Anonymous wrote:You really need to deal with the resentment issues first unless no sex is the cause of the resentment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A hall pass for him to relieve the sexual pressure may break the cycle of resentment in your marriage.
He's not the type to wait around for my permission. I would not be the least bit surprised to learn he's cheated.
To be clear, frequency has dwindled to around once a week. But that's getting hard to maintain.
Anonymous wrote:Desire is not only physical but mental. If your husband is fairly awful to you during the day, it's hard to want to sleep with him at night. I think counseling is probably necessary, but if you want to tackle this on your own I would really praise him whenever he does something kind and completely ignore him when he is terrible.
I find most immature, bullying men act that way because they want a response like a child having a temper tantrum, and if you simply look at him with disdain/pity and walk away, hopefully he'll realize you won't take the bait. You can hope his behavior improves so you can start to see him like a real attractive man versus the other child you're forced to care for just without the same amount of love that you feel for your actual children.
Anonymous wrote:If he's actively treating you badly, then don't have sex with him. If he's just kind of checked out, more sex could trigger a virtuous cycle where he's more engaged with the family which makes you happier which makes you more likely to want to have sex with him, etc.
So, if he's a dick, dump him. If it's a logjam that needs broken, do what you need to do to get yourself in the mood and break the jam.
Anonymous wrote:A hall pass for him to relieve the sexual pressure may break the cycle of resentment in your marriage.
Anonymous wrote:You really need to deal with the resentment issues first unless no sex is the cause of the resentment.
Anonymous wrote:Desire is not only physical but mental. If your husband is fairly awful to you during the day, it's hard to want to sleep with him at night. I think counseling is probably necessary, but if you want to tackle this on your own I would really praise him whenever he does something kind and completely ignore him when he is terrible.
I find most immature, bullying men act that way because they want a response like a child having a temper tantrum, and if you simply look at him with disdain/pity and walk away, hopefully he'll realize you won't take the bait. You can hope his behavior improves so you can start to see him like a real attractive man versus the other child you're forced to care for just without the same amount of love that you feel for your actual children.