I completely eliminated one OKC prospect who looked interesting because after he messaged me, his wife also messaged me to assure me she was okay with him messaging me and that she hoped we could hang out if he and I got to know each other.
Nope. Not cool with that. I guess it's good that she messaged to let me know she was okay with the situation, because at least I knew he wasn't cheating or lying, but it was just coming on way too strong when the only communication the guy and I had exchanged was "Hi, I'm poly too, I think we should get to know each other."
I'm perfectly happy with distance between myself and my metamours, or at the very least, with being able to decide for myself how much connection I'm comfortable with instead of having it foisted on me.
Ugh, that would send me running too!
To me there is HUGE difference between "I'm open to meeting your other partner and being friendly/hanging out if we get along" and "all of my partners MUST be friends". And whether it's fair or not, I get the "friendship is required" vibe from anyone who wants me to meet or chat with their partner(s) right away.
Or maybe I'm just hyper vigilant and misreading things right now. Like today, I was chatting online with a poly guy, and we talked about our jobs, and he starts going on about his partner's career and how talented she is and ... Dude, why? I don't give a fuck what your partner does for a living.
Does it help if you phrase it as what you are /aren't willing to accept in a partner?
As in the beginning discussions, "I need a partner who respects my privacy. For me that means my partners don't share details of our sex life with thers. That would be a deal breaker for me"
I also think fears about how things will be are very normal at the time of possibly and begin to go away after trust builds. Like aversion therapy. ..can you manage for x time if you are anxious before you need a safer space?
And of course you don't have to date if you don't want to. There's nothing wrong with taking a break for whatever reason and letting yourself heal after a recent breakup
Seeing it as my need does take my anxiety down a notch, actually! I still worry that it's unreasonable

but at least that phrase sounds like something I could say without worrying I was overstepping.
I'm usually fine hanging out in the "we'll see if this works out or not" space before I have sex with someone. I do need some level of trust/comfort/security in order to enjoy sex. Otherwise my anxiety kicks up and ruins it. I've had some shitty experiences - like the guy who messaged his 3 other partners while we were still in bed naked post sex, because he wanted them to know how it went
Right now okc is the only thing distracting me from missing Dag

I don't even particularly want to date, I just need something to keep me from messaging him and begging to see him. Andy is trying soooo hard to keep my mind off Dag, but... I'm used to having them BOTH, you know? As much as I love that Andy is doubling our date nights and making sure I get lots of sex, I still feel Dag's abscence like a constant dull ache. Online chats at least fill the time that used to be spent texting him.
On another note - I want to say how much I appreciate everyone listening to the horror stories of my childhood. I've gotten a lot of "but it's not like they beat you, so it's not that bad, right?" reactions in the past

Emotional abuse is a real thing, as is a lack of decent models of relationships, not everyone understands that, I'm glad so many people here do!
I definitely need to do some work on my ability to figure out, communicate, and stick to my own boundaries before I date seriously again. That is something I got zero experience doing in childhood, so I'm basically starting at a preschool level when it comes to sticking up for myself.
When I was little - like, preschool through middle school - I spent most of my time at my grandparents, surrounded by the crazy (or insert better word here lol) uncles and aunts who'd never moved out. I HATED sitting next to Uncle Gerbil Beard on the sofa, and sometimes I'd sit on the floor or go in a different room to avoid it. He'd get upset and hurt, and my grandmother would get angry at me. She'd tell me to stop being "mean" and "make up with him", which usually meant taking him his dinner in his room. (Uncle Gerbil Beard had a thing about eating in front of people.) His room... Ugh. Let's just say I still cannot see hermit crabs without having panic attacks. I'd cry and beg not to have to go up there, but my parents would tell me to "keep the peace" and "be polite" and "we all have to do things we don't like sometimes".
Yeah, comfort levels and boundaries were not a thing in my childhood. So now I have a hard time even knowing where mine are, and I worry that stating them will result in having them pushed even more. I wish that somebody, anybody, had come along and told 5 year old me that it was ok not to like Uncle Gerbil Beard, or Uncle Barks Like A Dog, or Uncle Plays With Guns. These days, I'm working on telling myself that I'm a grown up now, and I can choose the people in my life.