&#8217;s hard isn&#8217;t it? Life! Having entered the over 30&#8217;s category as an unmarried military spouse, I decided a blog might be a good idea (and now a podcast!) I question everything and try to find my own logic through it. I figured if I write and just one person can relate (and feel&#160;a little more &#8216;normal&#8216;) or learn something new, then my work here is done. So who am I really? &#8211; Not just a military spouse! Well, I&#8217;m no-one special. I live in a little village in the UK, &#8216;not married&#8217; to a long-serving army man and have been for over five years now. What I write isn&#8217;t fact, neither is it fiction, it is simply what I know, think and feel. Sharing my experiences with you in the hope you&#8217;ll relate; or at least have a new insight into the world of someone else. I recently had a baby boy in a global pandemic (read about that here) which was pretty traumatic! (I&#8217;ll write about it when I feel strong enough to re-live it!) But he is amazing, so all is forgiven! He has two older sisters from my not-husband, and thankfully they love him very much&#8230;phew! So what do I do when I&#8217;m not writing? Well, I used to &#8216;workout&#8217; twice a week at a military style (veteran owned) bootcamp and do things like walk Mount Snowdon just for fun. I loved to push my limits and really challenge myself fitness wise, but then a baby came along and all that had to stop (more about that here). Leaving your comfort zone now and then is great soul food and I can&#8217;t wait to get back to it! I&#8217;m an animal lover with four dogs, yes &#8211; four! So you&#8217;ll probably find me out walking most days (which has been great during all of the UK Lockdowns). I crave the outdoors and particularly love the coast. Professionally, I am part qualified as a counsellor, but Baby and a pandemic also put that on hold&#8230;so that&#8217;s &#8216;To Be Continued&#8217;. Although, I am qualified as a Mental Health First Aider with a focus on the Military Community. I experience anxiety myself (notice I don&#8217;t use the word suffer!) and have had bouts of depression, but why should I let that hold me back from anything? The crazy thoughts are still there, I have just learnt to cope with&#160;them more easily. (Credit to my lovely counsellor &#8211; more about her another day!) What else can I tell you? Well, I&#8217;m fiercely independent! Not in a feminist way, I&#8217;ve just always wanted to do things for myself and not depend on anyone. (which is ironic as military spouses are known as &#8216;dependants&#8217;). But that isn&#8217;t always a good idea! There are times in life where we all need someone. Whether that&#8217;s your spouse, parent or&#160;a good friend, you need someone you can be your true self with. I know this all too well, having ridden the emotional roller-coaster that was losing my amazing dad to a terminal illness. Read that one here. So why am I The Not-Wife? Well, the&#160;urban dictionary&#160;says, &#8220;Your female partner, life partner, significant other who you are not married to but eternally committed to&#8230;&#8220; Urban Dictionary So I guess that&#8217;s the answer really. The commitment without the commitment? We live together, I am step-mum (urgh, that word!) to his two children, we now have a child together and we share everything as any married couple would. Being in the military, everyone assumes you&#8217;re already married, which of course many are due to the demands of forces life. But I&#8217;ve been asked by welfare or at events like families day, &#8220;What&#8217;s your surname?&#8221; and that doesn&#8217;t work when you don&#8217;t have his name. What they&#8217;re actually asking is,&#160;who are you with or who are you linked to? (Click here to read my post about why women take their husband&#8217;s surname after marriage) And why AREN&#8217;T we hitched? Well, because he was scarred for life by the previous one! He&#8217;s quite rightfully fearful of another union since the first one ended badly. But he knows we&#8217;re not all the same! We are the best of friends, we never argue (we disagree, of course, but I just tell him he&#8217;s a dick wrong and we move on hehehe) and we have a ton of fun together. So, until my wonderful not-husband is brave enough to commit again, I shall forever be his not-wife (which is a good thing because then I&#8217;d have to rename this entire blog!) Whilst on our road trip to Scotland in our motorhome, we stopped at Gretna Green and added an engraved padlock to their &#8216;love lock&#8217; sign. The engraving said &#8216;Not Husband &#38; Not Wife&#8217;, with our names on the back. Marriage Stats What I find interesting though, is the divorce rate in the UK is at a&#160;40 year low, with around 42% of marriages ending in divorce (in&#160;2017 &#8211; stats aren&#8217;t updated that often apparently).&#160;Isn&#8217;t that still an incredibly high number?! Almost half of all marriages won&#8217;t work out?! Why is that? What there aren&#8217;t statistics for, are long term, committed relationships &#8211; like the one I&#8217;m in &#8211; that end after years of a joint life. Do they last longer? Or do they just dissolve without anyone batting an eyelid?! Although there are no official figures on second marriages and divorce rates, the&#160;Marriage Foundation&#160;suggests only 31% of second marriages ends in divorce. Which is good news right? Perhaps in your second marriage you learn to overcome issues more easily and&#160;make an extra effort to stay committed? Or is it that the first person wasn&#8217;t right for you or it happened a little too quickly. Or maybe too young? The possibilities are endless and every relationship is different, so how can we possibly conclude why second marriages are more successful?! Military Life and Marriage In my time as a military spouse, I am very aware that many forces relationships are dictated by the serving persons work life, which can sometimes lead to couples getting a shotgun wedding. Now this doesn&#8217;t mean it is in any way rushed, it simply&#160;means that postings hours from home or overseas, deployments or training courses can often bring forward an already planned wedding. Some couples choose to have a simple signing of the register ceremony (the official bit) in order to be together sooner, with&#160;a bigger (not always) celebration and/or blessing at a more convenient time. Postings can dictate where you and your family will live and for how long, and that becomes a whole lot easier once you&#8217;ve signed that little book! The military and us&#8230; Loving someone who serves can be incredibly difficult at times, but it&#8217;s so worth it! We may spend three months or more apart due to a deployment, but that just makes every day we do spend together all the more precious! For us, we bought our own house a few years ago, twenty minutes from camp and have settled in a place we both wanted to live. Luckily, we were at a point where we wouldn&#8217;t necessarily need to move anywhere (at least not for a while anyway) so it was an easy choice to make. However; things do change (forces life is ALWAYS changing &#8211; learn to expect the unexpected!) and we ended up &#8216;weekending&#8216; in 2019. Weekending? What&#8217;s that? It just means the serving person is away during the week and only home at weekends. Yes, it sucks! That Sunday night &#8220;he&#8217;s leaving again&#8221; feeling, coupled with the Friday afternoon &#8220;shit, he&#8217;ll be back soon and the house is a tip&#8221; rush. EVERY WEEK!&#160;We were 180 miles apart, but thankfully it only lasted three months! Weekending certainly has its own highs and lows, like any long distance relationship (more here). You still experience all that life has to throw at you; from love, to loss, to celebration and joy; you just have to learn to&#160;experience those things on your own. Modern technology has of course made military life way easier and more bearable. Being able to see and talk to (when the connection actually works!) to someone the other side of the world is just amazing!! Sharing those moments helps you stay connected over&#160;the miles. Over and Out Well, that&#8217;s it from me, Check out my Instagram for updates! See you soon and stay strong whatever you&#8217;re going through! Are you a fellow military spouse? What do you love or hate about military life? Are you living with someone but as of yet, unmarried? What contributed to your decision not to marry? Head to my contact page and get in touch! Over and Out, The Not Wife X JOIN ME ON INSTAGRAM!</p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/militaryspouse-2/">So Who Am I? &#8211; The Unmarried Military Spouse</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk">The Not Wife Life</a>.</p>
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<h6 class="has-text-align-center"><strong>I&#8217;m just an ordinary unmarried military spouse trying to <a href="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/adulting/">adult </a>my way through life, with a hint of what I like to call &#8216;a <a href="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/normal/">crazy brain</a>&#8216;. </strong></h6>



<p>You know, those weird ass, mostly nonsense thoughts you have sometimes, where you wonder if anyone else thinks these things&#8230;</p>



<p class="has-text-color" style="color:#c380fd"><strong>W</strong><strong>ell I&#8217;m here to tell you they do!</strong></p>



<p class="has-text-color has-medium-font-size" style="color:#ee27cd"><strong>It&#8217;s hard isn&#8217;t it? </strong></p>



<p class="has-very-dark-gray-color has-text-color has-large-font-size"><strong>Life!</strong></p>



<p>Having entered the over 30&#8217;s category as an unmarried military spouse, I decided a blog might be a good idea<strong> (and now a podcast!)</strong> </p>



<p>I question everything and try to find my own logic through it. I figured if I write and just one person can relate (and feel&nbsp;a little more &#8216;<a href="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/normal/" data-type="post" data-id="320">normal</a>&#8216;) or learn something new, then my work here is done.</p>



<h3><strong>So who am I really?</strong> &#8211; Not just a military spouse!</h3>



<div class="wp-block-image"><figure class="alignleft is-resized"><img loading="lazy" src="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/IMG_20190922_211414-300x300.jpg" alt="Pushing your limits, military spouse, not-wife" class="wp-image-643" width="225" height="225" srcset="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/IMG_20190922_211414-300x300.jpg 300w, https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/IMG_20190922_211414-150x150.jpg 150w, https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/IMG_20190922_211414-768x767.jpg 768w, https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/IMG_20190922_211414-1024x1024.jpg 1024w, https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/IMG_20190922_211414-1140x1138.jpg 1140w, https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/IMG_20190922_211414-75x75.jpg 75w, https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/IMG_20190922_211414.jpg 2048w" sizes="(max-width: 225px) 100vw, 225px" /><figcaption>I push my limits constantly! </figcaption></figure></div>



<p>Well, I&#8217;m no-one special. I live in a little village in the UK, &#8216;not married&#8217; to a long-serving army man and have been for over five years now. </p>



<p>What I write isn&#8217;t fact, neither is it fiction, it is simply what I know, think and feel. Sharing my experiences with you in the hope you&#8217;ll relate; or at least have a new insight into the world of someone else.</p>



<p>I recently had a baby boy in a global pandemic (<a href="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/pandemic/" data-type="post" data-id="1007">read about that here</a>) which was pretty traumatic! (I&#8217;ll write about it when I feel strong enough to re-live it!) But he is amazing, so all is forgiven! He has two older sisters from my not-husband, and thankfully they love him very much&#8230;phew! </p>



<h4>So what do I do when I&#8217;m not writing? </h4>



<p>Well, I used to &#8216;workout&#8217; twice a week at a military style (veteran owned) <a href="https://www.facebook.com/forcesfitsomerset/" data-type="URL">bootcamp</a> and do things like walk Mount Snowdon just for fun. I loved to push my limits and really challenge myself fitness wise, but then a baby came along and all that had to stop (<a href="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/pregnancy/" data-type="post" data-id="839">more about that here</a>). Leaving your comfort zone now and then is great soul food and I can&#8217;t wait to get back to it! </p>



<p>I&#8217;m an animal lover with four dogs, yes &#8211; four!  So you&#8217;ll probably find me out walking most days (which has been great during all of the UK Lockdowns). I crave the outdoors and particularly love the coast. </p>



<p>Professionally, I am part qualified as a counsellor, but Baby and a pandemic also put that on hold&#8230;so that&#8217;s &#8216;To Be Continued&#8217;. Although, I am qualified as a Mental Health First Aider with a focus on the Military Community. </p>



<p>I experience anxiety myself (notice I don&#8217;t use the word suffer!) and have had bouts of depression, but why should I let that hold me back from anything? The crazy thoughts are still there, I have just learnt to cope with&nbsp;them more easily. (Credit to my <a href="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/normal/">lovely counsellor</a> &#8211; more about her another day!)</p>



<p class="has-text-color" style="color:#ffa1ef;font-size:18px"><strong>What else can I tell you?</strong></p>



<p>Well, I&#8217;m fiercely independent! Not in a feminist way, I&#8217;ve just always wanted to do things for myself and not depend on anyone. (which is ironic as military spouses are known as &#8216;dependants&#8217;). But that isn&#8217;t always a good idea! There are times in life where we all need someone. Whether that&#8217;s your spouse, parent or&nbsp;a good friend, you need someone you can be your true self with. </p>



<p>I know this all too well, having ridden the emotional roller-coaster that was losing my amazing dad to a terminal illness. <a href="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/loss/" data-type="post" data-id="72">Read that one here. </a></p>



<h2><strong>So why am I The Not-Wife?</strong></h2>



<p>Well, the&nbsp;<a href="https://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=not-wife">urban dictionary</a>&nbsp;says,</p>



<blockquote class="wp-block-quote is-style-default"><p>&#8220;<em>Your female partner, life partner, significant other who you are not married to but eternally committed to&#8230;</em>&#8220;</p><cite>Urban Dictionary</cite></blockquote>



<p>So I guess that&#8217;s the answer really. The commitment without the commitment? We live together, I am step-mum (urgh, that word!) to his two children, we now have a child together and we share everything as any married couple would.</p>



<p>Being in the military, everyone assumes you&#8217;re already married, which of course many are due to the demands of forces life. But I&#8217;ve been asked by welfare or at events like families day, &#8220;What&#8217;s your <a href="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/name/">surname</a>?&#8221; and that doesn&#8217;t work when you don&#8217;t have his name. What they&#8217;re actually asking is,&nbsp;who are you with or who are you linked to? <a href="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/name/">(Click here to read my post about why women take their husband&#8217;s surname after marriage)</a></p>



<p class="has-text-color" style="color:#fb9fec;font-size:18px"><strong>And why AREN&#8217;T we hitched?</strong></p>



<p>Well, because he was scarred for life by the previous one! He&#8217;s quite rightfully fearful of another union since the first one ended badly. But he knows we&#8217;re not all the same! We are the best of friends, we never argue (we disagree, of course, but I just tell him he&#8217;s <s>a dick</s> wrong and we move on hehehe) and we have a ton of fun together. </p>



<p>So, until my wonderful not-husband is brave enough to commit again, I shall forever be his not-wife (which is a good thing because then I&#8217;d have to rename this entire blog!)</p>



<div class="wp-block-image"><figure class="alignright size-thumbnail is-resized"><img loading="lazy" src="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/IMG_20210228_190901-edited-150x150.jpg" alt="Marriage" class="wp-image-1084" width="150" height="150" srcset="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/IMG_20210228_190901-edited-150x150.jpg 150w, https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/IMG_20210228_190901-edited-300x300.jpg 300w, https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/IMG_20210228_190901-edited-1024x1024.jpg 1024w, https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/IMG_20210228_190901-edited-768x767.jpg 768w, https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/IMG_20210228_190901-edited-1140x1139.jpg 1140w, https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/IMG_20210228_190901-edited-75x75.jpg 75w, https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/IMG_20210228_190901-edited.jpg 1525w" sizes="(max-width: 150px) 100vw, 150px" /></figure></div>



<p>Whilst on our road trip to Scotland in our motorhome, we stopped at Gretna Green and added an engraved padlock to their &#8216;love lock&#8217; sign. The engraving said &#8216;Not Husband &amp; Not Wife&#8217;, with our names on the back. </p>



<h2>Marriage Stats</h2>



<p>What I find interesting though, is the divorce rate in the UK is at a&nbsp;<a href="https://www.crispandco.com/site/divorce-statistics/">40 year low</a>, with around 42% of marriages ending in divorce (in&nbsp;<a href="https://www.crispandco.com/site/divorce-statistics/">2017 </a>&#8211; stats aren&#8217;t updated that often apparently).&nbsp;Isn&#8217;t that still an incredibly high number?! Almost half of all marriages won&#8217;t work out?! Why is that?</p>



<p>What there aren&#8217;t statistics for, are long term, committed relationships &#8211; like the one I&#8217;m in &#8211; that end after years of a joint life. Do they last longer? Or do they just dissolve without anyone batting an eyelid?!</p>



<div class="wp-block-image"><figure class="alignright"><img loading="lazy" width="300" height="200" src="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/married-300x200.jpg" alt="Second Marriages" class="wp-image-426" srcset="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/married-300x200.jpg 300w, https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/married-768x512.jpg 768w, https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/married-1024x683.jpg 1024w, https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/married-1140x760.jpg 1140w, https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/married.jpg 1200w" sizes="(max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px" /></figure></div>



<p>Although there are no official figures on second marriages and divorce rates, the&nbsp;<a href="http://marriagefoundation.org.uk/publication_doc/second-marriages/">Marriage Foundation</a>&nbsp;suggests only 31% of second marriages ends in divorce. Which is good news right? Perhaps in your second marriage you learn to overcome issues more easily and&nbsp;make an extra effort to stay committed? Or is it that the first person wasn&#8217;t right for you or it happened a little too quickly. Or maybe too young? The possibilities are endless and every relationship is different, so how can we possibly conclude why second marriages are more successful?!</p>



<h2><strong>Military Life and Marriage</strong></h2>



<p>In my time as a military spouse, I am very aware that many forces relationships are dictated by the serving persons work life, which can sometimes lead to couples getting a shotgun wedding. </p>



<p>Now this doesn&#8217;t mean it is in any way rushed, it simply&nbsp;means that postings hours from home or overseas, deployments or training courses can often bring forward an already planned wedding. Some couples choose to have a simple signing of the register ceremony (the official bit) in order to be together sooner, with&nbsp;a bigger (not always) celebration and/or blessing at a more convenient time. Postings can dictate where you and your family will live and for how long, and that becomes a whole lot easier once you&#8217;ve signed that little book!</p>



<h2><strong>The military and us&#8230;</strong></h2>



<p>Loving someone who serves can be incredibly difficult at times, but it&#8217;s so worth it! We may spend three months or more apart due to a deployment, but that just makes every day we do spend together all the more precious!</p>



<p>For us, we bought our own house a few years ago, twenty minutes from camp and have settled in a place we both wanted to live. Luckily, we were at a point where we wouldn&#8217;t necessarily need to move anywhere (at least not for a while anyway) so it was an easy choice to make.</p>



<p class="has-very-dark-gray-color has-text-color has-background" style="background-color:#ffffff"><strong>However</strong>; things do change (forces life is ALWAYS changing &#8211; learn to expect the unexpected!) and we ended up &#8216;<a href="http://Thenotwifelife.co.uk/weekending">weekending</a>&#8216; in 2019. </p>



<h4><strong>Weekending? What&#8217;s that?</strong></h4>



<p>It just means the serving person is away during the week and <a href="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/weekending/">only home at weekends. </a></p>



<p>Yes, it sucks! </p>



<p>That Sunday night &#8220;he&#8217;s leaving again&#8221; feeling, coupled with the Friday afternoon &#8220;shit, he&#8217;ll be back soon and the house is a tip&#8221; rush. <strong>EVERY WEEK!&nbsp;</strong>We were 180 miles apart, but thankfully it only lasted three months! </p>



<p><a href="http://Thenotwifelife.co.uk/weekending">Weekending</a> certainly has its own highs and lows, like any long distance relationship (<a href="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/weekending/" data-type="post" data-id="288">more here</a>). You still experience all that life has to throw at you; from love, to loss, to celebration and joy; you just have to learn to&nbsp;experience those things on your own.</p>



<div class="wp-block-image"><figure class="alignright"><img loading="lazy" width="300" height="169" src="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/face-300x169.jpg" alt="Military relationships, military spouse" class="wp-image-427" srcset="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/face-300x169.jpg 300w, https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/face-768x432.jpg 768w, https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/face.jpg 950w" sizes="(max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px" /></figure></div>



<p>Modern technology has of course made military life way easier and more bearable. Being able to see and talk to (when the connection actually works!) to someone the other side of the world is just amazing!! Sharing those moments helps you stay connected over&nbsp;the miles. </p>



<h4><strong>Over and Out</strong></h4>



<p>Well, that&#8217;s it from me,</p>



<p>Check out my <a href="http://Instagram.com/thenotwifelife">Instagram</a> for updates! </p>



<p>See you soon and stay strong whatever you&#8217;re going through!</p>



<p>Are you a fellow military spouse? What do you love or hate about military life? Are you living with someone but as of yet, unmarried? What contributed to your decision not to marry? </p>



<p>Head to my <a href="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/contact/">contact page</a> and get in touch! </p>



<p class="has-pale-pink-color has-text-color has-medium-font-size"><strong><em>Over and Out, </em></strong></p>



<p class="has-text-align-center has-pale-pink-color has-text-color has-background has-large-font-size" style="background-color:#ffffff"><strong><em>The Not Wife</em></strong></p>



<p class="has-text-align-center has-pale-pink-color has-text-color has-medium-font-size">X</p>



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<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk/militaryspouse-2/">So Who Am I? &#8211; The Unmarried Military Spouse</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://thenotwifelife.co.uk">The Not Wife Life</a>.</p>
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