| OP, you're gonna have to develop or fake an interest in martial arts. Watch UFC fights with him or whatever. |
| DW doesn’t meet my sexual needs so why should I meet her emotional needs... |
PP here, and I think that’s kind of BS. I mean, you could also say sexual needs are a male concept on which bored males dwell, and they should cut it in half and quit dwelling. I’m not saying I expect my partner to hold me while I cry an hour a day. But he takes a genuine interest and always makes time for me if I need it. In return, I happily have sex whenever he wants. |
I don't think it BS. Dumb women who aren't intellectually stimulated use all their mental power thinking up problems and needs. |
I totally get it. My DH is a “dismissive/advoidant” and it affects every aspect of his life. He’s only comfortable with casual relationships and has an awful time with intimacy. This is largely because his mother abandoned him as a child. I experienced all the things you are saying for 13 years and I recently asked for a separation, as a result. I have days where I hope and pray he’ll turn the corner, for the sake of our family but with his avoidant traits, I have to be comfortable with the fact this may never happen. Best wishes to you and your families. |
Why did you marry him then OP? |
| and why is what you're doing better? why is it better for you. why is it better for the kids, and the family as a whole? |
That’s actually an insightful concept. When I became disabled, I had to stop working. I went from high functioning applied use of intellect to my time being consumed with pain, medical procedures, fighting with insurance , etc. Even now that this is my “normal” I don’t have engagement to stimulate my brain like I used to, and I did become emotionally much needier. I didn’t like it, and so I would try to engage DH in the evenings in intellectually stimulating conversations, but he needs the evenings to turn his brain off to detox from work. (and honestly my neediness.) I would get resentful of being denied the opportunity to change my stuck pattern by having those conversation with him, and viewed him as withholding that from me. Really I need to find another way to get the brain stimuli I need during the day, so I’m calmer at night, and not so dependent on him for my interaction. Thank you, PPs. |
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If a man can’t meet his wife’s needs, then they should have an open marriage. She should be free to find a man who she can connect with, and since most people feel more emotionally connected when they are having sex, that will likely be part of a relationship that meets her needs.
You can’t expect to never meet your partner’s needs and have them stay faithful to you. It’s unrealistic. |
Many men are not into this "emotional needs" raz a mataz. Get a therapist for you to get your emotional needs met. Understand men are wired to be good providers, not therapists and you sound particularly needy. |
I agree with this. NP but I too am tired of meeting the sexual needs of my emotionally stunted DH. |
| Instead of talking about it have you given him concrete things you can do to change it? You talk about wanting to have a shared TV show. Have you told him that? Have you suggested it? What would happen if you said to DH "on Friday night, let's start breaking bad. " Or "on Saturday night, let's open a bottle of wine and play some rummy" |
Agreed. I often post about opening a sexless marriage but this sounds totally fair too! Any spouse who refuses to meet a legitimate need (that’s been clearly communicated, in actionable terms, so he knows exactly what you mean by “emotional need”) cannot object when their spouse goes elsewhere to meet that need. |
OP I'm glad you have a social life outside of your home so you can have friends, conversations and people who are actually capable of responding to what you are saying or feeling. My spouse does not connect with me nor my kids well, but it is due to his aspergers. So he doesn't register any thought or empathy if a kid or I have a bad day, have a super day, or are in visible pain or frustration. It's like living with Spock or a robot. In his case he does not socialize much, have many friends or hobbies any longer, and won't take initiative to make some or keep some. In OP's case it somewhat sounds like her spouse is OK with childrearing and on the ball at home, plus has some sports outlets -- which does not lend itself to aspergers unless somethere there is like his #1 or 2 dogmatic "passions." Thankfully, I work FT, have sports, friends, kids, extended family (not nearby) so I can keep my sanity and level set on normal behavior. Otherwise I would end up mirroring the aspergers spouse: sit around, never both talking, no ideas on what to do, regurgitate my favorite work project again or news article everyone has already read. Also, by design, our children are in an excellent private school for socio-emotional whole child education and public speaking, so they see good role models, responsiveness, and conversational skills there. |
| ^ and FYI that was diagnosed 10 years into marriage, after we both thought it was maybe ADHD. the first few years I thought he was passive aggressive and "was a guy who didn't like to talk." but then nothing large or small was getting resolved and I should have walked then, but made more excuses plus didn't realize I was carrying the whole load. |