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No more love - Need help

My wife of 4.5 years fly into town last week and told me she no longer loves me. I had moved away for job reasons and she was to join me. She gave me no other reasons for this until we had a fight. Most of what was said was do to anger and confusion on my part. Hopefully o hers too, She had already planned to fly out the next morning(she was to stay for 1.5 weeks). At this time I do not understand what she was trying to accomplish. She deplores the idea of divorce and has told this to others. At this time I stuck in limbo as to what I should do. My feelings are that I still love her, but other feelings lead me to believe that she is gone for good. The move may have been what scared her, I have thought of this. But she would not tell me of her reasons for this suddenness.

I would hope that anyone who reads this can comment or share their feelings about this. I you can see I am at a critical junction here.

From: somebody's mother

Dear Need Help, How awful for you! I can imagine that this surprise from your wife must have felt like a punch in the stomach. First, my heartfelt sympathy for how difficult things must be for you.

Next, let me say that guessing at reasons for your wife's apparent change of heart probably won't do much good. You'll work yourself into even more of a frenzy over the stuff you imagine to be the reason and reality is already hard enough!. You can ask, but if she won't tell you, then try and set the WHY aside for right now.

I can't refer back to your letter as I write this, but I think I remember you saying that you moved for a job. Does your employer offer an employee assistance program? If so, you may have access to immediate, free counselling. If you can get your wife to go with you, great. If not, go alone. (You need SOMEONE to talk to, and if your wife can't be the one, then a counsellor can provide a much needed sounding board for you.)

One bad habit I have when I argue with my spouse is that I keep pressing him when he needs distance. The more he pulls away, the harder I try to bring us back together -- which only makes him pull away more. When I make myself remember that I can't control how he feels (especially not by fighting with him!), then the argument almost always becomes a discussion, and we move away from who did what wrong and start talking about what we want to happen now.

If your wife doesn't want to tell you the reasons for her feelings, then pushing at her to do so is probably only going to make her retreat farther to avoid telling you. Instead, try telling her you want to move into 'solution mode.' If it were me, I'd probably say something like "When you said you didn't love me, I got hurt and scared. I kept thinking that if I could figure out why, I could fix it. I understand that you don't want to tell me, and I accept that When you feel ready to talk about where you would like to go from here, I'd like to talk with you." Then do whatever it takes to wait without pestering until she's ready.

I'll be thinking about you with wishes for the best.

 

From: Bernd

I like the response by "Somebody's Mother".

Here's some thoughts from me. I remember times during our marriage when I struggled with the question of "how happy am I in this marriage?" I also remember splitting up with my high school girlfriend after being on my own at university for about 6 months. Time alone has a way of bringing home some fundamental questions inside that we try to avoid looking at closely in a relationship. It sounds like your wife has been doing some soul searching, and she realizes something important seems to be lacking in her relationship with you. It's not uncommon for people to assume they feel the emptiness because they've "fallen out of love".

This is what I consider a wakeup call for both of you. You have no control over what she decides to do. If she uses the insights she's gained to delve in deeper inside herself, and find out the true reasons for her emptiness, your relationship stands a chance in time. If she decides to hunt for someone that she feels WILL make her happier, then my guess is she'll have missed a great opportunity to discover some important truths about herself and love. But once again, you have no control over her choices, nor - in my opinion - should you try to influence her to do things YOUR way.

You DO however have control over what you do about this painful time in your life. A good therapist can help you uncover why this caught you so much by surprise, and what unspoken issues were present in your marriage that contributed to this turn of events. Learn what you can about yourself and love, because whatever you choose not to look at honestly and learn from, you are very likely to repeat in your next relationship, or in a continuation of your marriage. There are also some very good books on relationships that will give you some insight - they helped me a ton.

One final note. I believe we deserve to be loved simply because we exist. If someone says they don't love you, that says more about their ability and capacity to love at this point in their life, than it does about your worthiness to be loved. Give her the space to do the soul searching that she needs, and give yourself the same gift. That is treating both of you with love, and gives the best chance for miracles to happen. Good luck.


The opinions expressed in any responses above are opinions only, and should not be taken as therapeutic
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