Hurt, angry and confused

Funkyj

New member
Hi all, thanks in advance for your input. I really do appreciate it.

Not sure where to start... I'm a mother of a 2 year old, devoted to a loving husband for 16 years. We have talked about open marriage over the last 6 years on and off, but nothing has really happened till now. It was really all theoretical in the past. We both agree that it all makes sense and we would definitely consider it. But of course, it is easier said then done.

All this polyamory stuff is mostly driven by my husband. He is a very explorative person, with lots of passions and very emotional. I am the opposite. I am like your simple plain-Jane kinda girl. I'm very calm, patient and easily content.

Our sexual relationship with each other has been okay. We are actually trying to make it better by learning tantra yoga and sexual exercises. My sexual drive is not very high to begin with, and especially over the last two years, after giving birth, has been almost non-existent. So we have been working on it slowly over the last 6 months. It has improved dramatically, but has a ways to go yet. I have been trying to do more yoga, kundalini yoga, meditation and things that might help open up that sexual energy within me. We have been connecting quite well over the last 6 months trying to get our relationship back.

Over the past couple months, my husband has been hanging out with this other girl. I know they have more than a friendship connection. At that time, I had no negative feelings about them spending time together, because I trust my husband. And if things were to go further, I know he would tell me. That is why we have brought up this polyamory stuff again. We talked about it, theoretically, and concluded again that I would be ok with it.

The thing is, this other girl is actually looking for a soul mate that she can start a family with. She really wants a family.

I know who this girl is. We have hung out with her numerous times. She respects me fully. She has helped my husband open up too, and I thank her for that. She really is a good person. They both have very strong feelingd for each other.

So, my husband last week brought up the idea of pursuing things intimately with her. She said she would need to think it over.

Meanwhile, he told me that he told her about going further. I instantly cried. I felt hurt and sad, mostly. I didn't feel jealous or angry at the time. But nothing has even happened yet.

She actually said that she was not ready to do it intimately with my husband, and that her first priority is to find someone she can have a family with. So that isn't going to work in our situation. My husband felt rejected, angry and frustrated. I really felt sympathy and compassion for him.

After a few days, I felt less hurt. Processing my feelings has helped me understand things a little better, I think. A week passed after that incident.

They went to a yoga retreat together, which was planned over a month ago. He told me when they were at the retreat he shared a room with her, since he ended up with a bigger room by chance. And again I felt hurt and sad and alone. He said that there was nothing to worry about.

After the yoga retreat was over, I sensed that something had happened, because he again was feeling frustrated and angry. He told me that he tried again to bring up the subject and she said she still wasn't ready.

I am alone right now, while he is sleeping in the basement, because he needs some space. He wants me to know that he isn't shutting me out. He just need some space to clear up his feelings and his head. But now I feel more hurt and angry than the first time around. I feel like closing up and shutting myself down again so I can't feel pain anymore. And the thing is nothing even really happened yet. It's my ego taking over.

I'm not really sure if this is something that will work for me. Maybe I am just not cut out for this sort of thing. Or maybe it's not the right time for it yet. I don't know. I am just confused. I have read many books on this, but it doesn't teach you how to deal with your own insecurities. I am guessing that this isn't easy for anyone in a polyamorous relationship. I am just hoping that it doesn't kill our marriage. I really want my husband to feel fully happy and fulfilled in every way, but I don't know if i can handle it. I'm afraid that it might shut me down where to the point where I repress my thoughts and feelings, which I am really good at doing.

Thanks for hearing me out. I hope to connect with you. I'm happy that people are here to help out, listen and communicate. Peace and love to you all.
 
Hello and welcome!

It sounds to me as though all three of you are in a high emotional state right now and have a lot of thoughts and feelings to work through.

Stop. Breathe. You are not going to solve everything all at once. To me, it sounds like your husband is pushing things rather quickly, and then gets upset when things don't go as he envisioned. This is new. You and your husband are going to have to learn a lot of communication skills and be able to talk about things without emotions getting out of control

As for this other girl, she knows that she is looking for a primary to settle down with. He is not available for that. I think he needs to back off and let things settle. Back things down to friendship+feelings and let it ride.

JaneQ

P.S. If you are still in the 12-hour edit window, you will get a lot more replies if you go back and add some paragraph breaks to you post. A lot of people have a hard time reading a long wall of text and will skip over posts that are too hard to read.
 
Hi. My dh & I are new to this but activities like swinging & fwb brought us here after I fell hard for bf that led to a lot of communication on polyamory. There have been intense momments of insecurity, jealousy as well as envy & today is happier for both of us than a week ago. Its an emotional roller coaster at times but communication has been the key to moving forward on this journey for us as well as both of us utilizing the forum.

Maybe have him come here & discuss what he is feeling. It does sound like he's pouting that he isn't getting what he wants. And if she is wanting a monogomous relationship she needs to probably break away from the two of you or there is more going on than the two of them are willing to admit. It could be time all three of you sit down together to discuss your relationships.

There is nothing wrong with having your own insecurities and for some women, our sex drive does die a little after having children. Our bodies change, we're stuck with those last few baby pounds that don't go away, we're exhausted from being our children's primary caregiver and pretty much come last during this time, putting hubby & kids first. You'll have to figure out what you want. What will make you happy? What steps can you take to love yourself, because if you aren't loving yourself, how can you feel sexy? How can you have a sex drive if your down in the dumps about who you are? And lastly, if you are feeling inadequate (physically, emotionally, spiritually) is this the right time for you to dive into polyamory? Do you yourself visualuze that you want another besides your husband or are you on this path of discussions to please him, make him happy? You are just as important in your relationship as he is.

For me, I lost my sex drive after my son was born (2nd child) & I didnt really find it until I qiit nursing him. My first, was not so long, but again after she self weaned. Now with my third (she's 2), I still nurse but my libido is in overdrive, but that could because of my age (40's) & that a year ago, when I was feeling frumpy, overweight, I had a co-worker in his late 20's hit on me. That was awesome for my ego, my self esteem. I lost 30 pounds in two months (have kept it off too). I'm giving my own life example so you know you aren't alone & it's normal to feel how you do.
 
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What GalaGirl said. I'm new to this whole thing too, and the one thing that I have learned is that the only way a poly relationship will work is if I am attending to my wifey, and allowing both of our needs to be heard.

We live in a mono world, and the cultural message is, "You can only love one person at a time." Perhaps your husband isn't quite grasping that he needs to be attending to you rather than putting a disproportionate amount of energy into the new girl.
 
(ETA: Sorry, had to repost... my connection got wonky.)

I'm sorry you are going through this. This is not "polyshipping," to me. This is crazy sounding, to me. :(

She said no, not just once, but twice, and he still keeps pushing her. She wants other things. He could accept that this isn't a runner. Dating life comes with some disappointments. Not every date is a runner. He's jumping the gun trying to date her.

I don't think you are hurt because he is thinking about dating and sex with some woman and considering opening. You were fine considering this with him in the past--

We have talked about open marriage over the last 6 years on and off, but nothing has really happened till now. It was really all theoretical in the past. And we both agree that it all makes sense and we would definitely consider it.

I think you could be hurting because he is breaking a previous agreement to consider it together.

He is making a unilateral decision for your couple to "open" the marriage without considering or consulting your own willingness open the marriage, not just once but twice, with a woman who keeps saying no. I call it "open" because if he's doing this without your consent, it is not opening, but cheating, to me.

It is FRESH if he expects you to be feeling joyous that he's planning/trying to cheat on your current agreements in front of your face.
It is FRESH if he expects you to endure that and then comfort him when she turns his offer down. :(

I would like to lift this up to you --

So we talked about it and theoretically and concluded again that I would be ok with it. The thing is this girl is actually looking for a soul mate that she can start a family with... we have hung out with her numerous times. She respects me fully and has helped my husband open up,,, She really is a good person.

You seem ok when you are included and respected.

You appreciate the she respects you with her behavior toward you.

By contrast, your husband's behavior bothers you when it is not inclusive/respectful.

I'm not really sure if this is something that will work for me. Maybe I am just not cut out for this sort of thing.

I don't think polyshipping is going to work for you in a peaceful way with him, if he plans to continue behaving this way, where he doesn't respect limits or consider the well-being of his people before going off to do things.

For all you know, you yourself have good poly skills, but his just stink.

Again, to me, he's not planning a healthy polyship here with you and his potential. He's planning to cheat on you, and he's planning to push her beyond her stated limit. How is this behavior him demonstrating loving kindness toward his partner/potential partner? It's does not seem very loving to either you or the potential. :(

I really want my husband to feel fully happy and fulfilled in every way but I don't know if i can handle it. I'm afraid that it might shut me down where to the point where my repress my thoughts and feelings...

You are responsible for your own well-being. If his approach is dangerous for your mental, emotional, spiritual or physical health, you could respect your own limit.

He's could not be selfish. You could not be selfless. You could both think about being self-full. Talk and sort yourselves out.
  • Selfish: trying to meet your own needs at the expense of other's needs
  • Selfless: trying to meet other's needs at the expense of your own needs
  • Self-full: trying to meet other's needs and your own needs in a balanced way
.

You could tell him, "No, I am not willing to participate in a polyship with you like this. This does not meet my needs. This does not respect all people's limits or honor their boundaries. This approach is reckless and bad for my mental health."

If polyshipping in this manner (with no boundaries and him off behaving like a free agent) does not work for you, it just does not work for you. Obey your own limit.

If you are willing to work out another, different way of going that serves you both better in opening the marriage, that meets everyone's wants, needs, and limits, you could tell him that.

But if you are not willing to open at all at this time, because he's breaking trust behaving this way and you'd rather spend time rebuilding that broken trust first, you could tell him that too.

Be assertive; ask to meet with her and him both to get on the same page. When he ignores your readiness, tells you she says she is not ready, for all you know she'd been telling him to fuck off, and he's been ignoring that, and whitewashing it in his mind so he can keep pestering her. For all you know he's been telling her, "My wife is totally okay with it. Really!"

Don't keep guessing. Go find out. Get it all from each horse's mouth. Ask him to arrange for you all to meet for coffee and sort this out. Where is each person's willingness and ability at? What are their wants/needs/limits?

Then you can decide what to do next for yourself.

See if he's willing to change his behavior and start to play like a Jedi, or if this is all him playing like the Muppet Show with only more chaos up ahead.

Lean into the conflict and see it through to the other side. You can handle this. You may not love it, but you can choose to handle it.

Choose well,
Galagirl
 
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Selfishness?

It seems like the other girl has made her needs clear, and your husband is trying to push her anyway, and making you uncomfortable in the process.

There are other poly situations where she could join and have children within the polyship.

Perhaps he should encourage her to go find what she truly wants?
 
Thank you, everyone. I really appreciate it.

The thing is, I don't know all the details about how the other girl feels. But from my understanding, and I truly believe that my husband is being honest with me, she really loves him, but is still on the fence about pursuing an intimate relationship.

She actually is currently dating another guy (it's been about a month) and she really likes him. So she is holding off because of her boyfriend, I think.

But if she didn't feel comfortable with my husband, then why would she invite herself to stay in his room at the yoga retreat?

I don't know if things like this are "black and white". I'm sure if she was single she might have pursued it further. It's a good point that maybe I should try talking to her about her feelings for my husband. But do I really need to know all the details?

It sounds like, from everyone's posts, that we are not quite ready for a polyamorous relationship. But my question is, when will you ever be ready?
Won't the hurt and pain always be there? Isn't it just a matter of how you deal with those insecurities?

I want to be compassionate for my husband. I want him to be able to be fully happy, and able to connect with people fully. He doesn't believe that just one person can fulfill all his needs. He thinks that if he is able to share his intimate connections with others, it will only bring us closer. He is all about expanding your being, your consciousness and your energies within the body.

I don't want to own him and keep him to myself, because is that really fair? I see him suffer inside because his sexual energy is not being fulfilled. So do I just let him suffer and never let him be intimate with another person? It sounds unreasonable to let him suffer.

I don't know what to do. Maybe it is just a bad time right now. I am dazed and confused.

Thanks again for your help.
 
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Do you even want to open up at this time, like this? I wonder if you don't want to, but don't want to say it to him. Are you good at being assertive? If not, what blocks you from being assertive?

Does he not handle disappointment in appropriate ways? He's not suffering from "lack of polyship" right now. He's simply having to handle that his potential is not giving a "joyful yes," and neither are you. He has to deal with disappointment that he can't have what he wants the minute he wants it.

He thinks that if he is able to share his intimate connections with others, it will only bring us closer.

When he's off trying to make intimate connections like this, do you feel close to him? No. You feel angry, confused, frustrated, etc. You feel like closing up and shutting yourself down again so you can't feel pain anymore. :(

Ask him if he's willing to share how he feels closer to you behaving this way and how his behavior is drawing you closer together. I do not see it.

I don't want to own him and keep him to myself... Is that fair? I see him suffer inside because his sexual energy is not being fulfilled.

You have every right to have your own relationship preferences. If you prefer a relationship that is closed, just us 2, and married, there is nothing wrong with that.

Flip it to see all sides, not just one. Where is your side of the coin?

  • Is it fair to ask you to open up in this manner? (Is he even asking, or just doing without you?)
  • Are your needs for respect, consideration and concern being fulfilled?
  • Are there other needs not being met, like emotional safety within a relationship?

What about her side? What are her wants, needs, limits? Is she being honored/respected?

Do I just let him suffer and never let him be intimate with another person? It sounds unreasonable to let him suffer. I don't know what to do.

He's horny? Well, he could masturbate. He could invite you to share sex with him. He could negotiate with you to open the marriage so he can take on other lovers ethically. But this is shenanigans.

It may not be fun to feel, or to say, but you are within your rights to say:


"This behavior is not acceptable to me. I am not willing to participate in concurrent relationships with you if you are trying to hook up with women without first considering my wants, needs, and limits and coming to clear agreements here first in the marriage."

I cannot tell if you prefer to stay closed, or if you want to open up, but not like this. Adjust as needed. You could tell him:


"Would you be willing to discuss this and take my needs into consideration? What open model relationship are you offering me? With what boundaries? Would you be willing to stay closed?"

Get it out there. Spit it out. Then sort yourselves out and determine where each of you stands.

I might consider an offer. But I don't just accept any old offer that comes along just because it got offered. I don't need to sign up for crazy town. I have to look out for my own best health and well-being. I have the right to understand what kind of offer is being offered to me and how that will affect me and my life.

So what's he offering? If it isn't sounding great to you, you can say why. You all (whoever would be in the potential polyship) could work it out so it is good for everyone. Or you could just decline the offer, and not participate, because it does not meet your wants, needs and limits.

"Thanks, but no thanks."

If the outcome of the talk is agreeing that relationship has reached the end of the line, because you are no longer compatible, you could strive to be okay with that and end it with grace. Then you'd both be free.

  • He'd be free to pursue what he wants without having to consider you.
  • You'd be free from shenanigans and lack of consideration.

There are two kinds of freedom-- freedom TO and freedom FROM.

Maybe it is just a bad time right now. i am dazed and confused.

It is a bad time. You could not make life-changing decisions while dazed and confused.

Since he's pushing her, is he pushing you to decide to open up when you feel unbalanced?

Right now, it sounds to me like he wants to be polysexual, at best. He doesn't much sound hot on being polyamorous, because he's doing less than loving kind behavior to you and to her by rushing on and being pushy.

Nobody ever died from going slow. Ask him to put the brakes on. Ask him to consider you.

I'll assume positive intent. Maybe he's willing but not able at this time. Take a time out to grow the intrapersonal and interpersonal skills required. Same for you, if polyshipping is something you want for yourself too.

What is it you need for support? How can people help you? Do you need links?

http://www.practicalpolyamory.com/downloadabledocuments.html
http://www.kathylabriola.com/articles
http://openingup.net/resources/free-downloads-from-opening-up/


Hang in there.
Galagirl
 
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Thanks, GalaGirl, for your kind and thoughtful advice. I now see more clearly what you are getting at. I see that I need to concentrate on myself first and make sure that I am happy before moving on with this poly stuff. And he needs to respect people's boundaries, and respect my feelings, as well. He now knows that I want to put this poly stuff away for awhile till I am ready.

We hope to work through this together. We will hopefully also get together with the other girl to sort out feelings and create a more peaceful and clear light to this situation.

Thanks again for all your help, peeps! Much love and peace.
 
Glad to hear it was helpful.

If all of you were sitting in a waterbed, him FLINGING himself on it could send the rest bobbling about on the waves he made. What one does, could affect others.

If he's trying to build a 3-person polyship of some kind, he could remember he's not the only player. His willingness to participate is not the only willingness required for it to go well and succeed. His skills/ability to participate are not the only skills/ability required. There are 2 other people that have to get on board with their "willing and able" for this to fly well, if the shared goal is a harmonious, healthy open relationship model of whatever flavor you all are trying to co-create for yourselves.

Is it even a shared goal? He was not taking the trouble to ask you and find out. He was pushing her and not respecting her no. All players could get on the same page first.

Maybe reading about polymath and how one mini relationship inside the larger network can affect the others could give you more perspective too.

I hope you find peace and clarity.

GG
 
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There are many shades of poly

and all those shades can be completely different light or dark colors depending on the flavor of polyamory you choose as food to feed your soul.

No, the pain and negativity (jealousy, insecurity etc...) will NOT always be there, as those are not the fruits of a healthy living with healthy relationships

As you are learning to live your life in the manner you choose -- some call it an "awakened" life -- the progression is a series of small steps, as there is no elevator to carry you to the "LIVING"

however there have always been those who will sell you a ticket, or provide you with instructions on how to build an elevator to magically carry you into a LIFE that Is real, as opposed living while still asleep.

Often people refer to the stairway as "baby steps"

It is not an easy journey, and on the way you will likely find out that -- no, at this point in time knowing all the details will harm you -- however in order to do that requires that your trust, or faith be in a worthy spouse, that his behavior as well those who have a relationship with him are behaving in ways that are respectful and with genuine concern for your well being

as that is the only behavior that includes details that you should eventually be in a place where knowing every detail no longer harms you

this is an important because it is the fate of all human beings to understand consciousness, as we are capable of "knowing" everything, and unless prepared that will be too much to handle for many people

as it takes a hell of a lot of practice to be able to live with the "truth"

it takes a hell of a lot of practice just to be able to recognize it (the TRUTH) let alone to be able to handle the LIVING of it (LIFE)

We are humans, nobody is perfect, it is how we handle our imperfectness that counts. Hopefully your husband will understand that his isolating himself is not letting you in, and the TRUTH is that LIFE is a shared event.

Needing moments alone is something most people require, but not letting you know a time frame of how long he is going to shut you out is not taking a moment alone, you are his spouse and letting you know "he isn't shutting you out" is not the same thing as saying three nights or a week.

Which is not healthy behavior for spouses, unless he knows you desire and consent to that type of behavior.

For many people who are in serious committed relationships, in order for your relationship to survive, the "unknown" is usually traveled through together and often little things like shutting you out so that you are "alone" without knowing the time frame, can in many ways create "unknowns" that their partner has more emotional trouble than is necessary

maybe what is more important than knowing when your being "alone" in the same house is going to end, is that when he emerges he is willing to honestly talk about whatever he cannot share with you at this time

because that is what does the irreparable damage to a relationship, when all those seemingly small short lived hardships are for nought, because the circumstances that led to them are never dealt with

know you are not alone, that all people who appear to have "made it" and are "Poly" are only proclaiming each baby step along their journey, some of them without even realizing their stairway only leads to the top of a cliff
 
Hi, Funkyj.

I'd say your husband is attracted to the idea of poly, and he thinks this woman is hot, and isn't hearing her when she says she wants a (mono?) guy to be true to her and give her babies. He is coming across as desperate. It's not you, it's him.

Good luck with the sex life. I had no sex drive when I had 3 kids in 5 years. I didn't get it back until the youngest was sleeping through the night, and that took him 5 years! Tantra be damned, I just needed sleep!
 
Funkyj, I'm a little late to this thread, but I wanted to make a suggestion.

Please don't judge yourself too harshly on how you feel about this particular potential relationship. Try not to make a universal conclusion about yourself and where you may or may not fit in a poly situation out of just this one experience.

I have different experiences and reactions to the various relationships or dates that my OSO gets into. Some are no big deal. Me and poly? I got this thing handled. *snap* Then he dates someone else and my reaction is to want to get the hell out of this crazy poly situation.

In other words, I can see how your reaction to your husband wanting to date a woman who is specifically looking to find a soul mate with whom to bear children would freak you out, even if the actual situation turns out fine.

On the flip side, your husband might date a woman who is already married with her own children and only looking for a part-time mate, and you might feel no weirdness at all.

I see lots of other good advice in this thread. My 2 cents is to go easy on yourself, if you can. :)
 
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