he thinks he's doing better, but also that talking about it has not gone well in the past...
I'd say the majority of conversations that I had with my exww in those first few months did not go well at all. I can lol about that, today, as I write this. But, jezz... sooo many powerful emotions, triggers, doubts and fears.
Throughout the next year or so, I learned how to communicate on a whole new level. Some of that came from therapy, some from research on the net, and some from SI members.
Dynamics play a significant role in interpersonal relationships. I have a tendency to avoid conflict and build walls. My exww has (strong) codependent tendencies. Neither of us ever understood how those tendencies so horribly clashed until we were forced to do just that.
If my goal was reconciliation, what choice did I have but to tear down those walls and embrace conflict? I was so fucking terrified of placing those final bricks in the wall that... I broke.
And that's okay. Sometimes, to finally fucking learn, we have to break a part of ourselves before we can fix our shit.
By slowly tearing down those walls, by learning to work through conflict, I changed my side of our relationship dynamics.
Those deep, difficult conversations went better. Not always. By 18 months or so, more went well than otherwise.
Presence of mind. Knowing my own tendencies, being more self-aware, remembering that I can choose how I react to most things (thoughts, feelings, whatever), also helped to change those dynamics.
Overall, subtle changes lead to bigger ones. It's a process, you know?
I am probably not as far along as I think,
It's a very steep learning curve, with a lot to learn, and all of us want to get through it as quickly as possible. Don't be too hard on yourself.
I just feel so far away from him, like he's becoming a bit of a stranger.
I became a bit of a stranger to myself in a lot of ways. My exww, on the other... total stranger. I had no idea, no clue, she could have done what she did.
Men... we do most of our processing internally. We're kinda stupid that way. Being all "touchy-feelly" isn't the way John Wayne woulda dun it.
Maybe... your hubby just needs a little time to mull things over and chill for a bit.
Detaching from one another can be a good thing. It can help us to untangle the mess, to reassess our needs and desires, to become a little more self-aware, and authentic.
If R remains your goal, sharing the journey is its own reward, no matter how the future unfolds.