Anonymous wrote:As of last week I would have told you that we had an amazingly strong marriage, but DH recently told me that he’s been unhappy for a long time and wants to go to counseling. We have been married for 15 years and I thought we were a team, parenting, sex 3-4 times a week, lots of loving language and affection.
I feel devastated that he has been holding on to resentment for so long without saying anything. I definitely didn’t think things were perfect but to hear him tell it we were heading towards divorce- and I had no idea. I feel stupid and sad. He also can’t be specific about what resentment he has towards me, so it’s not like I can even start to make changes.
I know the answer is to at least try counseling but has anyone else gone through this? I am really struggling with the fact that he held on to these feelings for so long, I feel betrayed and upset.
Anonymous wrote:I find it interesting that he doesn't want to articulate what the resentments are in a specific way until you go to counseling. I'd be concerned about what that could mean. "We haven't shared household work in a fair way for years" isn't that hard to say. "I'm in love with neighbor Larla" is.
Anonymous wrote:Burned out on the complex medical needs. That's not PC to say so he wants to say it in therapy. He doesn't like the team and it's not what he signed up for.
Sorry.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Look, a symptom of unhappiness is the belief that it has been this way “forever.” It’s not necessarily true. He’s interpreting a story based on the present moment.
It is unusual he is asking to go to counseling. It could be a great sign. It could also be that there’s something going on he’s scared to tell you. Men having affairs often claim they have “been unhappy a long time.” It’s a cliche.
Are most of your chronically suicidal people women? Just curious. I have a niece was is “ always “ claiming wild things like this. It’s hard to know when their words are SO different from their actions.
DP. This makes sense to me. I work with a lot of people who are chronically suicidal, and they will tell me that they are “always” thinking about suicide. But when I probe further, usually they can articulate something like, “The last time I really thought about suicide was yesterday at 3pm when I brought dinner to my mom’s house and she made a snide remark.”
Counseling might be really helpful, OP. My guess is that you are not the cause of 100% of every unhappy moment he has had, and you are probably the cause of a lot of really happy ones too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Look, a symptom of unhappiness is the belief that it has been this way “forever.” It’s not necessarily true. He’s interpreting a story based on the present moment.
It is unusual he is asking to go to counseling. It could be a great sign. It could also be that there’s something going on he’s scared to tell you. Men having affairs often claim they have “been unhappy a long time.” It’s a cliche.
Are most of your chronically suicidal people women? Just curious. I have a niece was is “ always “ claiming wild things like this. It’s hard to know when their words are SO different from their actions.
DP. This makes sense to me. I work with a lot of people who are chronically suicidal, and they will tell me that they are “always” thinking about suicide. But when I probe further, usually they can articulate something like, “The last time I really thought about suicide was yesterday at 3pm when I brought dinner to my mom’s house and she made a snide remark.”
Counseling might be really helpful, OP. My guess is that you are not the cause of 100% of every unhappy moment he has had, and you are probably the cause of a lot of really happy ones too.
Anonymous wrote:As of last week I would have told you that we had an amazingly strong marriage, but DH recently told me that he’s been unhappy for a long time and wants to go to counseling. We have been married for 15 years and I thought we were a team, parenting, sex 3-4 times a week, lots of loving language and affection.
I feel devastated that he has been holding on to resentment for so long without saying anything. I definitely didn’t think things were perfect but to hear him tell it we were heading towards divorce- and I had no idea. I feel stupid and sad. He also can’t be specific about what resentment he has towards me, so it’s not like I can even start to make changes.
I know the answer is to at least try counseling but has anyone else gone through this? I am really struggling with the fact that he held on to these feelings for so long, I feel betrayed and upset.
Anonymous wrote:Look, a symptom of unhappiness is the belief that it has been this way “forever.” It’s not necessarily true. He’s interpreting a story based on the present moment.
It is unusual he is asking to go to counseling. It could be a great sign. It could also be that there’s something going on he’s scared to tell you. Men having affairs often claim they have “been unhappy a long time.” It’s a cliche.
Anonymous wrote:Look, a symptom of unhappiness is the belief that it has been this way “forever.” It’s not necessarily true. He’s interpreting a story based on the present moment.
It is unusual he is asking to go to counseling. It could be a great sign. It could also be that there’s something going on he’s scared to tell you. Men having affairs often claim they have “been unhappy a long time.” It’s a cliche.
Anonymous wrote:Could it be an emotional affair? Perhaps he reconnected with someone on Facebook, etc? The suddenness of this and the fact that he can’t articulate what he’s resentful about - despite the fact that he presented this as “brink of divorce”…it seems like he’s trying to justify something. Or he has a crush on someone. Or midlife crisis.