I think it's pretty well known that domesticity is a major culprit in NRE death. I still don't know why people clammer to live together and a one twue shared bedroom seems nuts to me. Esther Perel gives a fascinating
Ted Talk on desire in long term relationships. She's done a lot of work around the topics of infidelity, relationships and what a fulfilling sex life can be.
Thanks, I will check the talk out for sure! God, I would
love to have my own bedroom. Sadly, the rent here is so high that we can't really afford a two-bedroom right now. If I ever end up having to move out on my own, I'd need to find a roommate situation in someone's rent-controlled house or apartment where the room costs below market rate. Either that or do bankruptcy or something to get the rest of my bills down so a larger slice of income could to go to rent. Sigh.
In my opinion, its not about ignoring someone's faults or bad behavior, its about seeing them, accepting the person as they are, loving them as they are, but not mentally focusing on those traits. What we focus our energy on colors our interactions with the person. Obviously this doesn't mean accepting unacceptable behavior. Nor does it mean not maintaining your boundaries. It just means watching where you put your mental focus. If the issue isn't a deal breaker or something your partner wishes to change about themselves, then focusing on it will just be a barrier to intimacy. For me, it also means letting go of expectations and resentments....both of which can kill a relationship.
...During one rough patch with my ex I started a gratitude journal focusing on my ex and our relationship. It made a huge difference in how connected I felt to him which made me desire him more. But then, our issues weren't related to desire or lack thereof....
This makes a lot of sense. I also particularly like the idea of a gratitude journal with a relationship focus. I've done one of those generally for a while before and should probably do it again!
You probably should be looking closer at the lack of desire for husband, whom you do claim to like and want to keep - so whatever is causing you to check out, isn't conscious. Perhaps identifying addressing it will help you fix the situation (or, break it, alas).
Yes, I think I'll do some exploration into this when I have the time. Maybe some journaling in my blog on what all the possible causes specifically related to him could be, see if I can root it out. Maybe if I do some digging around in "what could be wrong" at the same time as I do a gratitude journal, it won't shift my focus to be too negative.
Is it possible that you pull of NRE for that long, and then after you are past wanting to see the best and the partners are past wanting to present their best only.... You start seeing other things that aren't as pretty? Possibly even stuff you noticed and dismissed earlier without investigation only to realize magnitude later. That would sound pretty normal.
I think that, at least in the couple of small things I mentioned here, it's kind of a mixed thing. In the case of Rider, I think I
saw all of the "less pretty" things from pretty early on—definitely while still in NRE, but . . .
. . . some things were slightly bothersome but "eh, I can live with this" (which is still technically true but possible contributing now to problems?)
. . . some things weren't bothersome at all at the time, but I have grown and changed so that now they bother me.
. . . some things were slightly bothersome but he agreed to work on them, and has, to varying degrees of success.
But I don't think I started seeing anything
new that was less pretty.
I will say that our stuff in common has dipped since NRE ended, though. In NRE, it seems we can get by with having mostly "we want to suck on each other's faces" in common. But we also wrote and played music together and did yoga and went night-swimming and did a lot of drinking in bars and him showing me around the city since I was pretty new.
Lately I've been kind of in a non-creative phase, so I'm not really writing new music (though we do still play in the band together). And night-swimming here isn't a thing (and Rider doesn't really like sunshine, so he'd probably tolerate but not enjoy a day-trip to the beach). I'm getting burned out on drinking in bars just for the fuck of it. Maybe we can try to make more time for yoga...
In my world, kissing princes turns them into frogs, so once the hormonal high is done, it is pretty hard to remain impressed with the guy. I am also an intellectual snob among many other requirements like emotional literacy, political views, and what not - fine with ignorance or lack of interest in knowing something, but expecting me to dumb myself down or pretending knowledge you don't have kills a relationship like it were a switch. And there are many switches - cruelty/sexism/inherent unfairness/prejudice/exploitation/entitledness/dishonesty... Unethical behavior not just ends a relationship, will likely have me sneering and evicting. Staying impressed is a struggle for me, unless there are signs of a learning curve out of the deal breakers as well. Sadly, the things I lose respect over matter to me. So I can't unsee them. Not being emotionally dependent "need a man in my life" type, there literally remains no deterrent to near immediate dumping if I don't like. Then it is over.
What I am saying is that it may not be a "fatal timer", but simply the natural progression.
Most of the things you've listed are also "switches" for me too. Rider thankfully does not possess the specific things you've listed, but I suspect I have additional post-NRE switches. Something to look into . . .
If my post struck recognition, one positive thing i can say on the front of the above sentence is that if a man recognizes the problem with whatever I had an ethics issue with and makes an effort to overcome it (as opposed to not caring or thinking I'm making a fuss about something that doesn't harm me personally, etc), it actually renews my interest in the relationship, because I see it as a commitment to evolving together.
Also, in a bizarre way, I respect ignorance in the sense of potential for learning. So doing something problematic out of ignorance is fine. Doing/defending it deliberately is the deal breaker. If I feel able to discuss it and he/we can work on it, I have found the partner HOTTER than before - in effect it is a new (and improved) relationship that is BETTER than the one we had.
On the reverse side, I also like a partner who will spot and state any problem they have with something I do so that we may discuss and understand each other's perspective and I may learn and evolve if opportunity presents rather than bottle it up and let it irritate him indefinitely.
I understand and totally agree with all of this stuff. A partner who is willing to admit a weakness and work on it, rather than doubling down or getting defensive, is SUPER hot. Hmm. Another area to put some serious thought into.