Killuas wrote:
... She says we don't really communicate anymore and we act more like roommates.
I actually agree with her...
My wife said pretty darn close to exactly the same thing to me last week, and I pretty much thought the same as you...as far as the quote above. We've also been married 13 years...go figger. If it weren't for counselling we would have separated long ago. After a few years, the chemistry stops, and love becomes more a choice than a feeling. When my wife says things like this, and she doesn't often, she's asking me to see past the body that didn't snap back after the 3rd child, the tiredness from working and being a mother, and the years of taking each other for granted and to think back to 15 years ago and
pursue her like I did when we were dating. It isn't easy, especially if in those times when the feeling just isn't there, but it is a choice a husband can make to love his wife. So will give a recommendation or two:
1. Go to couselling with an open mind...you will be surprised. If you are not surpised, then the counselor sucks for you--could be great for someone else, but sucks for you. Try a different one that uses a different theory. Marriage and Family Therapy is what I recommend, but a Cognitive Behavioralist or psychoanalyst or something else might work better for you (although for the life of me I can't figure out why some people prefer psychoanalysis...just crazy I tell ya). FYI...it was our second counsellor that worked for my wife and I. First one was hawt. Worked for me, not so much for the better half.
2. If you've got no kids and plenty of monies...go buy some romance. You have no excuse. But be smart...don't just go to a fancy restaurant. Take her somewhere for a weekend where you went 10-15 years ago, or something like that. My wife says I generally suck at romance, but whenever I take her somewhere for a weekend (which sadly, we just can't make work out at this time in our lives), it almost always has been a rousing success.
3. Don't give up. Choose to love.
Anyways...hope it helps, if not, I hope things work out for your relationship.