Thursday, 27 August 2015
6 Tough Questions You Must Ask BEFORE Leaving Your Marriage
Here are six key questions to consider as you determine the larger question of whether you're ready to end your marriage, work to make it better, or just accept it as it is:
1. How is your sex life?
Sex is an important part of marriage. At its best, sex is a baring and sharing of both bodies and souls. At its worst, it's just another chore to either do or ignore. The two most concerning sexual problems to have are these:
You feel trapped, scared or sad when you think about sex with your spouse (and you're not in a sexually abusive situation).
You've not had sex for a really long time (think a year or more without medical restrictions) despite wanting and asking for it.
In and of themselves, neither of these problems necessitate the need to divorce, but they are most definitely situations that you must address.
2. Do you still have basic respect for each other?
Mutual respect is critical for any successful marriage, yet there are moments in every marriage when respect, unfortunately, goes out the window. There might be a serious problem if you feel either of these two things to be true:
You've lost ALL positive feelings for your spouse.
You believe your spouse can do nothing right.
This isn't a one-way street though. Obviously, if you (the "core you") truly believe that your spouse has lost respect for you, then that's a problem too. And you need to consider it as you determine your course of action.
3. Do you find fault instead of finding solutions?
Sometimes it's so much easier to play the blame game than to step up to the plate and admit your part in creating the current situation. It's normal to do this once in a while, but spouses who consistently blame their partner typically do so because they're too self-absorbed, too easily insulted, or simply ignoring the obvious situations.
4. Have you developed bad habits?
Now, I'm not talking here about the little annoying habits that we've all got. I'm talking about biggies, such as:
You've become just parents instead of remaining lovers and partners.
Deception, lying, cheating (like feeling the need for a separate/private/secret phone) exist in the relationship.
Bad/non-existent communication leads to fighting all the time or no fighting at all.
You maintain a vice-like grip on the bad things that happened in the past and use them as weapons again and again and again.
Every situation becomes a fight instead of asking how you can fix or deal with this.
You're so tired of trying that you just can't force yourself to do so one second longer.
You both refuse to meet each other's needs.
You're living separate lives where you don't really know or care about what's going on with each other.
You've stopped communicating about anything substantial.
5. Have you remained in your marriage solely because of religious beliefs?
For some people this is enough reason to stay in a marriage and work on it for a lifetime. But for others, their religious beliefs may be masking one or more fears such as loss, the unknown future or even judgment.
6. Are you and your spouse's visions for the future different?
Do you have incompatible ideas about whether or not to have children, where to retire or even moral and ethical differences? These different visions could provide some interesting discussions (and maybe a few arguments) as you try to reconcile your different dreams and reach a compromise. Or, maybe they're the last straw.
Labels:
romance
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