Toronto Star

Zero interest in sex leaves six-year marriage on the rocks

- Ellie

My wife and I have been married for six years. We never broke records for sexual frequency when dating. We’re now classed as a “sexless” marriage — having had sex once in the past year. My wife has given me varying reasons for her lack of interest in sex — from lack of interest in me specifical­ly to menopausal hormones to depression.

Lately, she says it’s due to memories from fat-shaming, with which her parents tortured her, that’s turned her off sex.

I don’t know what to believe anymore — who is right, who is wrong, why anyone feels what they feel. And whether any of this improves our sex life. What do you do when one partner’s happy with sex once a year and the other partner wants it 50 times a year?

Is this reason to go our separate ways or can men get what they need in some way that their partner can accept? Once isn’t Enough

This is only about you and your wife, not what others would do.

Your marriage is still young and you’ve both never fully dealt with the issues involved here.

She’s got many: hurts from the past, hormonal effects — but they’re not impossible to handle through therapy for the emotional side and medical treatment for the physical.

But she has to want the marriage to continue.

And she has to want to be “interested” in you.

If these two elements are missing, there’s not much further to debate.

Of course, if you have children together, you’re both likely reluctant to part. So, it’s fair to raise the question of your fulfilling your needs elsewhere.

Such agreements often fall apart after awhile, but then you’d both realize that another path is necessary.

Meanwhile, suggest you go for marital and sex counsellin­g together.

She’s struggling with a lot of obstacles. If you reach out to understand her better, she might feel more supported, more loving.

Ultimately, if there’s no change, no compromise, no willingnes­s to seek help as a couple, you’ll end up apart.

My husband of five years is allergic to smoke. My father smokes and is aware of my husband’s allergy. He smokes in his home, in his car, generally everywhere.

At family functions, we’ve asked him to leave the table, not smoke in the house if we’re visiting, etc. My mom, sister and her family all can’t stand his smoking and have made the same requests to no avail.

It’s been five years with little to no change.

We’re seriously considerin­g not visiting at their home and he’s about to be unwelcome at ours.

We’re currently expecting our first child (it’s a high-risk pregnancy) and I fear that my parents won’t be seeing their grandchild because of his smoking. Wit’s End

Tell him just that — he chooses either smoking or a relationsh­ip with grandkids.

I know how tough that sounds and I also know how hard it is to quit.

But there’s little greater incentive than being welcomed by loving family, including the adoration of a grandchild.

There are many ways he can find online for quitting, but one that readers have written about as most effective is Allen Carr’s Easy Way to Stop Smoking. Talk to your father openly about your real health concerns for your child and your husband.

Encourage him to start a process and stay in contact with him, emphasizin­g how important this is to his health and to the whole family.

Tip of the day

When there’s no sex, no mutual acceptance and no agreement on a solution, the union’s already split unless profession­al help is sought. Email ellie@thestar.ca. Follow @ellieadvic­e.

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