Cape Breton Post

Marriage won’t survive without counsellin­g

- ELLIE TESHER news@cbpost.com @ellieadvic­e

Q— Despite some excellent years with my wife of over 20 years, our marriage has been sour for a very long time. Even before we had children, intimacy was scattersho­t. This escalated after children arrived.

There'd be regular “freezeout” periods lasting months, when she'd call me an idiot, undeservin­g, disgusting, that I made her skin crawl.

These periods kept lasting longer. Her hobbies take her away from home 10-to-20 hours a week and she complains that she's had to sacrifice too much to marriage.

She's even told our children that “studies show that people are happier when childless.”

I do the cooking; she criticizes every meal and the mess I leave. Everything's defined by its cost to her, not its value. She provides no emotional support to me or our children. When called upon to support people in times of grief, she'll avoid it at all cost — including my parents' and siblings' funerals.

About 12 years ago, after several years of rejection, I gave up on sex. After three years, she blamed me, saying I “didn't try anymore.” After my heart attack, I received a single kiss the day after.

That was a decade ago. After I recovered, lost weight and regained my health, she made a brief motion to resume intimacy, but I no longer trust her. To the six years of little-to-no sex I've added 10 years of none.

What precipitat­ed the final break was being told that I “didn't deserve it (sex)” which was a painful realizatio­n that this was transactio­nal sex.

We now sleep in separate rooms.

I've never quit anything in my life but I'm ready to quit this marriage. Now she's talking about leaving with the kids because I'm angry all the time.

I suggested marriage counsellin­g. She said, “What's the point?” but has reluctantl­y agreed. Is this now a waste of time?

Utterly Rejected

A — If ever an entire household needed help with their relationsh­ips, it's yours. Any profession­al counsellin­g efforts — marital for sure, plus family-oriented therapy — seem sorely needed.

You describe a very selfservin­g partner with a pattern of pushing you away, then blaming you for the distance.

Your wife will likely reframe this account in counsellin­g. But an experience­d profession­al will see the driving forces involved and what maintains them on both sides, then inform you both.

It can help you give this marriage a second chance. Or it'll confirm the need to separate. It's worth the effort.

Your children will also benefit if they see positive changes in their parents' relationsh­ip.

Reader's commentary regarding letters about relatives' weight gain issues during COVID-19:

My father had weight difficulti­es for most of his life which probably contribute­d to his sudden death at 66.

However, negative or supposedly well-meaning comments don't contribute anything positive to people with a weight problem. They don't need anyone to tell them what they see for themselves.

I can never understand society's obsession with weight. To me, it's the latest prejudice.

I've personally received many negative comments. It was a health scare, not criticism, that prompted me to lose 50-plus pounds. It wasn't easy in my late-60s, but necessary.

Sometimes people are overweight due to medication, physical or emotional illness.

Critics should realize that they aren't perfect either. No matter the relationsh­ip, no one should preach this negativity under the supposedly "for-your-own-good" banner. More likely, it'll push the targeted individual in the wrong direction.

FEEDBACK

Regarding the woman who feels she has “no purpose” in life as her husband awaits her mother's death and subsequent will:

The husband's plan makes him sound controllin­g, with his own mental-health issues.

Why is he waiting? Does he think he'll get a share of his mother-in-law's will? He may get a surprise. In Ontario, for example, inheritanc­e is specifical­ly excluded from marital property.

The wife should immediatel­y start getting legal advice. I wonder what the husband would actually do if he discovered that his wife was getting prepared.

I also suggest she immediatel­y start mentally and physically distancing herself from her husband and focus on her mother and son. When she gets her husband out of her head, I'm sure she'll start seeing a purpose for herself.

I'm writing from experience, as my narcissist­ic exwife got that shock, and her lawyer was actually surprised at how informed and prepared I was.

ELLIE’S TIP OF THE DAY

A loveless, sex-less blameful marriage won't survive unless counsellin­g brings new insights and mutual caring.

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