IndieSolo
Active member
We don`t have any idea if the OP let NRE get to him in the same fashion, during the dating, as he is letting it get to him now. What if his time and attention was all going to the bff ?
What if the bff was doing the same thing?
What if the both kinda mangled this themselves, and didn`t see the warning signs before the wife called a veto?
Of course we're only seeing one side, but I don't think anyone here is too off-base. He said that he and the bff had realized over the course of three years that they were attracted to each other. Seven months ago, he talked to his wife about it, she gave the go-ahead, and they had a "couple of dates." Three months after saying she was okay with it, she said NO MORE.What if she was trying to talk him through his NRE for 4, 5, 6 months, before calling it quits?
When she wanted to have an additional relationship eight years ago, he struggled, read about it, visited a counselor, and gave his blessing, and then agonized for the first two years about it. Yet he did not call it off. He said he probably wouldn't have married her if she were poly from the beginning, probably because in hindsight he sees how much difficulty he had weathered to make sure she was happy.
We don't know how far his relationship with the bff has gone. He said it's only been a few dates. It's possible they still haven't been physical at all.The wife has had NO problem in the past with the husband and bff hanging around each other, and developing a close friendship. 'Something happened on the way to heaven' when the relationship got physical.
Obviously the wife is struggling, but it sounds like she didn't give it much of a chance to try and learn anything from that struggle. Are you saying, if he were wrapped up in NRE, that that should always be dealt with by calling a full stop to everything? I think other solutions would come before such a decree.Judging by the OP's lackadaisical attitude towards his wife, maybe the wife is struggling, as it seems he may like the shiny new bff better, sexually.
I also don't see how he could be construed as lackadaisical toward his wife, after how he described his struggles, how glad he is that they're in counseling, even as he wonders if it's too late, and that he feels guilty about wanting to leave. He's invested a lot, and says that he does still love her, but feels taken advantage of. Letting go of the girlfriend is "eating him up," because he loves her, too! He is torn. That is not lackadaisical.
Well, no, he's said more than that. Plus he didn't say that he definitively wants a mono relationship with the bff (if she would be willing); he is being truthful enough to say that he's wondering about it. He said he's "starting to think that a purely monogamous relationship with my wife's friend would leave me more fulfilled in the long-term." Obviously he feels he's been yanked around a lot, and now thinks that maybe following the path of least resistance could bring him more satisfaction. I think anyone here can agree that polyamory isn't always easy. I don't think his comment about considering leaving the marriage, and being mono with the bff, means anything more than the fact that he's just grasping at possible solutions.The only fact, is the OP has said himself that he would rather be monogamous with the bff than monogamous with the wife. Gee, I wonder why the wife is panicking? She probably felt this coming all along.
Well, I don't necessarily see how that makes her friendship with this woman more precious than anything else.The bff and wife have supposedly been friends since childhood. She has had a relationship LONGER with her bff then she has with her husband. This could totally be about her losing her relationship with the bff, not so much her fears over her husband.
But even so, like I said, relationships change. People change. Things don't always stay the same, and shouldn't be expected to. Obviously, the bff didn't revoke her friendship when she started dating her husband, so losing the friendship is a fear, but not a reality. I would think that if she loves her bff, whom she's known all these years, she wouldn't refuse to consider her bff's happiness before wanting to hold onto a romantic notion about what lifelong friends are supposed to be. She wants the bff to stay in a particular role in her life, and it's a bit unreasonable and unrealistic to think it has to only be what she wants it to be -- or not to do the emotional work on handling the fact that it's changed.
Who was being flippant? I don't know about anyone else, but I gave my response much thought and careful consideration, and edited it several times. I wasn't being flippant at all, and I don't think any of the other posters on this thread were. Did the responses somehow strike a nerve with you?The flippant attitude in the advice makes me grateful I only know some of you on a message board.
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