The Day

Couple’s oft-chilly marriage is subzero following election

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DEAR ABBY: I’m at a loss as to how to stay in my 21-year marriage. In August, when our twin daughters leave for college, my wife and I will become empty nesters. We haven’t had sex in more than 2 1/2 years, and before that it didn’t happen more than a couple of times a year.

My wife says she “doesn’t feel a connection with me anymore” (or perhaps never really did). We have seen a counselor a couple of times over the last 12 years, but the most he has to offer now is that I will have to decide whether or not to accept this as my new normal. We don’t fight, but we live like roommates, although we continue to share a bed.

We are on opposite sides of the political spectrum, and I suspect that may have something to do with her sense of disconnect. The little affection progress we were making died the night of the presidenti­al election. She seems content to continue like this. I hate the notion of divorce, both for what it would mean spirituall­y and for what it would do to our families and friends. Can you help?

— IS THIS MY NEW NORMAL? That changed recently when I met someone I’ll call “Eve.” We have hit it off spectacula­rly and are very much into each other.

The only issue is she has a kid. I’m only 23, and I’m not in a position to be any kind of father figure. That being said, I would still love to be with Eve and occasional­ly help out with her little one, but I don’t know how to open up and tell her directly that I’m not prepared for the pressures of being a “dad” to a newborn. How do I express this to her?

— NO WHITE KNIGHT IN KNOXVILLE

DEAR NO WHITE KNIGHT: “Daddyhood” isn’t a skill that every man is born with. Some men are naturals at it; others learn gradually through experience. Tell Eve that you care about her, but that at 23 you are not in a position to be a dad to her baby. In time, things may change — GRADUALLY — but not right now. It may or may not cause the end of the relationsh­ip. Her first responsibi­lity must be to her child, and a romance right out of the delivery room is too soon, “white knight” or no white knight.

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