Win Your Wife Back And Save Your Marriage With Cody Butler

Your Wife Says I Haven't Loved You For Years...What Now?

• Cody Butler

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0:00 | 27:25

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SPEAKER_00

Hey Cody Butler here, and in this video I'm going to talk about what it means when she says, I haven't loved you for years. How do you go about processing that information without collapsing? And is there actually any way back from that statement? Because after working with literally thousands of men, this is a very, very common phrase and it can be interpreted in the wrong way very easily, which is going to cause the wrong course of action if you're looking to save your marriage. So let's get straight into this. So the real situation that's going on here is in a divorce crisis, when the wife has asked for a divorce or indicated divorce, and she turns around and says, I haven't loved you for years, then the immediate reaction within the man is going to be potentially collapse, panic, devastation, identity destruction, feelings of betrayal, like he's been lied to. Many, many emotions can rush through you at this point that really destabilize you very quickly. And if you're destabilized, it's going to cause you to behave in a way that's unstable, which is going to in turn destabilize the situation. So many times when you hear this, I haven't loved you for years, and that's a surprise. This feels irreversible. It feels final and it feels deeply, deeply personal to the man because it's like he's been lied to all this time. It's like she's been leading him on and letting him think that she loves him and everything's fine, when for years she's known truly that that's not the case at all. So what the man actually hears when he hears I haven't loved you for years is I'm not enough for you, I'm inadequate as a man, I'm unattractive to you, I failed as a man, I'm incompetent. And how he internalizes this is he interprets this statement as actually a verdict on his identity as who he is as a man, as a verdict on his attractiveness or desirability as a man. And it also comes across as proof to him of his incompetence, which, as I've said many times before, the number one fear that we have as men is that we are incompetent, and even worse than that, that we're incompetent, and that incompetency is exposed in public, which now is potentially on the table here, which is going to feed into the destabilization. So why is such a simple statement so devastating to the man when he hears it? Well, it's because it's not a statement being made in isolation, and it's simply not taken as just a statement of her emotional condition. It's more deep, it's deeper than that, it's more deeply tied to um the masculine identity that the man holds, and that's protector, provider, uh, prophet, and priest, as I like to say, or if we put that in secular terms, because it's not a spiritual uh diagnosis, is the man is protector, provider, leader, and spiritual or emotional stability within the relationship. That's how he sees himself. That's what the that's what the masculine identity is tied to, is being that provider, being that protector, being that leader within the house, and being the spiritual and emotional stability of the family. And that's being pulled away from underneath them right now. The rug's being pulled out. So the statement also attacks competency, adequacy, masculine self-concept. Now, it doesn't attack it in reality, but it attacks it in perception. All she's saying is how she feels emotionally right now, which could be tied to a hundred different things, right? Like her emotional state is not an absolutely definitive verdict and the truth. It's simply how she feels. It really is not an attack of competency, adequacy, or self-concept, but it can certainly feel that way in the moment if it's processed uh uh if it's processed way. If it's if it's not processed as emotional information, if it's processed as identity collapse, then this is going to be devastating to the man. Because as with all things, this is not this is not a verdict or the end result. It's simply data, is all it is. It's not it's not a declaration of who you are, it's just a data point to be analyzed and used to figure out what's actually going on in them in the relationship. Because as with all things in the marriage recovery process, if you want to save your what save your marriage, win your wife back, save your family, then the process for that is try, fail, analyze, and adjust. That's what I teach to the men that I work with in the Win Your Wife Back program is we try, we fail, we analyze, and we adjust. And we're simply in the try and fail stage here. This is not uh the end result or anything other than just a data point that we need to look at and go, okay, what is this data point telling us about the relationship? It's telling us something, it's telling us about how she feels about the situation, and it's potentially giving us some data onto what needs to change to fix this situation. So if we can process it like that, then it brings us to a place of stability, productivity, and a place to where we can actually make effective change to save the marriage. If we process it as this is a verdict on competency, adequacy, attractiveness, etc., then we're just going to collapse into a completely unproductive state. So why for years create the emotional collapse that many of you are experiencing watching this? Well, it's because it completely shatters the perception of reality, it pulls the rug out from underneath you and it challenges everything that you thought was true. And if that was if you were so certain about that part of the marriage or that part of reality, and that now is inherently not true, then it forces you to come face to face with what else have I been getting wrong? What else have I been missing here, and what else is going on that I'm not seeing? It it causes uh a lack of trust, a lack of stability, and it causes obviously confusion, it creates self-doubt, and it it creates a reinterpretation of the entire marriage. Now we go back over the period of time that she's claiming she never loved you, and every event is now reinterpreted through the lens of she didn't love me in that moment. So every single moment now has to be reinterpreted, and the marriage takes on a completely different meaning, which means she's not who you thought she was, you're not who you thought you were, and the situation is not what you thought it was. This is a completely destabilizing event. So the internal reaction that potentially happens when this statement is brought to the table is if I got this wrong, what else am I wrong about right now? Where else am I missing the boat here? Because here's the thing over 70% of men in a divorce scenario say that they never saw it come in. Because here's what's actually going on. She's been thinking about this divorce for a long time, but it's like the example that I that I like to use is if you're an employer and you're going to fire an employee on Friday, you don't tell them Monday that you plan on firing them on Friday because you want a smooth week. They can do a lot of damage in that period of time. They can damage your reputation, they can cause a lot of harm with clients, customers, etc. From the time you decide you want to leave that employee to leave to the time you terminate them, you don't want them to know anything about it. The reality is you're going to call them into your office at four o'clock on Friday afternoon and go, hey John, I need you to come to my office, bring your company phone, laptop, top, and keys, please. And it's the first thing that employee is going to know about it. The same is true with your wife. She doesn't, if she's in a situation she can't get out of, she doesn't want to rock the boat. She's going to create as much normality as she can from the time she's made the decision to leave or she's seriously considering it to the time the acts that she actually actually leaves. So for her, she's protecting herself, she's creating normalcy and normality. She's actually logistically planning that break or gaining the courage to tell you that she's planning that break. And to her, this just makes sense. This is just a self-protective mood move. She's not being deceptive or lying to you, she's just protecting herself, but to you and understandably so. This feels deceptive. This feels like betrayal. This feels like uh a false reality to you. So the hidden dynamic that's going on here is that he feels I'm losing my page here. Give me one moment. So the hidden dynamic here that's actually running beneath all of this is the man feels as though she let me believe everything was okay in this marriage. She let me believe that everything was gonna work out or that there were no problems even. And he often he'll feel like if she told me that there was problems, I would have worked on it. If she told me there were issues, then I would have resolved those issues, which then causes him to associate blame with her, which just isn't helpful at all. If your objective here is to save the marriage, then who's responsible? Placing blame on who's responsible just simply isn't a productive path forward at all. So in this moment, he feels and experiences humiliation, betrayal, a collapse of certainty. Again, a high, a very high uh emotion that we want to experience as human beings is certainty, and that certainty is taken from you. It's a very unpleasant experience. So, again, the entire marriage gets reprocessed emotionally. So the emotional collapse that happens in this moment actually makes the situation much worse in terms of restoring the marriage or getting her to change her mind or reconsider, because in light of everything that's just been said, it produces a state of panic in the man, a state of desperational desperation. It causes an emotional implosion. He's all of a sudden overwhelmed with emotions that he hasn't had to face before, and quite frankly, probably believed that he was never gonna have to face. So he he jumps into reassurance-seeking mode, starts to produce intense pressure upon her to repair this in terms of let's go to counseling, let's work on this, let's talk about this, I'm willing to change, I'm willing to do what's required. He sees this as uh him caring about the relationship and doing what any reasonable man would do. Now he understands there's a problem, which is fix it. But but this comes across, this is this comes across as reassurance seeking, it comes across as desperation, it comes across as emotional flooding and pressure. And this is the exact thing that she's looking to escape from in this moment. So it actually has the exact effect that that she's the opposite effect of what what you're trying to do. So unfortunately, in this situation, there's also an emotional asymmetry going on, meaning this is uh there's a there's a it's not an equal situation. So she's she's applied pressure to you for years to to bring about the change that she's been looking for. But she's been doing it slowly. She's been boiling the frog, she's been applying a little bit of pressure, a little bit of pressure, a little bit of pressure, a little bit of pressure, and she's been doing that through demonstrating frustration, making requests through pain, through disappointment, lots of mechanisms that she's used to attempt to bring about transformation in the marriage and to save the marriage. But she's done this maybe over three or four or ten-year period. So now the tables are turned here, and the man feels all of the pressure, all of the frustration, all of the pain, all of the disappointment, all of the fear, all in one go. So what it took her years to deliver to you, you now deliver it to her in a matter of moments. So all of this frustration that she's applied to you over a number of years gets returned to her as panic, as urgency, as emotional overwhelm, as emotional flooding. So she gets literally years of frustration in moments where it took you years, it took her years to express that to you. So what she experiences in this moment is an absolute emotional sledgehammer from you. She is just getting hit with an absolute uh knox of six, basically. Validation of uh of exhaustion. So what that means is she's exhausted right now. She's been trying for years to cause uh transformation within this marriage and that attempt to do that has caused her to arrive at a place of exhaustion. And fundamentally, many times in a divorce situation, she's just leaving because she has nothing left to give. She's just leaving because she's absolutely exhausted, and it's it's a it's a situation of self-survival at this point. But what happens when this emotional sledgehammer is dropped in the moment, it just validates it because she's now exhausted even more, and it's confirmation that nothing has changed in you, is what it is. So the real outcome is uh I have loved, I haven't loved you for years. It's not a verdict on who you are, it's not an indictment on your masculine identity, and it's not a final judgment on anything. It's simply a data point, it's simply relationship feedback, it's simply information about the emotional experience that she's having within the relationship. She's tried to tell you gently and subtly for years how she feels, and it hasn't been responded to, and it's been escalation after escalation after escalation until it arrives at a point where this is the only escalation that she has left to try and communicate. So this is this is not anything other than a data point and relationship feedback, and it's information, she's providing information about the emotional experience that she's actually having within the relationship, and it's evidence requiring analysis and adjustment, is all it is. As I said, when I work with men on this, that the formula is try, fail, analyze, adjust. If we can take I haven't loved you for years as a data point, we analyze and then we adjust the strategy. This can be very useful, and this can be one of the greatest gifts that you've been given because it's the opportunity to really enhance the relationship and bring it back. But if you if you if you interpret this the wrong way and you go into a state of emotional collapse and instability, it's not going to work out well. So the critical principle here is this is when she says that I haven't left you for it for years, it's emotional information about how she feels. It's not a verdict on your identity, it's relationship, the relationship outcomes are just feedback. It's all it is. Whether she's if she's having an affair, if she refuses to talk to you, if she says she wants out anything at all, it doesn't matter. It's it's feedback on what is happening within the relationship, and we have to view it that way if we want to save the marriage. The truth is also that painful statements still contain useful truth. I don't love you or I haven't loved you for years. As painful as that is, that statement contains useful truth within it that can be used to turn this marriage around, if you have the emotional stability and maturity, to use it that way and see it and to not take this as a personal attack, but to take it as a data point. So when we do that, it becomes a collapse, uh collapse prevents analysis. So another very important point to understand here is that collapse prevents analysis. When you go into panic, when you go into collapse, that prevents you from actually analysing the situation effectively and determining what needs to happen for you to actually start to work on the on yourself and the problems within the marriage effectively to get her to want to reconsider or to get her to the position to reconsider. So the next critical principle is that the ability to emotionally regulate creates clarity. When you can look at this and go, it's just a data point, what is the data telling me? It causes you to regulate, it causes you to stabilize. And that regulation and stability causes clarity, which then produces productive activity, which stabilizes the situation, which stabilizes her, which is exactly what's needed here for this marriage to move forward. So, why do men struggle to hear this objectively and take it so personally and act in such a destructive way when they hear it? Well, it's because ego is because of ego fusion with the relationship. The man has tied the marriage to his sense of self-worth, his competency, etc., and he's unable to separate the two now. Anything that she says or any behavior that comes from her associated with the marriage is now intrinsically tied to self-worth, etc. And this becomes an existential threat to the ego, which prevents any kind of rational analysis and any kind of productive course of action as a direct result. So these emotional statements to the man they become identity attacks and they become existential threats, which, as I've said many times, they're neither simply a data point. She's simply communicating how she feels in the relationship. You can take that as an identity attack and an existential threat if you want to, or you can take it as what it is. She's escalated to the point to where now you're actually willing to hear her. And of course, when when she says, I haven't loved you for years, your nervous system goes into survival mode, which effectively means you go into fight or flight. You either fight the situation or you flee from the situation. And quite frankly, neither one of those is going to be beneficial to you or the marriage. You have to be able to stabilize your nervous system and regulate yourself to the point to where you're able to exit that fight or flight condition to where you can now productively actually make decisions and get the clarity you need. So, what does healthy processing look like? How do you how do you start to regulate yourself in this situation? Well, emotional emotional regulation comes before reaction. Many of us simply react to this situation. But the truth is we have to have that level of emotional sophistication to start, pause, evaluate, and then choose our action instead of simply reaction, reacting to the situation like a monkey with a machine gun. And that's certainly one of the things that we do in the Win Your Wife Back program, teaching you how to emotionally regulate to choose your reaction to the situation or choose how you act in the situation versus simply just reacting to it. So you have to separate identity from relationship feedback. When you start to associate your identity with the relationship feedback, and it's one of the same things, then it makes it look it virtually makes it functionally impossible for her to give you any feedback on the relationship because you're going to take it personally and then you're going to go into an emotional reactive state, which again will put you in fight or flight. The real the short solution to this in one sentence is to enter into a state of curiosity instead of collapse. Virtually all men will go into collapse at this point with the catastrophic mentality of this is the end, it's all over, panic, etc. etc. versus adopting the curious position, which is I'm curious about what this means. Let me look at this from a position of curiosity and interest, not a position of this is the end of the world. So, how do you do this? How do you enter this curiosity state instead of collapse? Well, it starts by asking better questions. What does this reveal about the marriage? What does this reveal about what's going on? What patterns produce this within me? What am I doing that's causing this to happen? And we're all pattern-based creatures, so it's that pattern recognition and identification. What is actually happening? What patterns are being produced that are causing her to feel this way? How do I interrupt them and how do I change them with a more productive pattern? What truth is inside this statement is a is a very good one. Like she's not irrational and attraction is behaviorally based. And when we understand that, I'm not going to go into that in this video because this video will turn into a two-hour video, but when we understand that attraction is behaviorally based, the fact that she's fundamentally saying, I'm not attracted to you anymore, I'm not in love with you anymore, it's telling us, it's revealing truth about our behavior, it's revealing truth about what we're actually doing. And if we use what's going on to reveal that truth, then it empowers us and puts us in a position to where we actually can take act productive change and transformation versus going into reactive collapse, which isn't helpful at all, obviously. So the important distinction here is this is not about suppressing your emotions, it's not about pretending you don't care to stabilize yourself, it's not about becoming cold or invalidating her pain and going, I it doesn't matter, I don't care. It does mean developing a sense of emotional discipline, emotional maturity, emotional sovereignty. It involves moving to a place of analysis over collapse. Right now, you're a man that instinctively goes into collapse when negative information is put in front of you. We need to shift that to move into a man who, when information that's less than optimal is brought before you, you immediately go into a state of analysis, not into a state of collapse. When you're in a state of analysis, your your nervous system puts you into a completely different state to the fight or flight state. When you're in fight or flight, nothing good is gonna happen. Like, which of those two things is gonna help your marriage, fighting with your wife or running away from the situation? Neither one is positive. You have to, you have to enter into a protective state if you're gonna turn this around. And the only way you can do that is by moving into a position where fundamentally at your core, you are a man, whenever something is put in front of you that's that's harmful, damaging, or difficult, you move to a position of analysis, not to a position of uh collapse. And as a result of that, you're a man that seeks truth and you extract truth from a situation with the desire to use that truth to rehabilitate your. The situation, whatever, versus simply spiral out of control and very obviously moving to a place to where you can intelligently respond to any situation instead of emotionally reacting to it. Responding is emotional self-regulation and create stability. Reaction is emotional immaturity, lack of self-regulation, and will ultimately destroy everything that's valuable to you. So the bigger opportunity that exists that exists here, every cloud has a silver line in, every every di every problem has an equal or opposite uh gift associated with it. What's the opportunity here? Well, this crisis is revealing blind spots that you didn't realize were there. It's revealing patterns that you've been writing that are destructive to the marriage, and at some point we're going to have to be addressed anyway. It's revealing identity weakness such as dependency on the other person, a lack of emotional sovereignty. It's it's revealing emotional immaturity within you that needs to be addressed, which hopefully you want to address anyway. It's not a great thing to be an emotionally immature man. We want to move to emotional, emotionally mature, sophisticated, and regulated. And also the painful feedback here can actually become the transformation catalyst. It can be the catalyst to move you to a place of self-awareness and to actually create the impetus required for behavioral correction. Unfortunately, many of the men that I work with they have to get to the point of the relationship is threatened or divorce is asked for, put on the table, or actioned before the transformational catalysts are activated. If action was taken three months earlier or six months earlier, the whole disaster could have been averted. And what now is a relatively complex situation to turn around, not impossible, certainly can be turned around, but it's now much it's a much more complex situation to turn around. Would have actually been a very, very easy, relatively straightforward situation six months earlier. But unfortunately, the pain wasn't significant enough to create the transformational catalyst to do what needed to be done. Unfortunately, as men, we need to experience a lot of pain before we actually take a solid look at ourselves. So if you're watching this and this is an early stage, if you're seeing these signs in the early stages, or it's slightly before she's asked for divorce, now is the time to take action. Do not wait until it gets to the point because once she actually asks for divorce, it now becomes a much more complicated situation to turn around. So the core internal shifts that we need to make here are again better results come from better questions, different outcomes come from different questions. Stop asking the question, what does this say about my sense of self-worth? What does this tell me about who I am? And start asking the question: what truth about the relationship is this revealing in me? What can I what data point is this providing that I can use to become a better man, a stronger man, a more stable man, and in turn stabilize this marriage, help her self-regulate and help her reconsider the decision that she wants to leave. And here's here's let me just finish on this. This is a uh very many many men go, well, she says she's she's fallen out of love and she's not going to fall in love with me again, and they see that as a finality. Well, at some point in the not too distant past, she said she would love you forever and she would never change her mind. She she went from not being in love with you to falling in love with you to falling out of love with you, and all of these stages seem certain to her at the time. Her certainty is based on her emotion and what she's feeling right now, it's not actually based on anything in objective reality. And she fell in love with you, she fell out with out of love with you, and she can fall back in love with you again. But it's understanding that attraction and love is behaviorally based. It's you can't talk her into it. This is a behavioral problem that you're in right now, and you're not going to be able to talk your way out of a situation that you behaved your way into. You can only behave your way out of the situation of a behavioral problem. So ultimately, the solution is always the same. Fix the man, fix the marriage. If you do that, then all is good. So the core takeaways is men collapse because they confuse uh relationship feedback with identity. The emotional devastation that they experience when they hear this blocks clarity, and that blocks obviously any clear actions moving forwards. The painful statements are taken as verdicts, not data points. Uh they're just information. And uh when you when you're able to take it as the data point, that allows for analysis, adjustment, and transformation. When you collapse on hearing this, it only reinforces the existing dynamic that she's wanting to get away from. So if you want to go deeper into this and you want to know how to get her to reconsider or to give yourself the best chance of getting her to reconsider, I've got a free workshop. There's a link in the description or in the pinned comment below that will actually tell you exactly what you need to do step by step to bring her to that point. Uh click on that. It's what actually works in late-stage marriage crisis. It's going to stop her, it's going to teach you how to stop reinforcing the emotional exhaustion exhaustion that she's looking to stay escape from and how to create conditions where she will potentially reconsider. So if you like this content, if you got some value out of this and you'd like to give something back, the best way you can help is to leave a comment, give a thumbs up, subscribe, like, share this video. It really helps to get this content out. God bless you, and we'll see you in the next video.