archive1997.gif (2218 bytes)
Questions, responses, & comments about relationships from past forum postings
Archives Index | 1997a Archive Index | Search | Add New Posting | Relweb Home

Addictive - Wizzard

Dear Friends, I have been married for 26 years. I've never strayed....in fact, my wife is the only woman I have ever loved or had sex with. As unbelievable as it sounds after reading the rest of this message...it is true.

On average, my wife and I have sex about 3 to 5 times a year....and these experiences aren't that great. Last year, we made love one time. I have been doing some exploring and reading on the internet just to see how abnormal this is...I have always known it is abnormal....and my discoveries have confirmed that my life is very abnormal. I love my wife very deeply...obviously! But, I am constantly in need of love and satisfaction! Lately, I am angry and resentful because I am apparently in "mid-life crisis".

I read your link to a page on "addictive relationships". It blew me away. I think I am struck in such a relationship. What do I do?? Do I look for another relationship? This is foreign to my morals, which are very rigid and straightforward...but I am very unhappy. I need love and attention. I feel like I've been cheated my whole life, and it is time for change!!! Help!

From: Bernd

Hi Wizzard, Can you help me with a little more info? Can you tell me if you’ve ever tried couples counseling? Have you had any success talking about this issue with your wife, and if so, what responses do you get from her? Also, as far as you can tell, does your wife struggle with depression, or has she or is she going thru menopause? Has sex always been this infrequent, and if not, when do you feel the frequency really took a nosedive?

Finally, can you tell me more about the “rigid and straightforward” morals you have. All this will give me some clues as to what might be happening in your relationship.

From: Wizzard

No we have never tried counseling. I have tried to suggest it, but she explodes emotionally. Everytime we try to talk through this, she just cries. No progress. This has been going on since day one of our marriage. She does suffer some depression and is in menopause, but there has been no change, She truly believes everything is just fine. About my morals. I have a strong value around honesty. Cheating would give me great anxiety, but I am increasingly looking outside our relationship for satisfaction. Thanks for listening.

From: Bernd

If this has been the situation for the past 26 years, then it’s likely been an unspoken wall of iron that’s been reinforced all that time. I suspect that you were deeply disappointed in the early days of your marriage, and she would certainly have felt your disappointment, and very likely blamed it on herself, feeding her depression. I’m curious - have you been unfaithful before in any way, or come very close to it, and what triggered your reaching out for help at this stage? (or have you reached out for help at various times in your marriage, with no success?).

Wizzard, there are good reasons why your wife has such difficulty with sex, even if we don’t know what they are. Chronic depression is a PHYSICAL disease that has emotional symptoms. It’s like having the flu all your life without any fever, and trying to act normal in spite of feeling lousy inside from when you get up in the morning, until you go to bed at night. Think of going to work every day for the rest of your life with the flu, and having your boss expect you to live up to HIS expectations. How long would it be before you told him to go to hell?

Your wife hasn’t told you to go to hell, because she really doesn’t know why she has such a difficult time with sex. She likely blames herself more for your unhappiness, than you blame her. Both of you are dealing with a lot of buried anger, hurt, rejection, and despair over finding a solution after 26 years. None of it is either of your fault, but to find your way out of the swamp, the first thing you need to be honest about is where you both are in this relationship, and how you both really feel. Everything you feel is very likely what your wife feels as well - for different reasons - so the more you get in touch with how you really feel, the more you’ll be able to understand and be compassionate with the load your wife is carrying as well.

I’m going to give you some possible reasons why your wife has such a difficult time with sex. The real reasons may be any one of these, or a combination of them. She may have been sexually abused as a child (by relatives, family friends, or strangers), and every sexual encounter would bring up horrifying feelings and memories of this abuse. She may have chronic depression, a physical disease, which screws up every feeling she has, and can greatly dull her sexual feelings. She may have been taught as a young girl that sex was bad, filthy, and would send her to hell - unless she waited for marriage - and had the first part of those teachings drilled a lot harder into her brain than the marriage part, making it impossible to switch off those negative messages and her fear of hell once she DID get married. She may have had undiagnosed physical problems that caused her great physical pain when she tried intercourse the first few times, and been too afraid to say anything, or get it checked out, thinking that somehow it was “her fault”. If so, the thought of sex would bring up massive fears of pain, and fear is not conducive to sex at all. Try to get a hardon thinking of Lorena Bobbitt in front of you, and you’ll know what I mean.

If she’s grown up being taught that women should meet certain expectations and standards in marriage, she would have had struggles with feelings of failure early on. As human beings, when a problem seems unsolvable - especially when we think it’s our fault - the only option left to us is to block it out of our mind and hope that it will go away, or won’t really matter. You’ve helped her do that for 26 years , and in her eyes, it’s worked better than anything else she could think of. You haven’t abandoned her, which I suspect is a terrifying fear she has if she risks opening up to you and you “see what a unlovable person I really am”. This is a very REAL fear, because as much as you want her to open up, you aren’t ready yet to listen to her true feelings and thoughts without feeling rage and deep hurt over all those lost years. As much as you’d like to be ready, and think that you are ready.

You CAN help yourself, the marriage, and her, by looking seriously at individual counseling - as much of it as you can afford. You have control of 50% of the relationship - your half. The more you can heal the pain and despair you’re feeling on YOUR side, the more able you’ll be to give her a safe place to open up. Each part of your healing is something you can share with her, and each bit of new understanding and compassion you get thru therapy will help her find hope that there ARE solutions out there for her as well.

You both came into the marriage with beliefs and tools that you thought would work, but time has definitely shown you otherwise. You were robbed by those who led you to believe they WOULD work. It is not too late, and there is nothing you can do to change the past. But there is much you can do to make the future one that both of you truly deserve and want. Think of an archer’s bow pointed toward heaven. It is only when the bowstring has been depressed as far DOWN as it can be, that it has the hidden energy needed to push the arrow to the highest heights. That is where your marriage is right now. The bowstring has been pulled back about as far as it can go, and the tension is getting unbearable. If you can do the searching you need to find out how to truly release that bowstring, your marriage and life can be propelled closer to heaven than you ever thought possible.

There is a gate somewhere, that will lead you to the path you want and need most. These are my best guesses.

From: Wizzard

Thanks. Down to earth stuff. I think you could tell that I don't want to abandon this relationship. I love her. I have often wondered if she had been abused as a child. Don't know. It's not all her of course. My resentment feeds the situation as you have guessed. Will try to suggest professional help...we'll see. To date, I have never been unfaithful. Your insights have been helpful...or more accurately, comforting. Thanks.

From: Bernd

Wizzard, maybe "try to seek professional help" for YOURSELF, to help YOU find ways to truly help her?


The opinions expressed in any responses above are opinions only, and should not be taken as therapeutic
advice or counselling. For professional help with any problem, contact a trained therapist, or an appropriate
12 step or other support organization.
All contents Copyright Relationshipweb.com. Postings may be downloaded for personal or non-commercial use.