Seeking Advice: Married & Supportive of My Bi Wife’s GF — How Do We Make This Work?

stouf

New member
Hi everyone,

First off, thank you for this space. I’m new to posting here, but have been reading threads for a while. I’m hoping to get some guidance from folks who’ve navigated similar situations.

I’m a man, married to my wonderful wife (together 17 years). She’s bisexual, and I fully support her in exploring that part of herself. She has a girlfriend, and they’ve been together for about 2 months. I’m not involved with her partner romantically or sexually — our dynamic is that I’m monogamously married to my wife, and she has this separate relationship, but we all live in the same house.

I love my wife deeply, and her happiness is incredibly important to me. I genuinely want this to work for all of us. I understand that her love for her girlfriend doesn’t take away from her love for me, and I’m committed to growing through this together. That said, I’m still learning how to navigate the practical and emotional sides of things.

We did set some boundaries, but the fights are becoming a big problem.

What I need advice for is:

1. How do you handle moments of jealousy or insecurity when your partner is with someone else? What mindset shifts or coping strategies helped you move through those feelings without resentment?

2. For those in similar setups (one partner mono, the other poly), how do you keep your primary relationship strong? What rituals, boundaries, or habits made the biggest difference?

3. I have no romantic connection to my wife’s girlfriend, and we’re not close. How do you interact respectfully with your partner’s partner when you’re not friends? Any tips for avoiding awkwardness or unintended tension?

4. How do you balance time fairly without feeling like your relationship is "scheduling"? How do you handle holidays, vacations, or unexpected changes in plans?

5. What do you do to recharge and focus on your own needs when your partner is having fun? How do you avoid feeling like you are the third wheel in their relationships?

6. How can I help my wife so that she doesn't feel like she's in the middle and being pulled apart?

If you’ve been in my shoes — or in my wife’s — I’d love to hear what worked, what didn’t, and what you wish you’d known earlier.

Any insights you can share? I’m here to learn and grow.

A Loving Husband Trying His Best
 
Hi everyone,

First off, thank you for this space. I’m new to posting here, but have been reading threads for a while. I’m hoping to get some guidance from folks who’ve navigated similar situations.
Welcome! I'm glad you've been reading threads. There is so much good info here.
I'm a man, married to my wonderful wife (together 17 years). She’s bisexual, and I fully support her in exploring that part of herself. She has a girlfriend, and they’ve been together for about 2 months. I’m not involved with her partner romantically or sexually — our dynamic is that I’m monogamously married to my wife, and she has this separate relationship, but we all live in the same house.
This is the first thing to address. Why on earth is your wife's gf already living with you two, if they've only been dating two months? I will speculate that the gf was already a roommate of yours, and these feelings happened, or that gf lost her apartment and needed a temporary place to stay. I hope she can get her own place nearby. That would solve probably 80% of your problems.

Most people do not live with someone they've only been dating a few months, poly or mono. It's too challenging, and not really healthy. In my opinion, you are not required to have wife's brand new gf on your territory 24/7. I'd hate that!
I love my wife deeply, and her happiness is incredibly important to me. I genuinely want this to work for all of us. I understand that her love for her girlfriend doesn’t take away from her love for me, and I’m committed to growing through this together. That said, I’m still learning how to navigate the practical and emotional sides of things.

We did set some boundaries, but the fights are becoming a big problem.
Fights between your wife and you, or fights with the gf?

BTW, "true love" takes time to develop. What your wife is feeling is just infatuation. Two months does not trump a 17-year commitment.
1. How do you handle moments of jealousy or insecurity when your partner is with someone else? What mindset shifts or coping strategies helped you move through those feelings without resentment?
That's a big topic. Jealousy is a covering emotion for a feeling of loss. How much research did you and wife do before she started dating others? What kinds of reassurance do you need? Touch/sex, quality time, quantity time, acts of service, "just because" gifts, verbal reassurance?
2. For those in similar setups (one partner mono, the other poly), how do you keep your primary relationship strong? What rituals, boundaries, or habits made the biggest difference?
I'd say, not to take the established partner for granted. Look up "new relationship energy." Here's an article.

https://www.kathylabriola.com/articles/are-you-in-poly-hell
3. I have no romantic connection to my wife’s girlfriend, and we’re not close. How do you interact respectfully with your partner’s partner when you’re not friends? Any tips for avoiding awkwardness or unintended tension?
Again, there is no need for you to interact much with the new gf. If she didn't live with you, you wouldn't have to see her at all, hang out, share a kitchen and bathroom, etc. That sounds hella awkward, to me, in fact.

If she had her own place, she could host your wife at it. Or they could use your house when you were out, if necessary. When my gf Pixi first started dating her bf Malachi, I didn't meet him for seven years. That's extreme, I know, but he is introverted. He was dating her, not me. She'd always go to his place. We didn't start hanging out together, now and then, until the pandemic, when we were in our Covid bubble together.

And my bf Aries of four years? He only comes to my house to see me when Pixi goes over to Malachi's house (who lives alone). (Aries can't host easily because of his roommate situation, with one of his brothers, two younger cousins and an aunt. Their family closeness/commitment is important.) We all like splitting up our time and space like that. A few times a year, we now get together for dinners or special occasions, along with other family or friends. This is known as garden-party polyamory.
4. How do you balance time fairly without feeling like your relationship is "scheduling"? How do you handle holidays, vacations, or unexpected changes in plans?
You can't avoid scheduling. If you have kids, you know proper scheduling is necessary to live, to meet everyone's needs.

Holidays, well, are you out to family and friends at all? If you were, the new gf could come along for the big holidays with family. If not, she goes to her family, and you and wife go to your own families. Vacations with a new partner of only two months? It's a bit early for that, imo. If you and wife have always shared vacations, going separately will take some getting used to.

As for unexpected changes in plans, deal with whoever is the most needy first. Or some people always put their established partner first. Be adults and negotiate needs politely and with care.
5. What do you do to recharge and focus on your own needs when your partner is having fun?
Whatever your interests are, do those. Treat yourself well. See your best friends and family. Do something intense to distract yourself. This kind of feeling of unease when your wife is on a date will dissipate over time.
How do you avoid feeling like you are the third wheel in their relationships?
Don't do threeway dates. Don't spend time with the gf. Have enough one-on-one time with your wife.
6. How can I help my wife so that she doesn't feel like she's in the middle and being pulled apart?
That's her job to deal with. She is the hinge. She has work to do to keep things balanced. Just tell her what your needs and desires are so she can meet them to the best of her ability.

Please check out our many resources in the Golden Nuggets section for more answers to your questions.

 
Hello stouf,

It sounds like you already are making it work, you just need to do some fine tuning. Here are some links that might help you with the jealousy, insecurity, and how to cope when your partner is with someone else.
Hopefully that helps. I should add that a group calendar is nothing to be feared, my V uses one, and it's enormously helpful in more ways than one. The peace of mind is worth the "scheduling" of things.

Sincerely,
Kevin T.
 
Back
Top