Ravenscroft
Banned
DeepBlue, I am a terminology junkie. I believe that word choice and phrasing say a lot about our underlying motivations and shape how we are able to think about a situation.
I can understand where retyping "the other man" got quickly wearying.
For comparison, in the two posts you quoted at the beginning, you use "love" (aside from referring to your daughter) 19 times; in the first cited passage, seven of those instances are some version of "falling in love" (plus three more "in love"s).
Given opportunity, proper circumstances, and luck, those feelings might provide a healthy setting in which love can form, but the obsessive giddiness is not itself "love."
From what you said, it's clear that you have never had opportunity to be in love, that is, to love, deeply and fully, with more than one person at a time.
I have a few friends who seemingly cannot be happy without more than one steady lover, and I mean full-on "Serious Relationship" stuff, not merely FWBs. With two steady partners, they are stable and devoted, and not interested in further explorations.
I think you're much the same, and that you'd thrive having two husbands. Getting to that point is the mass of the problem.
Hmm... In your 10+ years together, have you never talked to your husband about the disaster(s) that preceded him?
I'm guessing not, as you make him sound totally baffled and blindsided by this "sudden change" in you. But if you never talked about that part of yourself, how much trust do you actually have in him? He'd be justified in feeling doubly hurt.
I can understand where retyping "the other man" got quickly wearying.
For comparison, in the two posts you quoted at the beginning, you use "love" (aside from referring to your daughter) 19 times; in the first cited passage, seven of those instances are some version of "falling in love" (plus three more "in love"s).
There is huge difference between falling in love and being in love. Quite often, the "falling" isn't reciprocated, or the object is entirely unaware of it, so there's really no "in" there. Moreover, it's not "love," but crush and fantasy.I have been falling in love with several guys over the past ten years.
Given opportunity, proper circumstances, and luck, those feelings might provide a healthy setting in which love can form, but the obsessive giddiness is not itself "love."
From what you said, it's clear that you have never had opportunity to be in love, that is, to love, deeply and fully, with more than one person at a time.
I have a few friends who seemingly cannot be happy without more than one steady lover, and I mean full-on "Serious Relationship" stuff, not merely FWBs. With two steady partners, they are stable and devoted, and not interested in further explorations.
I think you're much the same, and that you'd thrive having two husbands. Getting to that point is the mass of the problem.
Hmm... In your 10+ years together, have you never talked to your husband about the disaster(s) that preceded him?