pheonixaise
New member
Okay, so, I debated for a long time about writing on this forum and seeking help, but I have found myself in a jam I cannot seem to solve on my own.
My name is Dane. I'm in a somewhat poly relationship. When I met my fiancee, Liz, I was single and living a completely monogamous lifestyle. I never had any interest in poly whatsoever, and have a very apathetic view on sex, in particular.
Liz, however, was very sexual when I met her. She had been in several monogamous relationships, and had been fine in them (mild cheating aside), but reached the conclusion, thanks to one man, that she was naturally polyamorous. I will not argue this. She is the only person I've ever met who literally feels compersion in almost every situation she is faced with.
She also seems to form connections based on a single positive attribute of a person. She doesn't seem to need more than one good thing, be it physical attractiveness (though she has a very hard time without this), new ways of thinking, emotional receptiveness, or anything else one may take to be a broadly positive trait, in order to form a connection.
At this point, I must add that Liz seems to thrive on, and is almost addicted to NRE. Who wouldn't be, right? Once mutuality is established, it's like an emotional, sexual, and hormonal rollercoaster that is beyond contestation.
Here is the catch. I love this woman more than anything. I am naturally monogamous. I could spend my whole life with one woman and be very happy. I am hesitant to make new connections. I actually have trouble doing so, partly because it is difficult to find the diminishing percentage of women I would be interested in. 2% of the human population interests me, in general. About 50% of them are women. An even smaller, unquantifiable amount are women who would be willing to be poly.
I just don't feel the need to connect with anyone else. If I'm with another women, I literally have ALWAYS felt I would rather be doing this (whatever it may be) with Liz. If there is a connection I make, I view it as friendship, and feel almost no desire to take it further.
We have a 9-month old child together. That makes things complicated. For a while, she saw that her thriving on the NRE for others hurt me, and not through completely unfounded jealousy, but through errors in judgment on her part, breeches of established comfortability and understanding of boundaries. In my mind, there is another point to be made here, that evidence of such situations in every other poly relationship I have ever been privy to has been poisonous to the mental state and mutual enjoyment of the relationship as a whole. Through seeing the former, she decided that it would be best for the both of us if we focused on our relationship, and on our baby.
Added to this was the fact that after Liz had our baby, her libido (which could strangle three very active men and leave them crying for help-- ever heard the old Irish drinking song "The Widow"? Look it up, lol) dropped off the face of the planet, and even 9 months later, is still missing. I've received several pieces of advice on this, mostly polarized views, about how us being monogamous may be choking her libido, and a couple saying that the NRE may have just fizzled out, and that a baby will do that.
Now, all of these things taken into account-- my naturally monogamous nature, her naturally polyamorous nature, our baby, her libido, jealousy (in whatever way it manifests), and our life as a family, she recently told me that, to her, monogamy was like putting on a mask. She can never really be herself as long as she is thus.
Aside from the shattering connotations of this particular statement, chief among them, to a monogamous man, being the insecurity of the fact that, after sacrificing all of his freedoms to be with this woman, he is not enough for her, there is the fact that, after a heated discussion about the subject, in which we were trying to find a way to make it more comfortable and better for both of us, and despite our best efforts (and you're going to have to trust me that I did everything I possibly could to be A. honest about my feelings while being B. emotionally sensitive and supportive of her needs), we couldn't come up with anything that wouldn't be difficult for either me or her, she said, "Forget it. Let's just be monogamous!"
So here is my problem, and what I need help on. How can I
A. overcome my jealousy when it is actually founded on empirical evidence
B. believe Liz when she says that monogamy is the way she sees is best
C. not feel like I'm wearing the same mask if we are poly
D. find poly women who are interesting in a community where nobody wants to openly say they are poly
E. not let this affect our daughter?
My chief concern, of course, is E. I don't actually believe polyamory is wrong. I fully support gender-equality. I fully support development of different connections. I fully support the honesty that is completely necessary in a poly relationship. But I also fully support the definition of polyamory as it has been widely accepted: "with the knowledge and consent of everyone involved." I can't subject my daughter to the emotions I will feel while Liz is out with another man. Our daughter is very empathetic. When her mom is upset, she is upset. When I'm upset, she is also upset. So whenever I feel jealousy, founded or not, I cannot and will not let it affect this precious little girl.
Have I simply found myself at an impasse that will destroy our relationship, or is there some reasonable (and I can't stress this enough) not polarized viewpoint, or advice, that could help me overcome this issue?
Know that I am a Stoic-- all things in moderation. Therefore, I am not prone to the Epicurean viewpoints of "love conquers all," though I am convinced of its power and influence.
Excuse the length of this. I'm mildly freaking out.
My name is Dane. I'm in a somewhat poly relationship. When I met my fiancee, Liz, I was single and living a completely monogamous lifestyle. I never had any interest in poly whatsoever, and have a very apathetic view on sex, in particular.
Liz, however, was very sexual when I met her. She had been in several monogamous relationships, and had been fine in them (mild cheating aside), but reached the conclusion, thanks to one man, that she was naturally polyamorous. I will not argue this. She is the only person I've ever met who literally feels compersion in almost every situation she is faced with.
She also seems to form connections based on a single positive attribute of a person. She doesn't seem to need more than one good thing, be it physical attractiveness (though she has a very hard time without this), new ways of thinking, emotional receptiveness, or anything else one may take to be a broadly positive trait, in order to form a connection.
At this point, I must add that Liz seems to thrive on, and is almost addicted to NRE. Who wouldn't be, right? Once mutuality is established, it's like an emotional, sexual, and hormonal rollercoaster that is beyond contestation.
Here is the catch. I love this woman more than anything. I am naturally monogamous. I could spend my whole life with one woman and be very happy. I am hesitant to make new connections. I actually have trouble doing so, partly because it is difficult to find the diminishing percentage of women I would be interested in. 2% of the human population interests me, in general. About 50% of them are women. An even smaller, unquantifiable amount are women who would be willing to be poly.
I just don't feel the need to connect with anyone else. If I'm with another women, I literally have ALWAYS felt I would rather be doing this (whatever it may be) with Liz. If there is a connection I make, I view it as friendship, and feel almost no desire to take it further.
We have a 9-month old child together. That makes things complicated. For a while, she saw that her thriving on the NRE for others hurt me, and not through completely unfounded jealousy, but through errors in judgment on her part, breeches of established comfortability and understanding of boundaries. In my mind, there is another point to be made here, that evidence of such situations in every other poly relationship I have ever been privy to has been poisonous to the mental state and mutual enjoyment of the relationship as a whole. Through seeing the former, she decided that it would be best for the both of us if we focused on our relationship, and on our baby.
Added to this was the fact that after Liz had our baby, her libido (which could strangle three very active men and leave them crying for help-- ever heard the old Irish drinking song "The Widow"? Look it up, lol) dropped off the face of the planet, and even 9 months later, is still missing. I've received several pieces of advice on this, mostly polarized views, about how us being monogamous may be choking her libido, and a couple saying that the NRE may have just fizzled out, and that a baby will do that.
Now, all of these things taken into account-- my naturally monogamous nature, her naturally polyamorous nature, our baby, her libido, jealousy (in whatever way it manifests), and our life as a family, she recently told me that, to her, monogamy was like putting on a mask. She can never really be herself as long as she is thus.
Aside from the shattering connotations of this particular statement, chief among them, to a monogamous man, being the insecurity of the fact that, after sacrificing all of his freedoms to be with this woman, he is not enough for her, there is the fact that, after a heated discussion about the subject, in which we were trying to find a way to make it more comfortable and better for both of us, and despite our best efforts (and you're going to have to trust me that I did everything I possibly could to be A. honest about my feelings while being B. emotionally sensitive and supportive of her needs), we couldn't come up with anything that wouldn't be difficult for either me or her, she said, "Forget it. Let's just be monogamous!"
So here is my problem, and what I need help on. How can I
A. overcome my jealousy when it is actually founded on empirical evidence
B. believe Liz when she says that monogamy is the way she sees is best
C. not feel like I'm wearing the same mask if we are poly
D. find poly women who are interesting in a community where nobody wants to openly say they are poly
E. not let this affect our daughter?
My chief concern, of course, is E. I don't actually believe polyamory is wrong. I fully support gender-equality. I fully support development of different connections. I fully support the honesty that is completely necessary in a poly relationship. But I also fully support the definition of polyamory as it has been widely accepted: "with the knowledge and consent of everyone involved." I can't subject my daughter to the emotions I will feel while Liz is out with another man. Our daughter is very empathetic. When her mom is upset, she is upset. When I'm upset, she is also upset. So whenever I feel jealousy, founded or not, I cannot and will not let it affect this precious little girl.
Have I simply found myself at an impasse that will destroy our relationship, or is there some reasonable (and I can't stress this enough) not polarized viewpoint, or advice, that could help me overcome this issue?
Know that I am a Stoic-- all things in moderation. Therefore, I am not prone to the Epicurean viewpoints of "love conquers all," though I am convinced of its power and influence.
Excuse the length of this. I'm mildly freaking out.