Boundaries with partner's partner

I see so many people breaking up but still hanging out. Even having sex! I just never got that. For me, being someone's gf/wife is one thing. If we break up, it is because we have irreconcilable differences. Therefore, there are bad feelings around those differences. Therefore, I don't want to hang out with them. Also, since we were once sexual, there might still be sexual tension despite the irreconcilable differences, which makes hanging out as friends really difficult for me.

That's interesting. I think it really depends on the relationship for me. I had one ex when I was mono that (a month or two after the break up) we ended up being FWB. The thing that made it work...I was a couple of years older than him (I think he was 20 & I was 23) and although our sexual chemistry was great and we were very friendly with each other, we both knew from the beginning that this wasn't a super serious relationship or one that would last a long time. I was his first "real, grown up" girlfriend (he was also a virgin). He had been a very nerdy guy all his life and did that thing that some tall, lanky guys do when they hit their early 20s, which is flesh out from being awkwardly skinny and pointy and turn super-hot (I didn't know him during his awkward years, we met in college).

So we were bf/gf for about six months before he broke up with me. Had he not, I'd have probably broken up with him in less than a month. He was a great guy, but just...I dunno, we clearly both wanted different things, long terms.

Anyways, after a few months, neither of us had found someone new, so we were FWB for a good year after that. We parted on good terms. Ha. Now that I remember it...we were FWB for a year. I met someone I wanted to start dating seriously, so we broke it off, but still chatted. I went back to his town for a long weekend to visit friends. At one point, when I was talking to him (let's call him Mike) my best friend (who I lived with) saw me chatting with him and asked about him, so I showed her his photos on FB. She thought he was cute, and I asked if she wanted to visit with me and meet him. She did. They ended up hooking up, but I had to tell both of them about a million times that I was really, truly TOTALLY FINE with them hooking up and that they should have fun. Then I got juicy details from both of them the next day - though neither of them were my lovers, I did still care about Mike a lot and I loved my bf Allie, so I could possibly call this one of my first experiences with compersion. :)

Thinking about it, I'm on good terms with a number of my exes, but I think that's in part because many of them were friends before we started dating. It actually wasn't hard to transition back to friends (after having a few months of no contact, to sort of reset things), because we'd already done that before & had a dynamic already set up. The men that I'm no longer friends with after breaking up are the ones that that I didn't have any kind of relationship with before dating (and/or were jackasses/emotionally abusive while dating). We didn't have any established dynamic to fall back on, and once we stopped being in a relationship one (or both) of us realized that we didn't have enough overlapping interests/desires to stay friends after the break up.
 
Points taken, Opal and LizziE.

I guess it's different for everyone. I am thinking of myself, and also my adult nephew, who, in his mid 20s, broke up with his gf of 2 or 3 years, but without a break, kept on seeing her, hanging out, sleeping over, and having sex (as he told my sister his mom, and she told me). And he was miserable, in an "Ah wish Ah could quit yew" sort of way.

I have tried to be friends with a couple men I have had relationships with. One told me he couldn't when I offered. He was in love with me, and I wasn't with him, and it hurt him that I was falling more for someone else and realized I couldn't be bothered with him anymore by comparison.

The other guy was Ginger, who I was with for 2 1/2 years. In that case, there was still sexual tension, despite all the difficulties we were having. It would've been terrible to hang out.

I am finding out about myself (at my age of 60!) that I am highly sexually attracted to males, but emotionally find them difficult. I get along better with my female partner, as friends, than I ever did with any man, including my ex husband of 30 years. I have very few male friends. I have never really dated a male who was a close friend first. So, those are my variables that make hanging out post a breakup hard or impossible.

Opal I find it interesting you say there is an "expectation in lesbian culture" that partners remain friends after a breakup. Perhaps since you share a gender, there is more basis for regular friendship than there is in MF relationships. I don't think males and females can be friends, then become FWBs without it changing their dynamic, much less easily go back to being friends who don't have sex.

Ugh, this is all so confusing.
 
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