Referring back to the OP (because I don't feel nearly qualified enough to weigh in on what Jaynek and Telesphorus are discussing), the first problem to surface in my marriage was what appeared to be a miscommunication. I would complain about something, my husband would suggest a solution, and I would feel unsupported.
When I took my feelings to prayer, I realized that it was my feelings that were part of the problem. There's nothing wrong with getting sympathy and commiseration, but you can't expect to have those to the exclusion of anything else. I have plenty of other female friends who are more than happy to match my own complaints with words of support, commiseration, sympathy, etc.
So, I swallowed my pride and actually listened to what my husband was saying. When I did that, I realized he offered solid advice that, in the long run, helped me much more than whatever I received emotionally from my female friends. He was supporting me but just not in the way I had grown accustomed to when I was surrounded primarily by women.
Again, I'm not saying there's anything wrong with emotions and expressing feelings. And there are times when no solution can be given and the best thing my husband can do is let me cry on his shoulder. However, there is a season for everything, and God made men the way they are for a reason.
My point is: there was no miscommunication. We just had to learn how to speak to each other. I had to realize I had to adjust my own expectations. And we're the happier for it.