I've just found this, and there are certainly elements that describe my H. He's far from being an underachiever, quite the opposite, but his avoidance of conflict and intimacy are there. Especially this:
He has such strong fears of intimacy deep in his unconscious mind so he must set barriers up to prevent a deep emotional connection. He is clever at derailing intimacy when it comes up by tuning out his partner and changing the subject. He must withhold part of himself to feel safe and may withdraw sexually. The passive aggressive man lives an internal loneliness. . He is noncommittal and retreats, feeling put upon and burdened by partner's requests for more closeness. He becomes a cave dweller to feel safe.
H spends his life absorbed by work, FB, youtube, books, TV, music; anything but intimacy, conversation, facing issues. Yesterday, when I said I wanted to improve our communication, he said "it's impossible not to communicate. Communication is in everything we do". So he withdrew from the discussion by putting a philosophical point of view. When I said "OK, you are communicating that I don't matter, that my feelings don't matter" he just ignored me, and focussed on his FB photos. He is always blaming me for being cross, and refuses to face the issues which made me cross in the first place.
Is confronting him with more information about his failures the best thing to do? I'm absolutely certain that if I showed him this article, he would deny it was him. He would see it as controlling, and he can't be controlled. As the article stated, his father was absent, and his mother domineering. The only way to escape her intrusions is to withdraw.
But more importantly, why do we stay with a man like that? Yes, I can recognise a similar pattern from my childhood. My mother patiently coped with my passive aggressive father for years, who in turn felt completely unable to cope with his own domineering mother. My mother was the coper, the pleaser who just got on with things.
So I fell for my Hs charm, neediness, cleverness, and apparent coolness, and ignored his lack of connection to others. I accepted that he was introverted, and reorganised my life around his needs. As he withdraws from me, and blames me, I see myself as failing. The more I work on the relationship, the more he witdraws, and the angrier I get. I switch between taking care of family, finances; to being concerned about his needs) to being the victim of his behaviour. My self esteem is caught up with his lack of responsiveness.
The solution is NOT to confront (he will withdraw). My psychologist said the other day that I should avoid blowing up at H, but find other, safer ways of blowing off steam. I have a dear, dear friend who said she will be on standby... We should not avoid saying what we need to them directly, but having said it, walk away, and not turn it into a fight. I shouldn't demand more than he can give, or expect that he will suddenly change. This is why we still have to detach and to GAL.
Thanks, Hyper.