Thanks to those of you who responded. But the two responses I got suggested two separate courses of action: 1) hold out, see if spouse may understand over time. 2) prepare for divorce, it's the only ethical thing to do.
Similar advice, actually. If you decide to "wait it out," do it with a time limit in mind, because you can't be waiting to "feel better doing monogamy" for the next 10, 20 years, right?
If at the end of whatever time limit you choose, if you still feel crap, if it's still eating away at you, if you still want more experiences, if you want to be close, intimate with others, you could decide to part ways so both of you can move on.
As I said, then she can be FREE FROM poly stuff she does not want, and you can be FREE TO pursue poly stuff you do want.
Dragging it out doesn't sound great to me. Neither of you sounds especially happy here in this limbo space.
What do you mean by "sweetie spot"?
I mean, a monogamous person wants one sweetie, one romantic partner. If you are taking that spot up in her life, because you are married to her, and she's busy trying to make you "fit the mold," rather than accepting this doesn't work and moving on to seek a more compatible sweetie, she might be stuck in her own anticipatory grief -- like the bargaining stage, still trying to make it go.
You might have to be the one to pull the plug.
She would argue I am capable of giving her what she wants, only that I am unwilling to do so. To her, and to my past understanding of self, this is all very much an issue of morality (i.e., that monogamy is moral and polyamory is outright immoral). She seems to have no willingness, no flexibility, no sense of nuance. I even showed her that TED Talk video on being "Monogam-ish" and she flipped out.
So you know she's not up for poly. For some people, poly IS immoral, whereas, for others, it is not. And she might be dealing with her own anticipatory grief with denial, anger, bargaining, and all the rest of the stages. If she cannot MAKE YOU see the light on this, it's not going to work.
Does the language even matter, at this point?
- You think you cannot give her continued monogamy because deep down you are polyamorous.
- She thinks you could give her monogamy, you just don't want to.
Bottom line, you come from disparate viewpoints and values that do not align. You are not joyful right now doing monogamy. People who are happy in monogamous relationships don't say it is "eating away" at them.
I regularly see a therapist, and my therapist is aware of the struggle, but generally doesn't offer advice guidance or answers, but more reflection, for this difficult issue.
Maybe you could seek a different type, like a marriage counselor or grief counselor. You are the one who has to figure out what you need.
You could ask yourself these things
from Scarleteen.
Should you stay…
- You and the other person very much want to be in the relationship you're in together
- Most of the relationship makes everyone in it happy most of the time
- You and the other person are getting most of what each of you wants and needs
- You look forward to seeing each other, share a lot of laughter and joy, and find the relationship makes you feel good about yourself
- Both of you feel the give-and-take is mutual
- Communication is open and works well
- The relationship is and has been physically and emotionally healthy and safe for everyone
- Everyone in the relationship is, or at least seems, very invested in it
- You and the other person have more good things to say about each other, and things you like about each other, than criticisms or things you dislike
- You resolve conflict well together
- The relationship feels like a place where everyone can be themselves, be challenged and grow in positive ways, and is accepted, cared for and supported
- You or the other person don't feel done
…or should you go?
- You or the other person don't really want to be in the relationship anymore or feel apathetic about it
- The relationship makes anyone in it unhappy a lot of the time
- You or the other person are not getting most of what you want or need
- Seeing each other isn't something one or both of you looks forward to anymore, there's little laughter or joy, and one or both of you finds the relationship makes you feel bad about yourself
- You or the other person feels like they give way more than they get
- Communication has broken down, stopped or feels impossible
- The relationship is or has been physically or emotionally unhealthy or unsafe for anyone in it
- Anyone in the relationship isn't or doesn't seem invested in it
- You and the other person have more bad things to say about each other, and things you dislike about each other, than good things or things you like
- You don't resolve conflict well together or feel only one of you is trying to fix things
- The relationship feels like a place where someone wants to change the other, where positive challenges and growth have stopped happening or never happened, and/or one or both people aren't being accepting, caring or supportive
- You're only or mostly staying in it out of guilt
- You or the other person feels done
AND...
- Is this the right relationship for you in your life now, or was it only right in the past?
- Are you staying in because this feels good, or because this feels familiar?
- Are you afraid of change in your life or of being alone or single? Is this relationship keeping you from needed change or growth?
- Do you feel like letting go means you failed? Are you staying to try and prove something to yourself or someone else?
- Are you staying because you feel guilty about having been sexual in something other than a lifelong relationship?
- Are you choosing to stay because you've become a partner's caretaker or counselor rather than their partner?
- Are you staying because any relationship seems better than no relationship, or because you're afraid this is the only chance you'll have for this kind of relationship?
- Are you staying because it's what the other person wants or says they need, even if it's not what you want and need?
- Are you staying because you made some kind of promise that you know you can't keep or don't want to, but feel guilty about breaking?
- Are you staying in figuring you'll just wait and see if something better comes along, and stay if it doesn't?
As a therapist, I wonder if you don't already know it that
love alone is not enough to sustain a relationship. Love alone doesn't mean deep compatibility. There have to be other things -- similar values, wanting the same things out of life, etc. And married couples do and can grow apart.
I'm not trying to be mean. I'm just saying that for this to get any better,
you have to figure out what you want to be doing.
So if you decide you want to "wait and see," put a time limit on it, because you can't be waiting for decades on the fence about it.
Life is not a dress rehearsal. You only get the one.
Galagirl