In marriage, the question isn’t, “Who is right and who is wrong?”

Your question raises some interesting points about marriage. The first one that strikes me is the one found in your last sentence, that the problem has already been going on for 12 years. It’s so common in marriage for issues to remain in place for decades! Couples have so many things they have to take care of on a daily basis, they don’t get around to dealing with all the small and large issues that require their attention. As a result, many things just drag on.
Another point your question highlights is how marriage partners so often see things in such different ways. For you, this is a boundary issue. You want a degree of personal separation. Ironically, it’s also a boundary issue for your husband. He wants the two of you to be one (without boundaries) so that your plate is his plate and his plate is your plate.
Finally, your question also highlights the typical communication strategy used in marriage, the one in which each spouse tries to prove their own point and prove the other person wrong. This strategy of problem-solving is problematic on many counts. For one thing, each person can usually provide 100 supporters (people, research studies, authorities on the topic, etc.) for their own team. For another thing, the end result of the debate is always one unhappy marriage partner and a wounded marriage.
In marriage, the question isn’t, “Who is right and who is wrong?” but rather, “How can I meet your needs while not causing myself undue harm?”
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