March 10, 2012.
"Dear Annie: "John" and I have been married for 15 years. He is a wonderful person and a great father...Our relationship is fine on the surface, but it's emotionally empty. There is little intimacy, which has been an issue throughout our marriage. It manifests itself periodically in arguments that never seem to get resolved… He wonders why I cannot "just be happy," because from his perspective, everything is fine. I have told him clearly that I need more attention and affection, but I have come to the realization that he is "just not that into me.
… Annie, I love my family. I am not asking for a magical romance. I don't think it's too much for a woman to need occasional loving physical gestures from her husband. I can't figure out why it's so hard for him to express his love if he cares for me as much as he says.
I don't want to leave, but things could be so much better if John would only put a little more effort into our marriage. Any suggestions on how to improve things? Or am I just destined to have an emotionless relationship?"
The Annies answer: "There is a variety of reasons why a man may not show any interest in his wife: He could be gay, asexual, not attracted to you or having an affair. He could have low testosterone or other medical or emotional issues. The real problem is that he refuses to address it…"
Well those are all possibilities, but why would she have married someone like that in the first place if she craved affection so much? It sounds from the letter like she just thinks hubby might just an A-hole, does it not? I mean, she seems to think that he is someone who is depriving his dear wife of that which she craves, for no apparent reason.
But is that what is really happening? Could be, but I have another, more likely explanation. The writer starts by saying that they have been married for fifteen years. It doesn’t sound like this is a new problem, so what that probably means is that she has been putting up with this treatment for fifteen years. And, after she mentions that, she praises the guy for being a “wonderful” person. What, you may ask, is so wonderful about a guy who is more than willing to almost totally neglect your needs just because he can?
I find the husband’s response to be telling. He asks her why she cannot "just be happy, because from his perspective, everything is fine.” She also says that she has made it clear that the lack of intimacy bothers her a great deal. So why would he think everything is just fine? Why wouldn’t he already know the answer to the question of why she just “can’t be happy?”
Well, unless the guy has the IQ of a turnip, the only reasonable explanation for his apparent obtuseness and confusion is that he doesn’t believe her when she say she wants more intimacy. Remember, she has been putting up with this for fifteen years. In her letter she says he is wonderful and that she does not want to leave. If we are hearing this in a letter she writes that may be up for public consumption, then the odds are extremely good that he has heard her say this stuff. Many times.
The much less obvious explanation for this state of affairs – and so often the less obvious interpretation turns out to be the correct one for patients who I see in therapy - is that he takes her passive acquiescence of the state of affairs as a signal that she actually prefers it! So, when she complains about it, he becomes confused and asks her why she is not happy, since he is doing exactly what he thinks she wants. Maybe she really wants to avoid sex and affection, but also enjoys complaining!
He will never tell her about such thoughts because he knows that the thoughts will probably be greeted with great defensiveness, outright derision, or indignation from her that he is blaming her for his problem with intimacy. That will get him exactly nothing but grief, so why bother?
More important, he is helping her to not face her issue with sex and affection, because he is volunteering to pretend to be the bad guy by denying her.
More important, he is helping her to not face her issue with sex and affection, because he is volunteering to pretend to be the bad guy by denying her.
So could she really be covertly avoiding sex as much as he is? And if so, why? Well, the answer to the first question is a resounding, hell yes. This does not mean that on some level she really does wish for more sex, but that for some reason she is more comfortable with the current state of affairs than with the “improved” version. The answer as to why might be a one of many possible issues between her and her own family of origin, but she does not give us any clues in her letter about what those issues might be.
And what happened to his libido? Again, we don’t know. Maybe he has a whore/madonna conflict about his wife being a sexual being. But it could also be many other things.
The point is, they are both avoiding sex, not just him.
A different letter writer in the Dear Abby column of 3/15/12, says that she has been married for 32 years, and for all these years her husband has lied continually. He fabricates the most outlandish stories, and the whole family knows it. Furthermore, he is said to never own up to anything he has done wrong, but instead blames the letter writer for his actions. If she confronts or challenges him, he gets defensive and says she’s "always" belittling or challenging him in front of others.
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