Coping With Your Husbands Midlife Crisis
By Allie Ochs
This
man in front of you, whom you trusted and relied on all these years, is
no longer the same. You yell, scream, reason, cry, argue, debate, plead
and finally demand he be who he used to be. It is not going to
happen! He is finally going through what many before him went
through and many after him will go through: midlife crisis.
Nothing
will be same from here on. There is a big difference
between women going through menopause and men going through midlife
crisis: women are more prepared. We have read about it, talked to our
girlfriends, our shrink and are allowed to show and verbalise our
emotions. We have a support system in place that we can call upon. Men
don’t understand what they are going through and why they feel the way
they do. Your husband or partner will not want to admit that he feels old,
unattractive, out of shape, overweight, balding, unhappy in his career
and overburdened by responsibilities. He is frightened by the
thought that he might die before he has really lived. He
looks at his life and can only find fault: not enough money, too much
debt, too much work, too much responsibility, no fun or play, getting
old, fat and depressed. He has become negative and quite frankly, he is
fed up. He is burned out and wants to escape. Some men seek help
to cope with this dreaded phase, but many more try to find answers on
their own. Some may face this crisis with the help of their wives or partners,
resulting in a closer and stronger relationship. Some may seek the
answers in a new hobby, fitness program, diet or simply rearranging
priorities. Others seem to need a facelift, sports car or the cute
blond from the office to reassure them of their status. They may even blame their partners and family for
their misery: “If I wouldn’t have married you, I could be sailing off
in the sunset, instead of paying our mortgage and our children’s
education.” The difference in coping strategies lies in a
man’s ability to express his feelings and willingness to reach for
constructive solutions. Men and feelings often do not blend. They want
to appear strong, collected and in control, even when they are at their
weakest. So what do you do with such a man? First off, his
crisis is not your fault, nor is it his. If you insist that he return
to his normal self, you are asking for the impossible. Furthermore, you
will be the last person he would want to ask for help. You simply have
to allow him to seek his own answers and ways to deal with what he
doesn’t understand himself. Encourage a healthy lifestyle, hobbies
(except the blonde from the office), doing different things, getting
rid of unnecessary obligations, vacations and simplifying life in
general. Offer help if he wants it and suggestions if he
seeks your guidance. This is also a time when many marriages have gone
stale. Reinvent your relationship and do things that you enjoy
together. Marriages and partnerships that have been strong before are a huge support in
helping overcome a midlife crisis. Yet, not all longterm relationships survive midlife
crisis. He may take off with more appealing woman to grab a piece
of youth (literally). Should she become his selected survival tool, you
are not going to stop it. No
matter which way the dices fall, you must remember to look out for
yourself, because immersing yourself in other's problems can be doubly
damaging.
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About the Author: Allie Ochs is a Relationship
Expert, Coach, Speaker and the Author of "Are You
Fit To Love?". Her articles are published in numerous
magazines and newsletters and she has appeared on radio
and TV. Visit the website www.fit2love.com
for more info and for relationship/dating advice e-mail:
askallie@fit2love.com.
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