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I Feel For You
Elguerro,
My marriage is in a similar state, though it was me that ceased intimacy. I took this step because I felt unsafe in the relationship.
My wife's behaviour towards me has been psychologically abusive for the larger part of our marriage. In December 2007 I started seeing a counsellor to help me cope with deep depression. The counsellor had advised me to prepare for separation and to learn to be more assertive with her. It was his opinion that my wife was suffering from a personality disorder of her own. I knew that she would never see a counsellor as she hated me going, particularly when I started being more assertive. My wife accused me of abusing her (funny how things get turned round), but I knew that I was just being politely assertive. Our relationship hit rock bottom but at least I felt that I was working on my own issues and learning to manage them better and it was nice to put an end to some of the abuse.
Not long after I finished my therapy in April / May 2008 I was diagnosed with ADHD, Major Depression and Generalised Anxiety Disorder, all of which were rated as severe at the time. This came as a hammer blow to my new-found self-esteem. My wife found a certain amount of vindication in the diagnosis as she could blame some of our woes on on ADHD and to be honest I let her. Some of the abuse crept back, but I managed to keep most of my new boundaries. An uneasy peace was established.
My wife has a tendency to explode with seemingly little or no provocation. About six months ago she exploded at me in a particularly spectacular way and in her anger committed a significant breach of trust. At the time it was terrifying. However her reaction to such an insignificant incident was so extreme that as soon as I managed to calm down I was able to see it for what it was. It was a major turning point.
It was at this point that I unilaterally withdrew from intimacy. I couldn't trust her, I couldn't allow myself to be vulnerable with her and so intimacy was out of the question. I made it clear that she needed to deal with her anger before I would be able to trust her again. Naturally there were protests but we have stayed together though it has been only just. Occasionally she will admit she has a problem but doesn't do anything to sort it out. Most of the time she tries to carry on as if nothing had happened. During these times she tries to blame my ADHD / Depression / Anxiety. But I've worked hard with my professional carers to manage these conditions using a multi-modal approach (drugs, diet, exercise, therapy etc). For the time-being at least I'm free of depression and anxiety. Consequently the attacks don't wash. Ironically in an attempt to save our relationship I had invested heavily into self-improvement as a response to her criticism of my behaviour. BUT I have owned my impairments taking full responsibility for them.
The point is this. I took responsibility: I owned up to my issues and faced them and dealt with them. As a result I grew in maturity and self awareness. It makes it a lot easier to deal with a wife who is being plainly unreasonable. I have such a wonderful sense of self-empowerment, confidence, belief, worth etc and an overarching feeling of peace with myself, it's truly fantastic. This has spilt over into other areas of my life and I'm beginning to see a real prosperity happening. Ok my marriage isn't fantastic and I'm still not being intimate - BUT - I'm OK. I still have ADHD - but I manage most of the negative stuff most of the time and have started to build on my strengths. Because I'm calmer it actually makes it more possible for the marriage to succeed BUT if it doesn't it won't be my fault.
She threatened to walk out on me last week in another of her rages. I told her that I wished she would because it would at least be some action on her part. She immediately apologised - her bluff had been called.
You can't fight unreasonableness with unreasonableness. If you know you've done all you can to work on your condition and will do whatever it takes to get right and she's still saying "It's your ADHD" you know it's not reasonable.
I wish you all the best as you work on this. It can be done.
Regards
CTBR
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