Anonymous wrote:"I also wish he had said to me "being affectionate and having sex is a big part of who I am. I am very attracted to you and my feelings are extremely hurt that you continually reject me. I feel like you don't want me. When I come up and kiss you, I am showing you that I love and want you and when you push me away, it feels like a complete rejection." what he said to me was basically "I need to f...men like sex...there must be something wrong with you if you're not interested in doing it. I'm pissed that you're not interested in sex."
He did say that, but in guy speak. You just didn't understand it."
Well fine, but I'm a woman. We clearly weren't hearing each other which was why I suggested counseling. We needed a translator.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm the long poster - we were both 23 when we got married which to me now seems unbelievably young.
Yeah, the more I hear about this stuff, the more I think young marriage plays into it. It's like most issues. They don't really manifest when you are young. I mean, every teenager has a crazy libido so how can someone even know what they desire at 21 ish?
Like, if you think about college/post college: most people are slobs, drink a lot, stay up late, work a lot but don't have much career direction, probably are struggling to transition their friendships to adult ones, are still rebelling away from mom and dad, living far away from your family of origin. So it's probably impossible to see any red flags.
So you get married. Big day. Gorgeous ring. Beautiful.
And
- that party guy turns out to be an alcoholic with *whoops* alcoholic abusive parents but you didn't even know cos you met them twice a year,
- work a lot guy turns out to be a workaholic who never got any love as a child and is cold and emotionally unsupportive
- awesome sexy party girl turns out to be a childhood sexual abuse victim who turns sexless when the ring is on because of the unresolved PTSD
- laid back go with the flow guy turns out to be a slightly depressed lazy chronically underemployed man child
- slightly stressed out type A guy with "big dreams" who turns into the critical control freak spouse who withholds sex for control
- good on paper lawyer guy turns out to be a passive aggressive, can't take criticism, argues constantly, douche who doesn't lift a finger but whines like a child if he doesn't get his way
- good on paper banker guy is a sociopath who chronically cheats
- Don't forget the randomly CRAZY families of origin who appear to bring their special brand of dysfunction (codependence, child abuse, financial irresponsibility, borderline personality disorder) and your spouse turns out to be totally enmeshed!
Hurray for marriage!
Anonymous wrote:I'm the long poster - we were both 23 when we got married which to me now seems unbelievably young.
Anonymous wrote:^^
I'm surprised that people don't realize how important conflict resolution skills will be to a marriage. To me, that even seems more important than matching libido. You can't know in the future whether your libido will change but not being able to resolve any fights will always manifest. I suppose that's why people who marry over 30 have the lowest rates of divorce. They already know this. I suppose most of you married young?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like the long post too but I have one question. Did you ever say to your husband:
1. When you say you will take the kids but you call every hour and the kids are screaming in the background, it makes me feel guilty and stops me from enjoying myself and truly relaxing?
etc and about the housework. What I mean is does anyone actually explicitly call out the guilt tripping/half arsed job stuff, specifically? Before the cheating/rock bottom time. When it happens, I mean.
Long poster here. Yep, did exactly this many a time. I am a very good communicator (I'm actually in something similar to mediation as a career). So I know all the how to express your needs stuff. I think in my case, it was my spouse's complete unwillingness to accept the realities of married life with children. And my willingness to take on everything. I should have made up that contract long prior and demanded better for myself.
You say you're a great communicator, but do you listen well? You didn't know prior to counselling how important sex, affection and intimacy were to your husband?
Anonymous wrote:I also want to say that I suggested we try marriage counseling many many times. I said "I am unhappy and you are unhappy and our current ways of communicating that u happiness are not working. Let's try to go to a counseling session at least once or twice to see if we can improve our situations." he flat-out refused. He later told me that he saw counseling as admitting something was wrong that you can't handle yourself, that you have failed and that you are weak. Incidentally, he now loves it (we still go once a month).