My partner of 8 years and I are living on different coasts right now, and he started dating someone new this year. She and I have met once, texted a lot, and talked on the phone a few times. She seems great—smart, funny, interesting, and she has a lot of experience in polyamory. She has told me she's allergic to drama in polyamory, which is reassuring as some of my previous metamours have brought a lot of drama! We both also prefer having more contact than less with metamours—one of the perks of polyamory, for me.
Before I left town, my partner and I had just started living together. It felt so good we made plans to move back in together when I come home for good this winter. Meanwhile he and his new love started getting more serious. I was a little sad this was happening while I was so far away--partly cause I haven't found it easy to date where I am, so I had to manage some envy, and partly cause I didn't get a chance to do fun things with them and be part of our shared world as she joined it. Still, I was feeling pretty happy and excited about coming home until they sort of accidentally moved in together a few months ago.
She had to leave a bad situation with her now ex, he needed a subletter while he travelled, and when he came back she just kind of stayed. Now they're both really into living together, in his one bedroom apartment, and want to keep it up. He has not mentioned that her moving out is an option he would consider—all he says is "we will work it out somehow."
I'm mad at my partner for how this happened, without discussing it with me. I felt rejected and questioned whether he still wants the life we were planning together. He claims he is still holding a place for me in his home, because he wants all three of us to live together now. She confirms that she would be open to this, but clearly she and I have no idea how we even get along really, much less if moving in with our partner together would be a good idea. Clearly, there are also a lot of logistical details to work out (would we need move, or buy a trailer, or are we really all going to share one bedroom???).
I'm open to believing it could work, if handled carefully and with a lot of love and respect and flexibility on all sides. I believe we're all reasonable and caring people, but my partner did break some major trust here. I am having doubts about his ability to keep our intimacy safe by communicating well enough while I'm out of town. I know if I'd been living with him I would've been kept in the loop and been part of the conversations about whether she moved in. I keep vacillating between feeling absolutely devastated, like my strong partnership of 8 years might be crumbling all the sudden, and then excited to come home and trusting we can make it all work somehow. My partner wants this to be true, and has emphasized that he wants me and is in love with me still, but is also feeling really sad and withdrawn from realizing how badly he messed up.
So, he and I are headed to therapy as soon as I get back to town for a short visit (next week). Meanwhile, I really want to start off on the right foot with this person he's crazy about who will probably be in our lives for some time to come. That feels hard to do while I'm feeling alternately furious, heartbroken, and tentatively hopeful—sometimes all in one hour. I know she's allergic to drama. I feel like a drama cyclone right now. I don't want to hurt anyone with it.
I am so nervous about this. How can I take the pressure off and let us develop a friendship naturally? How do I separate my budding friendship with her from the fears I have that if we *don't* get along I won't have nearly as much access to my partner anymore? I'm only visiting for a few weeks this time, and she's agreed to sleep somewhere else during that time but we have plans to hang out together intentionally and get to know one another—and all three of us are also trying to go on some dates together.
What are the best things I can do to: 1) have the experiences I want to be having—not just hang around being miserable and trying to wear a smile, 2) be honest about what I feel and want without being high drama, and 3) have the best chance of developing a strong friendship with her?
Before I left town, my partner and I had just started living together. It felt so good we made plans to move back in together when I come home for good this winter. Meanwhile he and his new love started getting more serious. I was a little sad this was happening while I was so far away--partly cause I haven't found it easy to date where I am, so I had to manage some envy, and partly cause I didn't get a chance to do fun things with them and be part of our shared world as she joined it. Still, I was feeling pretty happy and excited about coming home until they sort of accidentally moved in together a few months ago.
She had to leave a bad situation with her now ex, he needed a subletter while he travelled, and when he came back she just kind of stayed. Now they're both really into living together, in his one bedroom apartment, and want to keep it up. He has not mentioned that her moving out is an option he would consider—all he says is "we will work it out somehow."
I'm mad at my partner for how this happened, without discussing it with me. I felt rejected and questioned whether he still wants the life we were planning together. He claims he is still holding a place for me in his home, because he wants all three of us to live together now. She confirms that she would be open to this, but clearly she and I have no idea how we even get along really, much less if moving in with our partner together would be a good idea. Clearly, there are also a lot of logistical details to work out (would we need move, or buy a trailer, or are we really all going to share one bedroom???).
I'm open to believing it could work, if handled carefully and with a lot of love and respect and flexibility on all sides. I believe we're all reasonable and caring people, but my partner did break some major trust here. I am having doubts about his ability to keep our intimacy safe by communicating well enough while I'm out of town. I know if I'd been living with him I would've been kept in the loop and been part of the conversations about whether she moved in. I keep vacillating between feeling absolutely devastated, like my strong partnership of 8 years might be crumbling all the sudden, and then excited to come home and trusting we can make it all work somehow. My partner wants this to be true, and has emphasized that he wants me and is in love with me still, but is also feeling really sad and withdrawn from realizing how badly he messed up.
So, he and I are headed to therapy as soon as I get back to town for a short visit (next week). Meanwhile, I really want to start off on the right foot with this person he's crazy about who will probably be in our lives for some time to come. That feels hard to do while I'm feeling alternately furious, heartbroken, and tentatively hopeful—sometimes all in one hour. I know she's allergic to drama. I feel like a drama cyclone right now. I don't want to hurt anyone with it.
I am so nervous about this. How can I take the pressure off and let us develop a friendship naturally? How do I separate my budding friendship with her from the fears I have that if we *don't* get along I won't have nearly as much access to my partner anymore? I'm only visiting for a few weeks this time, and she's agreed to sleep somewhere else during that time but we have plans to hang out together intentionally and get to know one another—and all three of us are also trying to go on some dates together.
What are the best things I can do to: 1) have the experiences I want to be having—not just hang around being miserable and trying to wear a smile, 2) be honest about what I feel and want without being high drama, and 3) have the best chance of developing a strong friendship with her?