Anonymous wrote:Of course, the money gone, now the love is lost.
You can leave, then when your ex is doing great and remarried, you will be sad and alone.
Anonymous wrote:You lost respect for him bc he ignored you and now you’re not sexually attracted to him. Divorce.
Anonymous wrote:
To your questions, sometimes I have flickers and thoughts and love that tell me I COULD do those things and live a life with him in this new relationship, even if it means I never fully love him as deeply as I did. But then I think it’s so painful, sometimes even physically painful, to feel like living that life with the deep love. And that I deserve a partner who sees me as an equal, respects my feelings/needs, and whom I love deeply and fully. Those flickers are what are keeping me in right now, hoping that they turn into something larger.
Anonymous wrote:I just discovered this term and found this article: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/divorce-busting/200803/the-walkaway-wife-syndrome#:~:text=During%20the%20early%20years%20of,is%20right%20in%20the%20world. and I was shocked at the accuracy. I've been spending years in my marriage asking my spouse for more help, more time together, more engagement in the family as a unit, and asked to go to therapy multiple times over the years. Things finally came to a head right before covid when I basically pleaded with him for more support and he said he is "too ambitious" and could never give me the additional support I need. I felt the marriage was over, completely disconnected from him outside of simple logistical matters, and grieved the end of my marriage and wondered what I would do.
Well surprise, he (finally) noticed, wanted to work it out, (finally) agreed we should go to therapy. He had hit a professional rock bottom and turned to meditation and read multiple books and realized a lot of his previous mindset was his own ego. My heart was so closed and my feelings toward him had changed so significantly but I knew trying therapy was important, if nothing else as a last resort to ensure we had tried everything. We have been in couples for 9 months and we have made incredible progress in terms of open communication, sharing feelings, being intentional toward one another.
But I still just...don't love him romantically. I recognize and truly appreciate the work he has done. I feel a fondness for him and our history (almost 20 years). But I sometimes feel uncomfortable when we kiss, have sex (I have shared all this with him and he is understanding).
I'm/We're struggling with what to do next. Recently I reiterated that for the last few months of otherwise good progress my feelings toward him haven't changed. I think he found that really disheartening and I completely, completely understand why. But I also can't just pretend. It's been such a painful process to see the work we've put in and really try to be invested but not have it materialize. We're in a good position in all other aspects -- we've talked in detail about our plan if we were to divorce, we're as comfortable as can be with how it might "look" from a custody and financial perspective.
I've been doing my own work on the side, individual therapy for this whole time, reading, also trying to be intentional and affectionate when I do feel positively toward him and talking about it with him when I don't. My individual therapist suggested I need to try to figure out whether my pain and hurt is from past injuries that are still unresolved or whether my intuition is telling me what I want and I am ignoring it/forcing something that isn't there.
I guess I don't have a question just needed to put it out there. Anyone been in this situation and what happened?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's okay to leave a marriage, if it isn't what you want. Even after 20 years. Even after he tried hard to fix the problem. Sometimes it goes that way. Be kind to him, but take care of yourself. You don't have to stay for him.
Thank you. I am very concerned about hurting him and feel that that urge may be getting in the way of identifying and communicating what I think I want. He’s come a long enough way that he has requested that I be as direct with him as possible and not worry about sparing his feelings, and while I’ve otherwise done that I am really afraid that if I say I want to leave that it will be the wrong choice because of how far we’ve come. Like maybe if I give it a few more months, a year, etc then something will change in me.
Anonymous wrote:This is a great thread. So supportive and thoughtful. Unusual for this site. ❤️
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you divorcing him because he didn't pay enough attention to you or because you find him physically undesirable?
I am not certain we are divorcing, but I guess I would describe it as he didn’t pay attention to my feelings and my communicated needs, which caused my romantic partnership feelings toward him to change/go away. Because of that change I find it very difficult to connect with him emotionally and sexually. Objectively he is physically desirable but I find myself shutting down at the prospect of sex.
If that’s the same as what you describe above then I guess the shorter version is “both.”
Anonymous wrote:Give yourself a timeline. You are going to try for 2 years and if it hasn't improved, you divorce. ANd during that time you should do 2 things-
1) do a Gottman Institute weekend seminar. Focus on appreciating each other. (the concept of 5:1 good to bad interactions)
2) take sex off the table for now. Still touch-hugs, snuggles but no sex. I think the pressure of "feeling something" or "I have to fall back in love" is actually stopping the feeling from growing.