Dear Dr. Romance:
My wife has developed a connection with someone at work. Can I ask her to give up her job? If the guy she works with is the source of her attention, would it not be better to take him out of the picture. If she doesn't see him at all wouldn't that help her concentrate on 'us'. It has been a month since we have been intimate, and this has been going on for almost two months. I am trying to be patient; is there anything I can use as encouragement to help me continue fighting for my family, for my wife. Is there signs, from her, I can use to know if things are changing?
I am going to ask her to go to a marriage counselor. If she insists we don't need one, and that everything will work out...then what??
Dear Reader:
Well, it's really time to begin talking to your wife (if it's not too late already). A marriage can't survive on occasional time together. You both need contact with each other. It sounds like what happened is that she was used to being neglected, but now she's in an environment with other people who are giving her attention, communication and perhaps even affection. That's what you have to compete with.
DO NOT get upset and demand anything right now. If you do, she will just get defensive and argue, or clam up and refuse to talk. No matter how upset you are, you need to stay calm, let her know that you care about her, and invite her to talk to you. What she probably needs to know is that you will listen to her without getting angry. Let her know you're worried, you miss her, you want to fix any problems the two of you have.
Begin there, and then if the two of you both still want the marriage to work, you'll probably need some counseling. This may be too big a problem to handle on your own. Read my article "Guidelines for Finding and Using Therapy Wisely" I understand why you want her to give up her job; but it's not a good idea to ask anything of her right now. It still sounds as if you're seeing all this as "her fault" rather than the obvious result of a problem both of you have created. Your best bet is to search for where you have gone wrong, and caused her to turn to someone else, and look for ways to fix that. If you make that effort, and find ways to make being with you as inviting as possible, you may find that she volunteers to quit or do something else to increase your time together. But, to push for her to quit when she's having a better time at work than at home, is not likely to work. Get yourself some help in seeing things more from her point of view, and a little less from your own. "Handling the Green-Eyed Monster" will help you both understand jealousy and how to talk about it. My book, Money, Sex and Kids: Stop Fighting about the Three Things that Can Ruin Your Relationship 2nd Ed can help you create a more functional relationship.
For low-cost phone counseling, email me at [email protected]
Comments