Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Wife seeks independen­ce from generally good husband

- CAROLYN HAX Chat online with Carolyn at 11 a.m. each Friday at washington­post.com. Write to Tell Me About It in care of The Washington Post, Style Plus, 1150 15th St. N.W., Washington, D.C. 20071; or email tellme@washpost.com

DEAR CAROLYN: I have a nice husband: responsibl­e, holds a good job, does most of his chores around the house regularly, is a reasonably good dad, and is a Good Person. And I’m so restless and unapprecia­tive of that right now.

Maybe it’s the pandemic but I honestly feel like it’s deeper, and it’s been brewing for a while. If you asked me what I want, it would be this:

1. Stay married, but see other people from time to time. (I don’t have anyone in mind. I’ve never cheated. Not even sure I want to. But seems fair to be open to this.)

2. Live together in separate bedrooms, but sleep together from time to time.

3. Co-parent but travel independen­tly and often. I’m a writer and I long to spend a month in different locations, just to soak up the sense of other places. My husband never travels unless I plan and direct the entire thing, and that’s exhausting.

4. We’d be a family at holidays and other important events in our kids’ lives, to disturb them as little as possible, but we wouldn’t hide that our marriage is different from their friends’ parents’. We’d be together when we’re together but live independen­t lives, schedules allowing.

This is probably the most honest I’ve been about these selfish thoughts, and I can see this being hard on our kids, both under 12. I doubt my husband would consent to this. I don’t know if I should indulge this line of thought or start shutting these ideas down. — I Want an Independen­t Life

DEAR READER: Doesn’t everybody, except those who have one? The pandemic being greener on other sides and all.

“Shutting these ideas down” sounds like the first step toward estrangeme­nt, regardless.

It’s counterint­uitive, given you’d be banishing these thoughts as a way of recommitti­ng to your husband — but if the marriage in its current form leaves you agitated and emotionall­y starved, then you’re going to find some other way “out,” be it divorce or distance or bickery contempt.

So it is an act of love for this Good Person you chose to try to reshape your marriage into something that enriches you both — and teaches your kids how to coexist without gritting your teeth.

It would also be an act of love to recognize the pandemic as an amplifier to whatever you’re feeling. That means trying a smaller solution first, to a problem that might be smaller than covid-claustroph­obia would have you believe, to see if it’s enough.

Since you have a wish list already — thank you! — choose one item promising the most relief for the least disruption. No. 3, yes, as soon as it’s safe? Since it’s milder than 1 and can even pre-empt it? Frame it for your husband as (you hope) a healthy expression of a fundamenta­l — perfectly normal and OK! — difference between you two. See if he’ll embrace it.

Families often manage business travel. If you do your same share of the work, just differentl­y — vs. dumping it all on him — then this could tell you how much independen­ce your well-being requires, whether he can be open to or (ideally) better for it, and whether this “difference” alone creates a more sustainabl­y happy household.

Trust it, talk it, try it, add/ subtract as needed. Good luck.

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 ??  ?? (Washington Post Writers Group/Nick Galifianak­is)
(Washington Post Writers Group/Nick Galifianak­is)

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