That's where my problems lie. No talking. I am a SAHM and would LOVE to get some attention. Would LOVE to have someone to chat with. Anymore I feel like we are roomies with benefits. It's hard to explain to others, but I talk enough here, that I'd think he would get it by now.
Who knows?
I have what I would classify as a pretty darn good marriage now, but it hasn't always been that way, and I'm quite sure there will be rough patches in the future too. I think that's an inevitable part of living and growing together, people change and so the marriage changes too.
My husband and I used to have the exact same problem that your having. I would tell him "I might as well just talk to myself, I'd get more response!"
The problem was that he didn't grow up in a house where people had conversations, they all lived like they were little islands, just went through the motions of life near each other, but not really with each other. A little like how 2 year olds parallel play, but don't really play together.
I didn't notice it so much when I worked because I spent sooo much of my time communicating all day, that I was honestly happy for the quiet respite at home, but when I quit work all that quiet got real lonely real quick.
For awhile I just would throw little internal pity parties for myself, or try to engage him in conversation, but it didn't do much good.
I finally just told him "Hey! We talk about you 95% of the time, so for the 5% that I'm talking you NEED to listen and respond, don't just nod your head or give one word answers. Don't change the topic while I'm mid sentence and even if your not interested, pretend you are!"
I would call him on it every time he went back to his old tricks! For my part I also made sure that I had a network of other people to talk to so that I wasn't relying solely on him for conversation.
We haven't had that problem in years, and my husband is a MUCH better communicator now, not just at home, but socially and in his career too. It was just something he never learned at home, so he had to learn it later in life. Now he struggles with visits to his family because of their lack of conversational skills. Hard to believe that was him just a few years ago!
I think that one of the great things about marriage is that it's like the other person is a mirror that shows you all the things you never knew about yourself, both good and bad. If you love each other enough, and have the commitment to stick it out, you can really learn a lot from each other and grow into better people together.