By Michelle Horton for Your Tango.
I’m not here to profess some grand happiness formula for marriage, seeing as I’ve only experienced this one life, with this one man, over a short eight years. Nor will I pretend to know all of the intricate, deeply seeded reasons for your own unhappiness. Happiness is wildly inconsistent and subjective.
But I do know a thing or two about chronic unhappiness. The way it simmers under the surface of our lives, building up pressure, and how each heavy sigh is like an emotional relief valve. I know how easy it is to dip into the shadowy parts of a marriage and then mistake it for all of the darkness in my life, even the parts that belong to me.
Top Comments
I have to disagree with 3#: "You'll only be happy once he changes". Surely if he (or she) is spending all the household money, or flying into rages, then these are very big reasons to be unhappy. These are dysfunctional, unacceptable behaviours that need change, not personal acceptance.
Completely agree. I'd be happier if my partner made more money because then he'd be able to save towards the overseas trips we want to take (but that I honestly want more).
Or you could save towards them?
But then you would complain that he was at work too much and neglecting you. Of course maybe he's wishing you would make more money
I do. Nice assumption.
Add to that lack of sex, lack of communication, lack of any kind of affection, conversation, getting too fat and comparing yourselves to other couples.
My husband announced today, after over 20 years of marriage, that he is asexual but doesn't wish to talk about it. Happy Valentines!
I'm going to go out on a limb - knowing absolutely nothing about your relationship, and say he may be confusing a lack of libido for asexuality. I feel this is something that would have been more obvious in a 20 year relationship. Low libido is treatable.
Yes, you're probably right but if he won't talk about it what can I do? Sex has always been issue throughout our marriage both in terms of quantity and quality. In some ways being asexual seems to make sense but I really don't know. When we do have sex we have no foreplay and the idea of him touching me intimately seems to be a real chore for him. The irony of course is that he always climaxes, me never. But he won't talk.
Absolutely get his testosterone checked by a GP. Mine had low testosterone as a result of a medical condition that we weren't aware of. He was also mildly depressed as a result. Medical intervention fixed his moods, his condition and our sex life. See a dr together.