It's not a verbal shrug, though. It's more like I'm standing in front of a woodchipper, thinking about jumping in, and everyone around me just casually keeps saying, "Jeez dude just jump in". That's easy to say when you're not the one who has to jump into the whirly death machine.
My marriage isn't what I want. I'm looking for conversation about that, maybe confirmation that I'm not crazy in how I perceive what's happening. Maybe it's me, and that's kind of what I'm trying to find out.
I really don't think she's depressed. She has no typical signs of depression, and if somehow I've given that impression, then I did a poor job of explaining. As I said before, she is content with the way things are. Hell, that's 95% of the problem! This is what she wants. She is living her life the way she wants, and it looks like she and I are incompatible on what we want out of a marriage. For her, this silo living is perfect. For me it's not. She shows no signs of wanting different. If she does, she hasn't expressed it in the many hundreds of conversations I've tried to have about it over the years. This is not a woman who stays quiet on something either. We're talking a type A extrovert who has managed to get not one but 2 lemon law buybacks and a free transmission, start an entire program at her University, etc. If she wants something, she will say it. That's how I know she is content. Plus, I know her mom, and her marriage is much the same. She's the boss, she does what she wants. I mean, it's possible I'm wrong about her being depressed, but I don't think so. This is someone who engages heavily in her life--just not the part with me.
I don't mean to seem argumentative, and if I seem so, it's because I've had this same conversation in person with friends and family for 10 years. But I get defensive of her, because no one has her side or sees how things are outside of my filtered story where I only tell you the bad parts