When a marriage has been annulled it is considered as never having happened, at least from a sacramental point of view. Where the original spouse or the prospective spouse comes from is irrelevant. Those who have had a marriage annulled by the church are free to marry, period.
Some marriages work out when the ex husband marries his mistress, but often the marriage becomes weak because the ex husband does not have the staying power; maturity or desire to make a marriage work. If the marriage has problems in the years to come (and there will be problems) he may well cheat on the mistress he married just like he did with you. Move on in your own life and let your ex husband find out what he is made of.
A marriage counselor or a family attorney can perhaps help in dealing with marriage problems.
no marriage is perfect
She was captured by Samuel argell She got away by marrying John Rolfe
no
I don't think there is anything online that can really help you with your marriage problems. The best thing to do is to probably go with your spouse to a marriage counselor.
Most likely, yes they will have problems in their marriage regarding their Faith. The two belief systems are polar opposites and like in a war this will affect their lives in spiritually, mentally, and emotionally. From a Catholic point of view, there is also a possibility that the children might not be raised Catholic.
A relationship should already feel committed and secure before any marriage occurs. You should only marry someone if you have a complete feeling of security with them. If there is insecurity and problems in the relationship currently, getting married will not solve these issues. In fact, the problems will likely intensify. If you can't trust someone currently or don't feel they are committed to you, marrying them will not make you trust them any further or increase their committment.
he might die befor her
no, kia is not having marital problems.
If your wife does not want to talk about marriage problems it could mean you have discussed your marriage problems before and nothing has changed to improve the relationship or, she may be thinking of leaving the marriage or she may be seeing someone else. It is important that you have good communication skills and since your wife refuses to talk about your marriage problems then you will have to be blunt in asking if she wants out of the marriage. If she still does not answer then tell her you cannot live in a marriage where the two of you don't try to resolve your problems and divorce seems to be the only way out. This may shock her into talking or, she may agree to a divorce.
I am not quite sure about the Catholic church, but in the Anglican Church marriage of first cousins is acceptable and not included in the 'forbidden' list in the Book of Common Prayer, as cousings are deemed far enough apart genetically to not be a problem. In history, many first cousins (especially in royal families) have married with no social, spiritual - or genetic - problems.