Hi, L.,
Your post caught my eye because, at first glance, I thought that I wrote it! I am 43, have been with my husband for five years and have two children, ages 2 and 1. I married my husband because my husband and I wanted to have kids and we were almost 40 when we met, my father liked my prospective husband, and I thought that I had the same incurable STD that my husband had and thus should marry someone who had the same STD I (thought I) had. (Last month, I found out that 21 years ago, a nurse MISDIAGNOSED me with an STD I did not have!) I feel your pain!!!
Let's talk about myths about love and marriage for a moment. (I am not an expert on either, but I do come from a family of psychotherapists (PhD and Masters levels), am a graduate psychology student, have been in psychotherapy trying to figure out how to fix my marriage for a year and a half with three different therapists, and am a wife and mother.)
Myth #1: In the U.S. since the 20th century, people have married for love.
Contrary to popular belief, not all couples, even those in the U.S. in the 21st century, married as a consequence of attraction, or "being in love." Some people, esp. those who have never married or those who married for love don't even consider the possibility that others might not marry for love. People marry for a huge variety of reasons, some conscious, some unconscious.
Myth #2: All couples fall out of love.
Not all couples fall out of love. I know couples who have been married for 50 years who "felt butterflies in their stomach" when they met and now! I loved and was wildly attracted to my first boyfriend for many years and still feel attracted to him, even though he hurt me and I am married to a man that is a good father, who doesn't beat me or cheat on me, as far as I know.
Myth #3: Communication is the key to successful marriages. Not necessarily.
Sometimes partners just plain don't agree on important issues. All the communication in the world is NOT going to solve the couple's problems! Thus, communication alone, might not help one fall in love. See John Gottman's book, The Seven Principles for Making Marriage Work.
Myth #4: Spending more time alone with one's spouse will make the marriage a success.
Perhaps it will if, at one time, you were attracted to your spouse and you can resolve your differences. I can tell you from experience that spending more time alone with one's spouse will not always make the marriage a success! I've tried date night. It feels less intimate than some business meetings I've attended!
Myth #5: Any type of therapy will help make your marriage better.
Some therapy in some situations might help improve some couples' marriages. However, my husband and I, together and individually, have experienced some therapy so bad that we plan to contact the therapists' licensing board to inform them of unethical behavior on the part of the therapist. Also, a lot of well-meaning therapists, counselors, and religious advisers do not have a clear idea of how to help people understand, repair and maintain their relationships. Even great therapy, like the therapy I am receiving now, might not help convince a person to stay in his or her marriage. After a year and a half of therapy and several thousands of dollars, I am ready to throw in the towel. Some people say that getting counseling is cheaper than getting divorced. That may not be true if, after getting lots of expensive counseling, mine costs $150/hour, you end up getting divorced any way.
Myth #6: Kids are always better off if their parents stay married.
Some kids might be better off if their parents stay married, but I've read lots of posts on various boards of people who say that they wish their parents had left their loveless marriages and not stayed together for the kids. My kids and I see my husband only half the year because my husband is a touring musician/roadie who has no intention of getting off the road in the next twenty or so years. If I got divorced and then remarried, my kids might have a stepfather around the whole year. And I don't agree with people, including Dr. Laura?, who say that all men who are willing to marry women with children are child molesters and therefore single mothers, in doing right by their children, must stay single until their kids reach the age of majority! As a researcher, I say, "Show me the scientifically sound evidence." Some people I've known have thought their stepfathers were wonderful. The notion that it is OK for fathers to remarry whenever they wish but not for mothers who find themselves single through divorce or death of their spouses until their kids are grown, almost 20 years in some cases, to remarry and still be considered good parents seems sexist and archaic to me.
Myth #7: Assuming that neither partner is abusing or cheating on the other, a couple is always better off staying together.
My parents-in-law, parents, grandparents, great-grandparents and the vast majority of my relatives stayed married to their only partners for many decades, until they died. Some of these couples did not/do not have happy marriages. Some people actually have BETTER relationships with their partners after divorcing their partners. I have a strong feeling that, if we got divorce, my husband and I might become fairly good friends who happened to have been married to each other and have two kids in common. My husband might find the love of his life; I might find mine. Even if I didn't, I might be happier in that I would not feel compelled to have sex with someone I was not interested in. (I don't lack interest in sex because I have hormone problems, because I was abused as a child--I wasn't, or because I'm busy raising two babies and studying.) That situation would be an improvement on the current situation in some ways.
I agree with several respondents, but I don't completely agree with those that say your life is not about you once you get married. Once you get married, your life is "about" your partner, your kids (if you have any), your in-laws, and your relationships with your partner, your kids, and your in-laws, but that does not mean that "you" don't matter any more!
Give yourself a pat on the back for trying for seven years! A few people on this board love to bash brave people who, often in anguish, reveal their true, uncomfortable feelings in a post on this board. I'm sorry that they say people like you are selfish or say, "Grow up." How insulting! It's obvious to me that you care about others, including your husband, to at least some degree. People who were in love with their spouses when they married don't know how hard it is to live with a person one has never been in love with. I agree that love can be defined as an action, but without the feeling component, loving can be a constant, fairly unrewarding struggle (duty).
I don't know you or your husband, so I cannot advise you on whether to stay married or not. I am not "anti-marriage," but neither am I a proponent of marriage at all cost. I would advise three things:
(1) Try to find peaceful ways to settle the differences between you and your husband. This effort will serve your family well whether or not you stay with your husband.
(2) Read Andrew Marshall's book, "I Love You, but I'm not in Love with You." I only recommend psychology (relationship) books from authors who base what they say on sound research. Many of the authors who write pop psychology books on relationships do not have psychology degrees, do not have a psychotherapy practice and do not conduct their own research or read research articles on the topics on which they claim to be experts! They make unsupported claims that are ridiculous or too general to be helpful because most readers want a "dumbed down, quick fix" and don't insist that authors or speakers support their claims with solid research.
(3) Set a limit on how much time and money you will spend trying to save your marriage. I have resolved to try to optimize my marriage for the next two years. If I still feel the way I do now, I will revisit the issue of divorce. If I get divorced, I will neither blame my husband nor beat myself up.
I hope that things turn out optimally for your family.
Good luck,
Lynne E