I hear you on that.
You have probably said- but do you guys do marriage counseling? It seems like there would be some process in which you can both make the other feel more emotionally safe and find a better understanding of one another.
If it were me I would have us both sit down and write down what we like about the relationship and what we would like to improve. And then negotiate.
Unfortunately, as the higher functioning person, you will have to accept the idea of leading. Though I think there is one of those in most marriages, though I suspect in more equally yoked marriages that role does change back and forth more than it does for you (and honestly for me in my marriage too)
I think perhaps utilizing written communication at some points may be helpful because it would give him time to think about what he is saying instead of getting flustered and giving you a brain dump. It seems like maybe you guys might have done that though.
My husband doesn’t know how to express emotions either. He often doesn’t know why he is sad or down and sometimes he doesn’t want to share his complaints/observations because earlier in our marriage it would upset me and I would spin on that for a while. I have had to learn to react differently, which has helped. I find sometimes writing out or saying what I feel about something, giving him time to think and write something back or come talk after a day or two has helped. My husband doesn’t have the issues yours does with executive functioning, and he isn’t as easily flustered. So I don’t get the raw stuff you do, though I suspect there to be similar sentiments at times. But he is silent usually and that’s always been off putting to me. When I tell him how I am feeling the reaction is either impatience/shutting me down or silence. If I prod him to speak he still declines saying he doesn’t know what to say. He often perceives the health of our relationship on the quality/quantity of our sex life. If that is good, he calls our relationship strong. I don’t get it but it’s a common measurement for some people.
So, I understand the frustration. But the problems we speak on and issues in our relationship are far less complex or loaded now and I have learned over time how to communicate in a way he can receive it. I also don’t let him shut me down, I say "you are getting impatient/frustrated and you are not making me feel safe in telling you how I feel" and while that added frustration in the beginning, it’s actually over time made him aware of his demeanor and he does it far less. Usually he will either soften or we will agree to discuss it later at a less emotionally charged time.
I guess what I am saying is some of this is always going to be there, so yes it does take some level of acceptance. But it often takes practice and experimentation and a lot of patience from the more emotionally intelligent one to get it to a level that you are having to accept less things. I actually think some of this is normal in any marriage but due to the added stress of his level of function, his infidelity, you are carrying some very heavy burdens with nothing balancing it out to make those burdens more worth it.
I would look more at it like negotiating. "I hear you want more sex, so do I. I would love to have a better connection in that area. For that to happen, I need to feel emotional safety, and that means you being honest about how you feel so that I can trust you more. It means being able in improve our communication and honesty and learning to connect."
I recommend you read "rising strong" by brene brown together. Do it a chapter at a time and discuss it. It can really help both people look at what blocks connection and what makes it stronger. It would give you guys a common language/understanding for these kinds of conversations and maybe help express that negotiation in a way you can be on the same page.
Honestly, I don’t know if this relationship can ever work. You are so tired from carrying it and your husbands ability to help is hindered, so I just continue to give you advice based on what I think you want and are working toward. But it goes without saying - it’s also okay to wind it down, let it go, and move on.
[This message edited by hikingout at 5:07 PM, Wednesday, January 8th]