As with so much hot-button stuff in relationships -- unicorn hunting, DADT, primacy, couplefront -- then so long as these rules are spelled out explicitly & everyone's aware, I can't see reason to fault them as inherently wrong or bad. (I feel it adds unnecessary complication, but anyone is free to accept that.)Call it couples privilege if you want, but that's how our marriage works.
Let me set out a case...Open honest communication is the cornerstone to a good relationship.
Oh, so much of that paragraph makes me feel bad.I don't actually understand why people in 2017 still have an expectation of privacy ... I look forward to the day that we drop the charade and move into a culture based on transparency rather than secrecy.
Privacy and secrecy aren't the same thing, and if my privacy isn't respected in a relationship with you I'll happily keep walking.
If I can't trust you then I'm not going to waste my time trying to do anything else with you, either.
It is your default assumption that everything you encounter during your day is up for discussion with your other half. It's my default assumption that if I want to discuss a thing another person might not want publicly known that I'll seek their consent first.So let me ask you: before you share your private thoughts with people, do you ask their permission?
Let me set out a case...
Is that correct? or did it slip off the rails somewhere?
- human beings are fallible, if not outright flawed
- no relationship can be perfect, because they're all full of human beings
- your relationship with your husband is "good," but imperfect
- "Open honest communication ... good relationship."
- you believe you also have "good relationships" with your other partners
- THEREFORE, you always speak freely about your husband (especially your occasional tiffs & misunderstandings) with all your other partners
Oh, so much of that paragraph makes me feel bad.![]()
It's my default assumption that if I want to discuss a thing another person might not want publicly known that I'll seek their consent first.
So let me ask you: before you share people's private thoughts with others, do you ask their permission?
I'm not sure what you're trying to convince me of. I've already said that if I was given the opportunity to date someone like you I'd walk away.
the right to be let alone—the most comprehensive of rights and the right most valued by civilized men.
— Louis Brandeis (1928)
Edit: Do you close the door when you use a public toilet? It's no secret what you're doing in there, so if you truly don't grok privacy then why not leave it open?
My question is at what point do you draw the line as to what should be private? I mean, if I tell Sprite that Elle and I went to a certain restaurant, that could be considered violating Elle's privacy.
There isn't anything wrong with sharing everything with your spouse - or with the world -, *if* the people whose information you are sharing are ok with that *or* they understand that about you and adjust accordingly. One of my dear friends can't keep anything to herself. She just can't. So I don't tell her anything I would mind others hearing.
Not dodging, just reading threads on my phone in bed. I'd assumed your questions were deliberately hyperbolic, but as you say they aren't I'll try to answer them now that it's no longer 3 am and I have a full-sized screen to work with.I'm not trying to convince you of anything. I'm trying to ask you questions for clarification, and you're dodging them.
No, unless it's something I think they'll be uncomfortable hearing but which it's imperative that they know, in which case I'll also offer support while they deal with it.So let me ask you: before you share your private thoughts with people, do you ask their permission?
As above, if I think it's likely to have a negative effect on them and for some reason I'd be unable to help them work through it I probably won't burden them with my problem.Otherwise, what right do you have to burden people with your problems and then forbid them to get help working through their own response with someone who loves and supports them?
If that's a genuine question I'll eat my hat.Do you offer to pay their therapy bills so they can confidentially discuss their own reaction and feelings about your private thing?
In this case, the fact that you are considering breaking up with your GF is not private between you and her, and can be shared with your husband. The fact that it's because she doesn't want to have sex with you is the reason for that, so it would reasonably be expected to be mentioned, but there's no reason that it should be discussed in detail. If the reason why she doesn't want to have sex with you involves anything beyond "she doesn't want to" (or perhaps "she says I suck in bed, can you give me any pointers?") then it's off limits because that's not relevant to the discussion you're having with your husband.e.g. Suppose my girlfriend shares with me that she's no longer interested in sex, and I'm the kind of person who requires sex in my relationships. Now I'm facing a huge decision -- whether to break up with her -- and normally I would talk to my husband about it, because he would have some good perspective and would help me sort through my jumbled thoughts. But under your rules, I'm not allowed to talk to my husband because her sexuality is private. So now because you've dictated that privacy is more important than anything, I have to struggle with this on my own? That's bullshit. Meanwhile, I'm getting all closed up and pensive because I'm contemplating the end of a relationship, and my husband sees me getting distant and distracted but isn't allowed to know why?
Trust isn't only about keeping words private, it's about things like being able to make myself emotionally or physically vulnerable with the expectation that my partner isn't going to take advantage of that to my detriment. If they are unable or unwilling to protect our private conversations then they have shown that they can't be trusted to protect me in other ways. I will, therefore, avoid emotional or physical vulnerability with them, meaning that we are unable to have a romantic or sexual relationship.You seem to be confusing the word "trust" with "confide."
Trust isn't about whether you can expect someone to do what you want. It's about whether you can expect them to be predictable. I'm open and upfront about the fact that I tell my husband everything. So, you can trust me 100%. You can trust that if you tell me something, then I may share it with my husband if it affects me and I need to talk to someone about it. You can trust that I don't do secrets. You can trust that I'm an open book.
If it's not something you can visualise them happily telling the bus driver, assume it's private unless specifically told otherwise. This is particularly the case for anything said in a heightened emotional state.How do you know what someone might and might not want publicly known?
Err on the side of discretion.What if something is no big deal to you but a really big deal to someone else?
Where it involves anything told to me during an intimate one-on-one conversation? Yes. I don't feel the need to gossip.So then, do you just never tell anyone anything about anyone, in case you get it wrong about whether that was supposed to be private?
I assume that not slapping people is normal behaviour, so I don't expect people to slap me as a form of greeting and I wouldn't give someone a pass on slapping me without warning just because they're wired for S&M and it doesn't occur to them that there's anything wrong with doing so. If you are aware that your wiring isn't up to code then you need to make allowances for it in order to avoid causing harm. In your case, making sure that anyone who might feel they can confide in you knows to tell you "this is just between you and me" is such an allowance, but you saying "do you mind if I talk to Husband about this?" would be a better one since it doesn't rely on other people reading your mind to find the magic passphrase.Because of how I'm wired, it doesn't even occur to me that anyone would tell me something they didn't want publicly known without saying "this is just between you and me." Like I said, I'm an open book. I've told countless people all kinds of things about myself that many people would consider private. So if I'm going to use my own privacy standards as a benchmark (and what else can anyone use?) then I'd still end up sharing all kinds of "private" information simply because I don't recognize it as private.
I would consider the noises I make during sex to be private between me and my partner. It's none of your husband's business whether or not I sound like a chipmunk on acid at the moment of truth, and the fact that you were there while I was making such noises doesn't suddenly make my sex noises public domain. Any discussion of those noises would be a gross violation of my privacy.Insofar as people ever share their personal thoughts with me, I don't share those with others at all. Those aren't my experiences to share. What I do share with my husband is my own experiences, because those are mine to share. If that experience happens to involve another person, it's still my experience. If that experience left me with feelings or concerns that I'm not comfortable discussing with the person, then I have the right to discuss my feelings and concerns with whomever I choose. They're my feelings and my concerns -- the fact that you may have triggered them does not make them yours nor give you authority over them.
I have always assumed a base level of politeness, which includes not broadcasting personal information to uninvolved third parties. Since joining this forum I have come to discover that many people (usually in marriage-style relationships) don't share my view on what I consider to be a very clear black or white issue. The problem is that many of those people remain unaware of the assumptions they are making and become hugely defensive when they are pointed out.From what I can tell, Emm and Ravenscroft, you two identify with solo poly and relationship anarchy. You tend to make little or no assumptions about each relationship, crafting each one explicitly. Assumptions in the past have bitten those who assume on the bum, hence you prefer to be explicit in negotiations with no default rules.
Hierarchy is fine if all parties agree with it, but presuming that everyone will agree with "the rules" without explicit discussion is a mistake.Hierarchy is okay only if all parties agree with it? I dunno.
From what I can tell, Schrodinger, you practice hierarchical poly. People you start a relationship with are clear that you and your husband have a hierarchy and they're okay with that default privilege. I imagine if they got to know you for several years and were no longer okay with that privilege, then explicit renegotiation would happen.