Dear Carolyn ? How do you know it?s time to end a marriage? I?m not at all attracted to my husband, the result, I think, of his preoccupation with work (even when he?s home, he?s usually thinking or talking about it, or on his phone or laptop) and just an overall lack of physical chemistry. We?ve never had a good intimate relationship ? something we both acknowledge ? and I?ve ached for something better almost the whole time we?ve been together. He says he?s content. That said, we?ve got two young children, and for the most part, we are great co-parents, manage the household pretty well together, communicate well and have a solid friendship. Many would say I?m lucky, but the idea of spending my life in what feels more like a business relationship than a marriage breaks my heart. Am I crazy to think of leaving?
Anonymous
Dear Anonymous ? Crazy, no, of course not. You want passion, something most people want, and the thought of not having it, ever, knocks plenty of sane people off their hinges. Still, your decision-making skills aren?t at their peak. You married a man you never found intimately satisfying, brought children into that marriage, and now you want out because your marriage lacks intimacy? Imagine your anguish for your grandchildren if your grown children made that same sequence of choices. Do children adapt? Yes, mostly. Am I playing the guilt card? Maybe. Should kids have the last word in adult relationships? Yikes. So put aside for a moment your emotional impulse to dismantle your marriage, and weigh the logical case for (re)building it. You say you are good co-parents and friends who communicate well. That?s not a "business relationship," that?s an emotional one. Solid at that. Meanwhile, your husband is "content"; that suggests powerful motivation for him to cooperate if you let him know the full truth of your emotional state. He might refuse to budge, and the environment his refusal creates might be detrimental to your kids, and you might need a marriage counselor and ultimately an attorney ? but please, for everyone?s sake, take that road only if it?s the last logical choice, not just an emotional one.
Carolyn Hax?s column runs Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays.
Copyright 2012 The Salt Lake Tribune. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Source: http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/lifestyle/54643060-80/marriage-emotional-relationship-business.html.csp
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