What's wrong with what I've said now? That I think my wife deserves to go pamper herself while I watch the kid because she's able to let me go off and do something on my own occasionally? Isn't that one of the things that mono spouses can do to keep their jealousy in check? I'm just saying it's an extremely good idea and I'd encourage her to do that even more when I went out on a date than if I wasn't.
What I see is wrong with what you said is that your original statement states that for you helping out with your child would be contingent in some way on your wife agreeing to a poly relationship.
I don't think that's actually what you mean. Reading what you've said above sounds as if you'd seek to help out so that your wife can go out and enjoy some child free time anyway but that you'd be even more mindful of the need to do that if you were dating somebody else.
In your very first post, you said that one of the problems in your marriage is that your wife was feeling as if you had checked out, were not willing to help out around the house etc. You also said that your wife looked on opening the relationship as a way to end it while you looked on opening the relationship as a way to improve your marriage.
Do you think that some of the difficulties you and your wife experience could be because there is a general lack of understanding between you and your wife about what each of you mean? I think that for everybody communication is difficult - it's easy to forget that the other person can't see into our minds to understand the full meaning. Easy too to then get irritated when somebody takes a statement in a different way than it was intended. From there, arguments and annoyance at each other can soon follow. If that's been going on in your marriage for a while, it is easy to see how things can have become so difficult between you.
This discussion is, for me, a possible snap shot of that sort of thing. You made a statement that wasn't quite what you meant to say. A couple of people on the board picked up on it and pointed out that it wasn't a great way to behave. You then came back in what seems like a fairly irritated way and explained yourself. If this is typical of how communication goes in your world in real life as well as in written communication, I can see how difficulties and resentments could build up over the years.
For clarity, I'm taking this as an indication of irritation:
Now go pick this apart and rake me over the coals.
For clarity also - this isn't an attempt to pick anything apart or rake you over the coals. It's just an observation of how this communication is going as well as an observation that difficulty in communication is something you've raised as a problem already in this thread.
In my experience, how I see my life and how I have built happiness in my life has lots to do with communication. The written, verbal and non-verbal communication I have with others really matters when it comes to building and maintaining good relationships that are filled with joy rather than irritation. Most importantly also is, my own internal narrative and communication with myself about my life, the direction I want it to take, the people I want to have in it and how I see myself and the world around me.
If communication is hard for you, I think it will be difficult for you to live a happy and fulfilled life.
IP