NewStats: 3,263,913 , 8,181,859 topics. Date: Sunday, 08 June 2025 at 06:12 PM 839w6z3e3g |
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Badbunny: No, I have no interest in more kids in the future and it's highly unlikely to change.. |
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werisetogether: Yes was I was conscious, the doctor just numbed my sac and tube. I could feel the pressure but no pain. This is not my first operation using local anaesthetic. I had a screw in my ankle taken out years ago while i was awake. They just numbed the area and got to work. |
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Benbisco: Vasectomy is a permanent form of contraception. A reversal can be attempted but it has a low rate of success. |
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illicit: Yes sex is not any different feeling wise. Everything works as usual except no sperm is delivered to the semen. 2 Likes |
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Ahmed0336: Why? you prefer condoms and pills? |
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samomoli: I don't understand how this is a problem. If the kids I have are not biologically mine I'm still their dad in practice so doesn't really bother me. For insecurity, we don't live in Sambisa forest, odds are that most of my kids will outlive me. If they somehow don't, I have no interest in looking after a baby in my 40s. 1 Like |
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Livingstone01: What kind of regret? I don't have any interest in more children. In the highly unlikely event that all my kids die I can always adapt or dedicate my life to other pursuits. |
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DaddyCoool: Interesting, most couples report that it actually improves their sex life when the risk of pregnancy is removed. |
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I had a vasectomy 4 weeks ago and want to share the experience to help anybody considering it. I'm in my mid thirties and done with having children. Having to worry about possible pregnancy when having sex continues to be a burden. Worrying about condoms, pills and injections are a challenge I'd rather not deal with. I looked into a vasectomy and it seemed the most reasonable thing to do. So I booked my appointment and arrived at the clinic. The clinic had sent me material before hand to read so I reviewed it and looked at a few videos to be familiar with it. They'd asked me to bring tight fitting underwear to use after the procedure. I arrived a few minutes before my appointment so was left to seat in the waiting room. While there II could smell the burning flesh presumably from the burning of the flesh in the procedure. Soon after one guy came out after his procedure and left, seemingly in one piece. Few moments later another man left also in one piece. I felt reassured seeing them work out without agony. My turn came. The doctor brought me in to the room. Talked me through the risks and had me sign a consent form. It's "permanent" he said and hard to reverse. Music to my ears. In the procedure room, I proceeded to UnCloth and lie on the table. The clinic used a no-scalpel technique which meant a quicker and less painful procedure. It started off with a needle to my my sac to numb it. Felt a bit painful but was manageable and then he started to tug. When he went to burn the sperm tube, I could feel pain so he numbed it some more. Other than the pulling and some discomfort the rest of the procedure went well. Within 20 minutes he was done. I got dressed and left the clinic just 35 minutes after I stepped in. They told me it would be quick but it felt surreal that it had only taken a 20 minute procedure to give me reliable contraception for life. I left there thinking more men should do it. The next few days were uncomfortable but not unbearable. I took some paracetamol when it got too painful. I was instructed not to shower for the first 2 days which I complied with. The swelling lasted for a few days then started to subside. The hole on my scrotum took some time to heal as the scab kept getting pulled off but eventually it did. There's now just a small scab there 4 weeks later that would likely come off soon. The swelling is more or less gone and i only get a small discomfort now and again. Overall it was a good experience with no complaints. I'm set to have a semen test 4 months after the procedure to confirm it's been successful. In the interim there's still a risk especially if there hasn't been over 20 ejactulations. That's been my experience, would you consider a vasectomy? Ask me anything. 2 Likes |
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Quick update to this thread. After much consideration and giving my wife the chance to make amends, I've decided to end our marriage. We will be getting a divorce and work together on co-parenting our kids. I needed to be able to tell my kids when they're adults that I tried my best and I can say now that I did. So my conscience is clear and I can move on to the next phase of life. One of the things I read that was important early on was that no important decisions should be made within the first 90 days. I successfully negotiated those 90 days with the attitude of working on the marriage. My wife on the other hand couldn't see past her ego and pride and was stuck on her resentment and perceived slights. After 90 days I finally decided there was nothing to hold on to anymore and that I was too valuable to wait around for my wife to choose and return to me. So I'm letting her go, let her go find her happiness elsewhere while I nurse myself back to life. Thanks to all those that advised here. To those that were disparaging, understand thatLong-lasting decisions with serious consequences on others should never be taken in a rash manner. 8 Likes |
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Also, some people have referenced another link to a similar situation. I want to clarify that it is in no way related to me. This is an entirely different situation.
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Lorayne: Of course, I need therapy, no shame in itting that and I'm going through it. I'm sharing my thoughts and feelings here for others who may be going through similar so they can see other perspectives. 3 Likes |
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The challenge with Nairalanders and Nigerians, in general, is that we like to delight in ignorance. So let me help educate you in a small way. There are broadly 2 types of marriages. High conflict and low conflict ones. High conflict is where there's abuse, violence, and constant fighting. Low conflict marriages are the opposite. In the latter things are generally calm and happy with occasional bouts of arguments. In high conflict marriages, divorce can be a good thing for the kids as it removes them from a highly charged situation. For low-conflict marriages on the other hand, divorce is devastating to the kids. This is because the kids see mum and dad as happy, stable and loving. When they then hear suddenly that the family is breaking apart it devastates them. They then have to deal with a lifetime of insecurity. They develop serious emotional challenges that put them at risk of so many adverse outcomes that are too numerous to mention. Just google 'divorce effect on kids'. Now kids didn't ask to be born, parents choose to bring them into the world. To so violently take away their stability because parents couldn't put aside their ego to at least try to work out their issues is the most cruel and unfair thing one could do. So if there are kids from broken homes doing just fine, I can assure you that if there were from low-conflict homes that broke up, they would be doing so much better if their parents worked out their issues. I think many of us in this age don't truly understand what marriage and parenting is about. I think my wife falls into this category actually and I didn't do a good enough job to teach her. I underestimated her limited understanding and thought love would get us through. Well as it turns out, love waxes and wanes. What keeps you going is understanding the commitment you made and working hard to protect it. A small example is talking about marital problems outside. This should never be done. Only discuss your marriage with your spouse or a trusted counsellor when things are too difficult. Sharing everywhere with everybody is a recipe for disaster. 12 Likes 2 Shares |
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Certain things have happened recently that s what many of you are saying. Yes my wife is totally gone. I don't mind accepting that but due to my kids I have a hard time letting go. There's no version of a divorce that doesn't hurt them and I can't stand that. I'm in a very difficult place I'm not sure how to move past it. Our kids can only have one of us as the closer parent in a divorce and we're both very close to our kids. So serious wahala dey. Na only prayer fit solve this problem. 1 Like |
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People don't realize the upheaval that's currently happening in our societies and relationships. Many of us still have this archaic vision of what life and relationships should be. The reality is that it's 2021, we live a very modern life with technology everywhere. This means the old models of marriages and families in Africa don't really apply as they used to. The idea for instance that men can cheat willy nilly while women can't is dead and gone. Women are now equal to men and can and should do as they please. You can't beat your wife, you can't be cruel or maltreat her just because she's a woman or because she wrongs you. No matter what she does, if she doesn't break the law, she has every right to do it just as every man also has the right to do as he pleases. Fundamentally, I believe in this equality so i know that my partner has the right to do as she pleases. Women on the other hand I think are stepping into a new world of rights but don't fully understand the responsibilities that go with these rights. The way however to sensitize women to their newfound responsibilities is not via violence but rather persuasion. The challenge however is that women are more emotional and so the form of persuasion they need is an emotional variant. Being the betrayed partner it's difficult to offer this soft emotional persuasion but it's really the only way to go. Mixing it with some tough love also sha when boundaries are overstepped is also important. Tough love being firm with consequences when there's error and not violence or abuse. The option of being wicked, controlling and authoritarian is not really compatible with modern relationships. Insisting on being this way will mean you as a man leave a trail of broken and unhappy people. This is my world view and while some people think it weak, if you consider it deeply you will understand the validity in it in today's world. Anyway sha this is me just thinking aloud. I hope it makes some sense. I'm still in a holding pattern with occasional emotional outbursts. These will cool with time and I'll be able to make rational decisions. Till then, my default position is hoping we can recreate a new stable relationship. 3 Likes 1 Share |
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The challenge with infidelity is that it makes you question everything. For example, someone asked what our sex life was like. I would have said good before now but after her stepping out it's hard to know. By her own ission, she didn't have issues with our sex life, if anything I wasn't getting as much as I would have liked but was ok with it. Whether she's satisfied by them, it's only her that can answer that truly. It wouldn't be uncommon however for us to make love for over an hour. The sex with the other guy was of course a pleasurable experience for her as it's forbidden fruit and will always be impossible to compete with. Challenge now is that she has a new reference point that wasn't there before. This will make sex between us more complex as it may not ever compare to the highs of the forbidden new guy who wanted to do his best to please her. And by her he did. So yeah, a difficult situation to be in. The other guy is also relentless in his pursuit and actively lured and chased her knowing fully well of my existence. I also warned her of the danger of the guy so she didn't heed my warnings, so, yea, there are a lot of things to unpack. She's doing therapy now and we will soon go to counselling together to find a way to get past this hurt and chart what the new relationship will look like. Whether it will be together or apart, only time will tell. 6 Likes 2 Shares |
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Nancystan: Thank you for sharing. Have you tried talking to him? What's the response? |
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It's about 3 weeks since I found out and it's been getting easier to deal with by the day. Today though has been a particularly difficult day emotionally. Not entirely sure why as I thought I was coping better. I'd began journaling daily, focused more on my fitness and a good diet, and continuing to be there for my kids. I'm also now more accepting of the whole situation and moving towards thinking about what's the next best step. My partner on the other hand still doesn't give a reconciliatory vibe which is what is setting me off I think. I guess also that it's a roller coaster and there will just be bad days. Have you been through infidelity? What was the first month like?
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JovialJune: I agree, there's definitely a double standard. The reality however is that modern marriages are a partnership of equals so what is good for the goose is equally good for the gander. Women stay and work on it for the kids, don't see why a man doing the same thing means he's a "simp". Imagine people suggesting violence and cruelty as a response to cheating because "alpha male". May toxic masculinity not kill you people and your families. As for me, I chose differently. I may leave in the end but it will be on my own and in a healthy manner that considers the wellbeing of my children. 8 Likes 3 Shares |
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okpanachil: Thank you, we need plenty of prayers as I also believe there's a supernatural component to all of this. If I didn't believe a devil existed before, I do now. The level of evil I've seen in the last few weeks is unfathomable. But My Lord am and we go overcome. 2 Likes |
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"You're weak" "You're effeminate" "You're a simp" The irony is I agree with this assessment of my actions too. I would have said prior to now that once adultery enters, the other partner should leave. I was ready to leave but when you have 3 small children whom you love dearly and do everything for, you have no choice but to put your ego aside. I have made it clear to my wife that our old marriage is over, we're now in the process of redefining what the new relationship will be. To those in doubt, I am not saying divorce is off the table, it still is an option. I'm saying that it's a significant decision like that cannot be taken in the heat of the revelation of the affair. It's just been 3 weeks now so I'm still picking up the pieces. Weakness is walking away in the heat of the moment and leaving the family in jeopardy not dissimilar to what my wife did. Putting aside ego and anger to get to a workable solution is the very definition of strength. I better not share the rest of the full situation sha because una go abuse me tire. The betrayal and disrespect were very deep but how person go do? I cannot control another person's actions and nobody has a right to mete out violence to anyone else regardless of how angry one is. 5 Likes 1 Share |
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MMotimo: Thank you for your comment. You're the first person that's actually seen and acknowledged me and my point of view properly. 1 Like |
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BKsoul: Of course, I have a lot of shortcomings, I'm not going to pretend that's not the case. I've been negligent and inconsiderate many a time. Generally not deliberately and I try to apologize and right the wrongs where possible. Like I've posted several times, marriage has its ups and downs as it's 2 imperfect people trying to forge a life together. What I haven't done though is have sex with another woman. Finally, I'm afraid of all the people here that seem to think that love and commitment is something you can just turn off like a tap. It's not that easy and I of course want her to do well considering the difficult circumstances we're all in. 4 Likes |
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BKsoul: Of course, there's lots of history. For example, this is not the first time she's asked for a divorce. She's done it several times in the past. Usually in an emotional or depressed state. We then generally get past it and have a good marriage. This particular episode is different because it's combined with cheating. There's also the fact that on the same day she cheated, she received news that her brother committed suicide. The second brother to do the same in 2 years, so yes there's a lot of history. 2 Likes 2 Shares |
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TheRollingStone: My wife is a full-fledged adult with the right to do as she pleases. I do not have control over her and cannot control her agency. She's not a child to be scolded. Yes, I did have strong words with her to impress upon her the gravity of her actions but strong words only work to a point. In fact, the research shows that they very quickly become counterproductive so you dear sir have no idea what you are talking about. I am indeed working on myself and will be stronger as a result. I just don't just buy these egotistic and toxic tropes many people keep parroting. It simply doesn't work in modern relationships, in fact I'd argue that it never really worked and just leaves men angry, depressed, and unfulfilled. For others who may be going through a similar thing to me, don't be afraid to bury your ego and think logically first before going for a divorce. 5 Likes |
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TheRollingStone: Lol at I have no game. What is this game you speak of? Is it to get women into bed. Don't worry bro, na women dey chase me, I dey turn dem down steadily. Crying is a natural and healthy response to emotional anguish. Let go of your toxic masculinity. This man here cries and is very secure in his masculinity. If any woman is offended by it, she's the one with the problem, not the crying man who's in pain and having a natural response to emotional pain. Of course, what's going on is painful and no I didn't beg. I pointed out the reality of what she's choosing and how foolish it is. Woman no be my problem but my 3 kids will only have one mother and I must bury my ego for their sake. 16 Likes 2 Shares |
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Matheusmartin: Is my life at risk? No, unfaithful spouses do not go around killing their partners and the father to their 3 children who is the sole provider for them. What are the risks to my wellbeing? Divorce puts me at a 90% chance of a mental disorder. What are the odds that someone who's apparently 'out of the union' returns and re-commits to the marriage. Somewhere around 30 - 50%. It's quite obvious what the logical thing to do is. So remove your emotions for a minute like I'm doing and think logically. Working to first salvage the marriage via therapy and counselling is the best initial course of action. Divorce is not running anywhere, it's still an option. 5 Likes |
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Lorayne: Ambivalent, non-committal, not remorseful. This was shocking to me to be honest. I thought to myself that it's all over. Was ok to go ahead with the divorce but the thought of ripping apart the world of my 3 small kids couldn't let me do it. I had to persist and encourage her to go to therapy for herself first and then counselling for us both afterwards to give it a shot. I said to her that when our kids are older, they're going to ask if we tried all we could to keep the family together. We need to be able to look them in the eye and say we did. So that's why I haven't packed my stuff and moved out yet. I was very close to doing it but it wouldn't have been the wisest thing to do. It might yet happen but I know I have to give it time and make decisions with a clear head. 2 Likes |
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Lorayne: Thats' what you think. Nobody ever says what really goes on in their marriage. You think you know from the outside, you have no idea. We didn't have issues with our sex life, again by her own ission. Not that it's an excuse if we did. There are ways to solve problems that don't include unapologetically cheating. 2 Likes |
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Matheusmartin: Lol, 'simp' ke! Some people value commitment you know and stick to the promises they make even when it's difficult. 3 Likes |
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jesmond3945: I'm just in a holding pattern now and seeing how things go. She's doing therapy and I'm learning to manage my emotions. Some days are better than others but on the whole, I'm better at self-regulating. I view all of this as an opportunity to build my own self. I'm looking inwards, building mental strength and increasing my resilience. I know I will need it for the future. 3 Likes |
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Lorayne: I would definitely be more a "nice guy" than a "bad boy". Bad boys don't make particularly good husbands or fathers though. So while the bad boy may be fun, it always ends in tears. 5 Likes |
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