'My husband has gone into his shell'

Researchers have compiled a list of 50 things people would change if they could live life over again.

Researchers have compiled a list of 50 things people would change if they could live life over again.

Published May 26, 2015

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QUESTION: I’m a very social person and as I get older and have more time – my children have left home – I want to see my friends more and more. I love parties and I need a social life to keep me going.

My husband, on the other hand, who used to be gregarious, has gone into his shell. He spends his time gardening, reading and writing a history of his family. But I know that, when we’re invited out, people often only ask me because of my husband – because he can, when he makes an effort, be charming and entertaining.

ANSWER: Your husband is no different from a great many men of his generation. They've spent their lives at work in the company of other people and now they want a break.

I always remember my own father groaning when people were coming over for drinks. He would open the door to them and be utterly charming and amusing and - after the last guest had gone, having been the life and soul - would slump on the sofa groaning: “Thank God they've gone! Never again!” It used to drive my mother mad.

I have a certain sympathy with your husband, as well. Social life, which you find so stimulating and refreshing, can often, nice as it is, be a huge effort. Sometimes it's not even nice - it's just a huge chore. This gregarious manner of your husband's may not come without a price. It may be that he's always felt that to be entertaining and sociable is, in fact, like a job of work.

So since you both have different attitudes to social life, why not separate it out? It sounds as if you've been married long enough for him not to seethe with jealousy if you were to go parties and left him at home. And he can't really object if he's been invited anyway. Tell anyone who invites you that they'll have to ask your husband separately because you live different social lives. It could be that having to refuse every invitation instead of using you to do the dirty work would turn out to be more of a chore for your husband than actually performing for the evening.

As for your knowing that when they invite you as a couple, people really only want to see your husband, how do you know that's true? Obviously, after it becomes known that you're a lone socialite on most occasions, you might find that invitations dry up; on the other hand, they might remain at the same level, making you realise that people like you for yourself alone, not as the appendage of some amusing husband.

Some couples, as they grow older, become more intertwined, like ivy into a trellis. Others grow further apart and get divorced. But others grow further apart and, at the same time, decide to stay together because they love each other. But loving each other doesn't mean you have always to go out together, go on holiday together, do the shopping together.

You're different people going through different stages of life. But I have a feeling that if you didn't make excuses for him, and left him to wriggle out of things on his own, he wouldn't be quite as quick to refuse invitations. It's one thing to refuse all invitations, another to find that, after refusing every one, you've got such a reputation as a hermit that you're never even invited at all.

The Independent

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