Spork
Active member
Responding to some of your thoughts, and particularly Lioness's concerns, in bold font.
You are welcome. It is not selfish of you to make yourself a priority. When people criticize the pitfalls of "unicorn hunters" they talk a lot about couple privilege, and it seems to me that she is exercising quite a bit of that. It's why many people prefer not to be considered a secondary, especially if they wish to have solid commitments and children (as opposed to a solo poly who is content to keep entanglements loose...easier probably to be a secondary partner, then.) And the expectation was dangled before you that you would be an equal, but she is not treating you as one now.
I feel for you, I think that this is a sad situation. I think that you are a sweet and accommodating person and she is either a strong willed and overbearing personality, or a conniving and manipulative one...I think/hope it is the first. Although it's entirely possible that her feelings did change over time (we grow as people and what we want in life changes)...and by the time she had these concerns, she may have felt if she said so to you, she'd drive you away (possible) and they have likely come to rely on you a lot, and her kids probably love you...so she was trying to ride along under the radar and hope she'd dodge the baby bullet. Like you'd forget about it, or if she made you wait long enough, you'd give up on it. But it simply is neither fair nor respectful to string a person along to get what you want, even if you can justify that you had good intentions.
I'm sorry. *hugs* I hope that she can come to a place of respect for your life choices, whatever they needs must be, to have Wolf's baby and take the chances that come with that, or to let you go so that you can have the life you want.
Oh, yes. We've all acknowledged / avowed that the children are high priority, for many reasons. Thank you for seeing that. I am touched and honored.
I've got kids, totally get it.
A very good point. When Lioness told us that she had some concerns, Wolf asked if she might write them down for us. She did, and it was some of those concerns that made me wonder if they were just symptoms of an underlying issue with me being (a true equal) called spouse/mother and with a biological child.
Here are the concerns she voiced (and my response):
- when we discussed the relationship, she didn't realize the life goal of a biological baby was a "deal-breaker"
(I apologized that I did not make it more clear then, and that while I have always wanted a bio baby, I know for certain now that it is a deal breaker desire for me.)
Kind of reads like: Did not realize your life goals were THAT important.
- she worries about our ages, as certain aches and pains have cropped up recently that make her feel older, and that same age gap will make things difficult when we are older and the child may have a child of their own.
(I reminded her that we were waiting/delaying as part of a compromise to her because, when we very first talked, she wanted to put it off several more years than what we have finally agreed upon, and that we could move up the timeline if that is what she needs now.)
I don't understand how HER aging is a big deal, unless she is insecure that Wolf might lose commitment to her in favor of the younger family. Does she expect that she will raise your grandkids? That's an odd concern. Should not be her problem. Is, after all, YOUR BABY.
- she bemoans the current lack of "kid free" time, and postulates that having another in early 2018 would delay us in getting any more "kid free time" by at least five years, and also adds five more years before we could possibly do a family vacation where everyone can remember it.
(I volunteered that moving up the timeline could again help resolve this, and that it's okay with me if we do a family vacation before baby 4 can "remember" it-- and that we can do others later, too, if we plan well.)
This I DO understand. I am looking forward to my teenage sons being grown, as I've got some me-centered life goals that will be hard to try until they are independent. Starting the clock over doesn't appeal to me. However, this doesn't justify letting you live under false expectations and pretenses for all this time.
- she worries about how the parenting needs for baby 4 will be met, particularly late night sessions
(I was actually a little hurt by this one, as we had previously agreed that I was doing an excellent job, and that the night duties were one thing that I should do less of as my work is less forgiving of me having to miss for children that are "not mine," and because I make a morning commute that could be dangerous if I am sleep deprived --the latter of which was actually her point when we had the conversation--. Anyway, I told her that I have always been of the opinion that certain duties/responsibilities would shift appropriately for baby 4, including late nights, and that I hope to have the baby bassinet sleep or have me sleep in the nursery when necessary to help mitigate the stress of those late nights.)
So it's ok for you to make a lot of sacrifices for HER offspring, but not your own? That seems selfish of her. And frankly...unkind.
- she worried about falling in love with the baby and then losing it if I should ever need to leave later.
(I told her that, just as she promised me that I will always be part of her bio kids' lives, I too, promise that she will always be part of Baby 4's life, no matter what. I know that we will always work hard to take care of not only each other, but the children, just as we have already promised each other.)
But it's ok for your love of her kids to hold you hostage to the situation, under terms of her choosing. OK to hurt you, not ok to hurt her...I appreciate her honesty, but is she aware of how these things sound?
- she said that she recognizes that it's "an awful Catch 22:" on one hand we want to have Baby 4 soon (our ages) but, on the other hand, she doesn't want to rush into things AND doesn't want to have kids too close together
(I can respect this, of course. I don't want to rush into it either. However, I told her that, if we are going to have Baby 4, we will simply have to decide which of these risks we'd rather face. Should we risk babies that are "too close" together and the possibility that we might someday part ways, or should we wait longer and risk that we will all be "too old" later on? I told her that we should weigh the pros and cons of each.)
How close is too close? I'd say the sooner the better. The sooner you do this, if it's going to happen, the sooner you reach certain milestones such as no more daycare cost, no more diapers, etc. and kids closer in age should bond reasonably well.
A note here-- she has not yet responded to my counterpoints. : /
I like your idea here. We have had conversations about this in the past, but I like the addition of putting it down on paper and, particularly, of ranking them.
Reading that, I realize that I am very grateful to you for saying so. I think I felt that the (possible) arrangement was unfair, but wasn't giving myself enough credit, or was telling myself, "Yeah, but life isn't fair, suck it up." Hearing someone else say it validated it in a way I didn't realize I needed, so thank you.
You are welcome. It is not selfish of you to make yourself a priority. When people criticize the pitfalls of "unicorn hunters" they talk a lot about couple privilege, and it seems to me that she is exercising quite a bit of that. It's why many people prefer not to be considered a secondary, especially if they wish to have solid commitments and children (as opposed to a solo poly who is content to keep entanglements loose...easier probably to be a secondary partner, then.) And the expectation was dangled before you that you would be an equal, but she is not treating you as one now.
I feel for you, I think that this is a sad situation. I think that you are a sweet and accommodating person and she is either a strong willed and overbearing personality, or a conniving and manipulative one...I think/hope it is the first. Although it's entirely possible that her feelings did change over time (we grow as people and what we want in life changes)...and by the time she had these concerns, she may have felt if she said so to you, she'd drive you away (possible) and they have likely come to rely on you a lot, and her kids probably love you...so she was trying to ride along under the radar and hope she'd dodge the baby bullet. Like you'd forget about it, or if she made you wait long enough, you'd give up on it. But it simply is neither fair nor respectful to string a person along to get what you want, even if you can justify that you had good intentions.
I'm sorry. *hugs* I hope that she can come to a place of respect for your life choices, whatever they needs must be, to have Wolf's baby and take the chances that come with that, or to let you go so that you can have the life you want.