Hi Kelly. I can’t begin to speculate what the problem might be, but two things on your list describe my husband perfectly.
3. He doesn't like to answer the phone or door. He gets mad at people for calling.
4. He doesn't want people to come over even though we have an awesome backyard and pool.
His pattern of watching television is also the same as my husband’s. Very short attention span, constantly flipping channels. Movies and drama bore him. He’ll watch the same dumb comedies over and over, but if I turn on Law and Order, he’ll leave the room.
My husband will not answer the phone or the door. He acts like he’s afraid to – doesn’t know what to do. Honestly, I don’t know how he lived before caller ID. When the phone rings, he looks at the name on the caller ID and whines like a baby, “It’s the hair salon. What should I do? I don’t know what to do.” To which I respond, “You answer it.” Most of the time he sits there staring at the phone until the machine picks up, then makes excuses for not answering because the machine already picked up.
He also doesn’t want to socialize. Doesn’t want to go to anything we’re invited to, and doesn’t want any friends coming over to the house.
I’ve talked to my therapist about this, and she believes he has social anxiety. He also has some OCD going on. Like your husband, mine is also fixated on one band, has every CD they ever released (imports, remixes, bonus tracks . . . sometimes 5 or more copies of the same album). Knows every worthless piece of trivia possible about them. On and on.
The big difference between your husband and mine is the drinking. Mine has maybe one or two beers on the weekend, but I’ve never seen him get drunk, so I don’t know about that part of it.
If you could convince him to go to therapy with you, it might really help. I know that’s easier said than done. My husband (I’m guessing many men) has a real problem with therapy. He thinks therapy is for women, because women like to talk about their problems. I DID get him go to some couples therapy with me, but we didn’t get anywhere. He wouldn’t talk, and in some cases lied to the doctor. He didn't want her to know that he had problems, and she ended up telling me I was wasting my time, because you can't help someone who doesn't WANT to be helped.
Therapy only works if the person is aware that they have a problem, and is willing to admit that they need help. That’s the hard part. If you can get him to see a doctor with you, it would probably give you some answers, but getting there is half the battle.