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Title: | What's all this fuss about 'sax and violins'? |
Notice: | Archived V1 - Current conference is QUARK::HUMAN_RELATIONS |
Moderator: | ELESYS::JASNIEWSKI |
|
Created: | Fri May 09 1986 |
Last Modified: | Wed Jun 26 1996 |
Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
Number of topics: | 1327 |
Total number of notes: | 28298 |
549.0. "A dilemma - my nature and my spouse's" by QUARK::HR_MODERATOR () Mon Jul 25 1988 16:12
The following topic has been contributed by a member of our community who
wishes to remain anonymous. If you wish to contact the author by mail, please
send your message to QUARK::HR_MODERATOR, specifying the relevant note number.
I'd like to you take a moment or two, and consider a dilemma I'm
currently facing. It's not life-threatening, it doesn't need immediate
action, but I feel that unless I come up with a plan of action,
my partner and I will just drift into splitting up without either of us
making a conscious choice.
I've known my spouse for fifteen years. We were at school when we
first met. We lived together for 8 years before marrying last year.
By any standard, it's a long-standing, and stable relationship.
It certainly wasn't something we rushed into.
I have always traveled a lot, for long periods, but always there was
someone there for me, in more ways than one. My partner has always
been a real partner and friend.
About 6 years ago, we broke up, when my partner decided they were
love with someone else. I was pretty devastated by this at the time,
crying into the phone, endless long-distance calls and so on.
Turned out the other person was a sham, a chimera, a mirage.
The sort of person who metmorphosises their personality to match
your expectations. When this came to light, my partner was doubly
hurt, firstly by the "other person", but secondly by their own guilt.
Slowly and cautiously, we got back together. This is well behind us now,
but I suspect it had long-term effects on both of us.
However, since we have been back together (5 years or so) certain
things slowly started to deteriorate. (While others did get better
-- the ability to communicate with each other, for example).
Over the years, the physical aspect of our relationship has diminished.
Not long after being rejected by the other person, my SO found a
a Christian faith of a strict kind, which instilled a strong
prohibition against pre-marital sex; this lesson took root on a
fairly deep level, I guess; although the faith has mellowed to a
fairly conventional kind.
Marriage has not changed the fact that our physical relationship has
been often been unsatisfactory in recent years.
Not that we don't; just infrequently. (partly due to my being away a
lot, but mostly due to lack of desire); It seems to have become a
physical release rather than a shared moment. Occasionally, though, it
works right, just to remind me of the way it once was.
My spouse is also easily depressed, for no apparent reason. Somewhat
of a workaholic, too -- always taking on a heavier and heavier load
until they can bear it no longer. These two things, especially the
workaholism really get to me. I have a hard job too -- but at the
end of the day I can switch off -- something which is alien to my spouse.
It's not uncommon for people to have such problems, I know. It's
all part of being alive. Materially, we are very comfortable, and
intellectually we are highly compatible.
We communicate, too. We both know that there's a problem, and I've
tried to be patient -- over _years_ now. We do have, very much, what
was described elsewhere, as a practical love.
On a number of occasions I have met other people who I have been
attracted to, or have shown an interest in me, or sometimes both!
I have always resisted the idea of taking the matter any further,
as I felt there was "unfinished business" to attend to. (Sometimes
this has been quite hard, as I have a high libido)
I just don't know which direction to take from here -- maybe I should
make serious moves at a "trial separation" to show that I do see
things to be getting critical; that my till-now enduring nature has its
limits. But maybe that would just damage the postive aspects of
our relationship
Comments, please.
T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
549.1 | a suggestion... | 16BITS::AITEL | Every little breeze.... | Mon Jul 25 1988 23:39 | 13 |
| Have you tried seeing a counselor? It sounds to me like your spouse
still has feelings of guilt, perhaps of "dirtiness", from the affair
he/she had. Sounds like they've become more and more ingrained
over the past years. And perhaps he/she is using the strict
religion as a punishment, or as something to help make the guilt
bearable. But this may be all bosh - there may be some other problem
at the root of it all. A professional could likely help IF your
spouse wants to resolve this. It might actually be better to have
two sorts of sessions - one for both of you and one for just your
spouse. Sometimes it's hard to work out problems when there's
someone besides a counselor there.
--Louise
|
549.2 | off the wall, but... | LEZAH::BOBBITT | festina lente - hasten slowly | Tue Jul 26 1988 00:24 | 12 |
| Please don't be shocked by this - it may seem like a wacko suggestion,
but a couple I know made it work...and that is open marriage.
However...
I assume your spouse's strict religious morality totally voids the
concept of an "open marriage", even if you might find it remotely
tenable. Then again - since you've both been hurt in the past -
this may only propagate the ending by causing more pain. I second
the suggestion for counseling - perhaps first alone and then with
him (if he agrees, of course).
-Jody
|
549.3 | whoops - mea culpa | LEZAH::BOBBITT | festina lente - hasten slowly | Tue Jul 26 1988 00:28 | 6 |
| gosh oh golly jeekers - I just jumped to conclusions and assumed
gender roles for the couple. My sincerest apologies - the suggestion
would apply in either case. Terribly sorry...
-Jody
|
549.4 | Hole is the Soul? | ELESYS::JASNIEWSKI | Our common crisis | Tue Jul 26 1988 09:07 | 45 |
|
When I see in a person:
a. Guilt
b. Adherance to strict, absolutist requirements.
c. Depression.
d. Addiction.
I just cant help but think that they have the "Hole in the soul",
that was formed by a "Parental abandonment" of some sort during
their childhood. Again, the 'usual' approach is to look at the person,
in terms of "what's wrong with them", when, in actuality, there
is nothing wrong with *them*.
They are only needy, as we all are. It's a special need, however,
one that was likely not met waaaay back possibly when this person
was only, oh, 4-10 years of age. A 7 year old cannot understand
why things happen the way they do sometimes. It hurts the little
girl (guy?) deeply, so she makes an emotional bond to a fantasy,
an ideal, in order to cope with the pain. In doing so, her true
self is swapped for a false self, because facing the true self is
to also face the pain - something we try our best to avoid. The
false self happens to carry with it the ideals of the fantasy bond,
such as perfectionism, unrealistic ideals and absolutest beliefs.
Unfortunately, this also sets one up for compulsive behavior -
"addiction" to work is as valid an example as any. Depression results
from a complete loss of the true self, long buried by the various
masks that were put into place in various stages of living. But
the original pain remains - only "by now" the person really has no idea
of where it comes from, hence, as many of our unanswered dilemmas
often cause, we become depressed.
One way to possibly clear this up is for the chronic compulsive
person to focus on their own family system of origin, in terms of
the interrelationships between the constituant members. What rules
governed the parenting? Any of the parental behaviors happen to
attack one's idea of self? Did the "real you" ever get a chance
to develop, or was that subverted by "shoulds", "oughts" and "supposed
tos"? Could the "real you" possibly be that empty feeling deep inside?
Would this knowledge allow one to "relax and let go" through finally
understanding "why" these feelings and habits persist? I think it
can.
Joe Jas
|
549.5 | married a while | TLE::RANDALL | I feel a novel coming on | Tue Jul 26 1988 12:30 | 12 |
| It sounds like you might be suffering from marriage boredom. This
happens after you've been together for a long time; something like
a Marriage Encounter weekend or a week at Hedonism II might put
some zip back in.
Or a marriage counsellor.
Now that I think about it, a counsellor might be a good starting
place, just to figure out whether you [singular or plural] do have
a problem.
--bonnie
|
549.6 | Counseling, Yes! | HENRYY::HASLAM_BA | | Tue Jul 26 1988 12:48 | 7 |
| Ditto on seeing a counselor first. If your relationship was worth
getting into, it's worth working on before you decide to leave.
A counselor can help you to get at the real reasons behind the apparant
reasons.
Good Luck!
Barb
|
549.7 | Ignoring a problem, doesn't resolve it!! | USMRW4::KPELLETIER | | Wed Jul 27 1988 14:32 | 14 |
| I agree with the suggestion of seeking help through a counsellor.
You state both of you spend most of your time working, is it out
of necessity to succeed or to escape confronting the problem? Getting
physically involved with someone else will only help to pacify your
libido, but will not resolve your problem either. I agree we should
all be patient to an extent, but being patient "over the years" can
sometimes be interpreted as "long suffering"....come on, if your
relationship has weathered the storms you described, you owe it to
yourself and your partner to seek counselling and stop dragging
yourselves down.
We only go through life once, why not spend it happy.....I wish you
both luck!
|
549.8 | Thanks | QUARK::HR_MODERATOR | | Wed Aug 10 1988 14:35 | 18 |
| The following reply is from the anonymous author of the base note.
Firstly, thank you to all who responded to the base note.
Everything that's been said has been of great value. Thank you. Things
have been looking a little better recently. We're going to try to work
this out on our own a little longer and we'll be spending more time
away together.
When I wrote the base note, I hadn't caught up on the rest of the
conference. I have now, and in doing so came across at least two other
topics along similar lines. Reading those has been useful too.
Thanks to the moderators who made this conference possible; it has
really helped. And a special thank-you to Joe Jas for his perceptive
insight.
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