Ottawa Citizen

You’ll need to rebuild this marriage

- ELLIE TESHER Advice Read Ellie Monday to Saturday Follow @ellieadvic­e

Q My wife and I haven’t had sexual intercours­e for almost one year.

We’re both 58 and she’s been experienci­ng health issues.

A stubborn three-month cough and cold, an abscess, and internal rectal hemorrhoid off and on for the past five months. Also, menopause, work stress and anxiety. She retired recently while still battling those health issues. We don’t have too many common interests. It’s like being married to my sister. But it was different in our younger days (we married at 22). She can be narrow-minded and difficult to talk to. We’ve been to a marriage therapist in the past but didn’t follow the therapist’s advice. How do I get my wife to open up and talk to me?

No Sex, No Discussion

A Your wife’s recent health issues of an abscess and hemorrhoid (both painful), on top of menopause changes, have apparently made even the idea of sex remote and unappealin­g.

No surprise there. But your feeling, after 36 years of marriage, that you have few common interests, shows that this break from sex isn’t just about her current health. It’s about both of you and the relationsh­ip.

You two could still have at least 20 good years together if you have the courage to tell her that you miss her and would like to work on the marriage.

But do not make your approach about missing sex. She needs to feel healthy again.

Meanwhile, both of you need to consider what interests you can now pursue together. Yes, that requires a current visit to a therapist, and you both presenting a common need for easier, better communicat­ion.

If you show your wife that your interest is in a better union, you’ll grow closer. In time, holding hands, cuddling and intimacy will likely follow. Reader’s Commentary: Regarding your column topic on favoured and unfavoured children.

“As an unfavoured child of both parents, I always had the feeling that I needed to do something to receive or earn parental approval.

“It wasn’t until many years later that I realized the dynamic involved.

“It has little to do with the child himself, but with the parental likes and dislike that are often totally arbitrary.

“The child has a skill or personalit­y trait that the parent doesn’t admire, or reminds the parent of a disliked relative. The dislike is transferre­d to the child without thought.

“Worse, it leads to a search for “reasons” to openly favour one child over another.

“For me, the reasons given were my brother’s better academic credential­s. In high school, I began to surpass him academical­ly. Then, other totally different “reasons” emerged for the favouritis­m.

“I eventually realized that the whole system was a fraud. It made me delve back into my parent’s life history to see the reasons for their life choices and how I was affected. By this time, they’d both passed on and I could share my insights only with my wife and children.

“Watching the dynamic play out in families of my near relatives has been instructiv­e as well.

“As your column stated, it can sow the seeds of discord between siblings that last a lifetime.

“The parents are bewildered as to why their children don’t get along, sometimes blaming the marriage partners, without realizing that their own behaviour is often the root of the trouble.

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