Alvin's question is not about responsibility for MLC to me. As I said, it's about an honest moral inventory. Taking him at his word, which I'm forced to do because that's all I have to work with. That and the fact it was not Alvin but Disillusioned who posted a vague comment saying saddened by all this and that it can/should be avoidable. Which Alvin didn't agree or disagree with. And he outright denied the hidden hypothesis by MBIB.
LP - great post. I apologize if my comment was vague - that's a hallmark of my writing style! LOL
I did not intend to imply that being mindful in the marriage could have stopped MLC, if that's the way anyone took it. My comment was more about the different ways men and women process life. My W, definitely in MLC as the script is pretty constant these days, said a lot of things while monstering that struck home: she didn't feel cheished. She didn't feel seen. Her emotional needs weren't being met. She'd been doing things her whole life for others... Rather than ignore these comments as the ravings of a lunatic MLCer, I choose to focus on these insights into areas where I need to do my mirror work. All of us on HS have spent countless hours reading the Gottman's, or Terry Real, or Gary Chapman or Esther Perel or hundreds of other current resources having to do with how men and women communicate in relationships. My main take away from all that is that the "lack of awareness" in relationships is actually a lack of understanding in how the different sexes interpret and respond to each other.
Now, this may be a bit controversial, and I dont intend it to negate what I just said , it's more of an observation: I now believe that I went through a mild MLC. It could have been an MLT. Numerous factors, including my age, contributed to it. However, one thing that was foremost in my head during those days was the lack of physical intimacy in my marriage. It had been going on for a long time, and it eventually wore down my self esteem, my feelings of worth, my feelings of being desirable. My W, to this day, does not/will not accept how important physical intimacy is to men. She
does understand how important emotional intimacy is to women, though. And that's where I wasn't mindful. We were both doing things we thought were showing love to each other, but were completely missing the mark. Obviously, this brings to mind the Love Languages theory to those familiar with that work.
Were we being the best we could be at the time, as you said? Yes, I believe we were. However, that doesn't stop resentment from creeping in when we feel our needs aren't being met. When you finally break down, it doesn't stop the feeling that those moments of "neglect" or lack of "consciousness" were malicious.
My MLC was mild, but it wasn't short. There was no affair, but I walked in the door one day a completely different person, as my W will tell you. Argumentative, moody, complete shift in political affiliation. Twitter and the Playstation were my alienators. While I engaged in everything as a family and never stopped loving my W, eventually I considered getting out. It wasn't untiil she declared she wanted a D, and I found out about her OM, that I completely snapped out of it. And I mean, SNAPPED out of it. I am now thoroughly who I was when we met 20 years ago, with a few major improvements, mostly regarding the ways men and women interact. The person I became during the marriage, all the blurred edges and enmeshments, is gone. The MLC version of me is wiped out. At this point, my W and I are probably no longer compatible, but I still stand.
Did the lack of intimacy lead to my MLC? Assuedly not. Did it contribute to it? It sure feels that way looking back. One thing I am certain of, though: I loved my W, and I know she loved me. And our marriage could have been infinitely better if we had understood these basic differences between each other, and been mindful of each other's needs, because they are met in completely different ways.
My original, however vague, point was that there are probably few marriages that are really, authentically happy, where both people feel genuinely that their spouse "knows" and understands what their needs are. Maybe that's just being viewed through my own, cracked lens. I think, however, based on everything I have read, that the situation is more common than not. And that is what I meant by it being sad, and that a great deal of the unhappiness in marriages is avoidable.
I hope this makes a little more sense.