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stinkcat_14
Guest
I think you hit the nail on the head. She runs him ragged, yet won’t even acknowledge that there is a problem. Nobody is suggesting that she should have sex with him in her current state, but she does not have the right to give him verbal abuse when he brings up the subject. She doesn’t have the right to refuse to do anything about the problem.I’m sorry, but this example has gotten extreme.
What kind of selfish person is so scared and repulsed by sex but goes ahead and marries anyway (selfish mistake #1) and then refuses to get any sort of help and gets angry and her husband for seeking it out on her behalf? She sounds like a very entitled, spoiled person with mental health or personality disorder issues unrelated to past trauma.
Yes, she is a victim of sexual abuse, and that’s terrible. But she should NOT have married in this sort of mental and emotional state, and if she didn’t recognize this until after marriage when she tried it, she should be bending over backwards to get help.
In this case, divorce and annulment are more than appropriate.
Being a victim of sexual abuse doesn’t entitle you to marry, and it certainly doesn’t obligate someone else to jump through years worth of coaxing and timid begging for what is an inherent and integral part of marriage out of fear of making the person “feel” revictimized.
I say all the time on these boards that not everyone is cut out for marriage, usually in reference to someone who is too scared or selfish to do the basics like merge finances. But it applies here too; if you are not mentally capable of engaging in sex with your spouse, then you simply shouldn’t marry.