You trust a partner to treat you well and not "do stupid," and if they can't do this, you leave.
Yup. What else is there? I'm not going to hang around in unhealthy and/or incompatible relationships.
I have anxious attachment issues (my problem, I know). My GF (we don't live together) enjoys new men in her life frequently, which was not a huge problem for me, although anxious attachment is difficult when there are frequent partner additions, especially since she was my only partner, and finding new partners for me is extremely difficult (cis/het married).
Sounds like you don't want her seeking potentials from your group of friends. Like, she can date her own friends, but not yours. Is that it? What happens with mutual friends? Is that case-by-case, or just none? Have you talked it out? Kind of sounds like maybe you didn't realize it needed discussion until now?
I think, for me, it depends on proximity. I think dating friends is natural. It's not unheard of for a friendship to grow into something more.
At the same time, if this were your BEST friend, the one you usually turn to for help with problems, it could be hella messy. You can't turn to them for support in the same way anymore. Now they ARE the person you are having difficulties with. They are not able to be impartial or someone outside the dating system anymore. They are now inside the system.
The same goes for dating your roomie, your boss, your parents, etc. It makes for very weird dynamics.
I think there are enough people in the world to date without going right for the "messy people" that would make it weird. Some might be permanently messy -- like dating your parents AND you. Some might change over time -- like the roomie, if they stop being your roomie. Or if you change jobs, that person is no longer your boss. Once they are no longer your roomie or boss, it isn't as weird or messy.
If these things bother you, you need to tell her up front who is on your "messy people list," and ask who is on hers. You could say something like "In future, I prefer you not date these people: _____. They are too messy and weird for me. In exchange I won't date people on your messy list. Who are they?"
If she's not willing to skip dating your parents, your best friend, your roomie, your boss, etc., at the same time as dating you, you end it with her, and that solves it for you. She's free to date all those people, but she's not dating YOU at the same time as them. You are out.
You cannot ban the whole city, but I think it's reasonable to ask for a few that really just make things way too weird.
When I expressed how difficult was for me to have her dating a close friend, she said "I needed to trust her."
I could see her point of view if this was a "friend" or "close friend," and not "best friend." Some communities have a very small dating pool, and having some overlap is just a fact of life.
What are you doing to manage/heal your anxious attachment?
I once dated someone who was super anxious and fearful. I was willing to work with his reasonable and rational requests. He acted like he wanted to put me in a box and throw away the key. It was like I was supposed to lead a limited, circumscribed life and thus never "trigger" him, just so he could keep AVOIDING dealing with his issues AND get to date me.
I wasn't even dating his friends. It was just me going out with MY friends and doing things on my own without him. Coffee at the bookstore or shopping at the mall, or whatever. Really benign things.
He was always so worried someone "better" was going to hit on me if I was out and about and "take me away," that he wanted me to not lead my normal life. I was just supposed to stay home all the time, or only go out with him. He would not get therapy, so I broke up and left. He just didn't have a healthy relationship to offer me. I can't be in a relationship where I'm not trusted.
Galagirl
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