Dear Carolyn: After 30 years of marriage, my wife and I have come to the realization that we have nothing in common. It hasn’t always been this way. We had kids right away and were always in agreement about how to raise them, and there were school events and sports to keep us busy.

As the kids grew up and moved out, our problems became more apparent. She can be self-centered and controlling, and gets very upset if things don’t go her way. She got upset when I made decisions on care for my aging parents. She gets upset if I ask her what she wants to do on a weekend; she wants me to find something she’ll like.

There were early signs. When we first started living together, for example, she would complain if I read a book while she watched TV. My wife also doesn’t show any interest in things I like. If I try to talk to her about current events, sports, movies or music, I’m met with indifference. She only seems concerned with what I can do for her.

Therapy hasn’t helped. I think I’ve made changes; she doesn’t feel like she needs to change. We’ve talked about divorce, but it seems like we should be able to work through this. There is a serious lack of communication. — Looking for Something More

With all due respect, I’d say there’s an excess of communication. At least, there is plenty on the negative and futile end of the scale. You are trying to converse and in the process communicating your hopes of converting her into an engaged, chatty companion. Your efforts to share her interests communicates this, too, in their ways.

She, for her part, is communicating with you all over the place. The emotional outbursts, the indifference to your conversation attempts, and the stubborn resistance to change are all forms of communication and her message is clear: She is available to you as-is, so don’t look for anything different from her.

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Whether this is healthy, good or kind, and whether you accept or like this about her, are all apparently beside her point. As-is. Take-leave.

So move yourself to the positive and productive end of the scale with full knowledge of her as-is terms. Since she’s not budging, anything that hinges on her changing the way she does things is not productive and therefore is out. Your dwelling on what you and she no longer talk about or share? That’s negative, so that’s out. Reacting when she gets upset is negative and counterproductive and out. You get the idea.

What’s in: Look for what she offers you now. Don’t be stingy; even shared history and financial stability have value. Find what pleasures you can in your reality.

Maybe you need to stay interesting to yourselves and each other through some smaller, separate pursuits.

Explore this positive and productive side of the scale, as creatively as you need to and as transparently as any marriage deserves, then assess: Can you live happily in a marriage built out of the material you have, versus the material you keep trying in vain to get?

And don’t get hung up on what you “should” be “able to” accomplish. There is only what you do, what you have, and how you feel.

As for her controlling and selfish nature: It’s not OK. Maybe she’s bored and adrift; people sometimes micromanage less when there’s more to do.

Email Carolyn Hax at tellme@washpost.com, follow her at www.facebook.com/carolyn.hax or chat with her at 11 a.m. each Friday at www.washingtonpost.com.

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