Newbie excited but scared at the same time

Imajica

New member
Hello everyone,

My husband and I recently decided to open our relationship after being married for eight years. I was the one that initiated this change in our relationship. After much discussion, we decided that this would be a positive move for our already stable relationship.

Now that the relationship is officially open, I feel like I have been thrown back "into the pool," so to speak, and I am excited and nervous. I am interested in someone who is non-polyamorous. Just bringing up that I was in an open relationship was a challenge, but I was able to do it.

I will take things slow, because I need to consider that this is our first experience with an open relationship. Does anyone have any advice to offer regarding our entry into polyamory, or about how to approach people that we are interested in that are non-poly?
 
Hi Imajica,

Welcome. Congrats on opening your relationship. I keep pondering the approaching thing (only from a single perspective) myself. Specifically talking about approaching monogamous or poly-curious people, my only rec would be to ease into it, and don't put pressure on them or yourselves. Go slow and be patient. And communicate! There are lots of great threads with advice on being poly in general. I know I really enjoyed reading around here when I first came on. Good luck with the one you're interested in approaching!
 
I can relate to that feeling of fear and excitement. It's a good idea to go slow and let the feeling settle before moving on.

There are some great threads on here about what some of us have learned, and some ways to approach poly in terms of setting yourself up with a foundation that works. You can find them by doing a tag search for "lessons" and "foundations."

Other than that, it sounds like by identifying as open, you might not yet know the avenue of exploration you want to travel down. Is that so? If not, and you find that a polyamorous approach is a better fit, then great. As long as the two of you understand what meeting and becoming involved with another person will mean to you in terms of depth and connection, or just fun, then you are good to go in making a move.
 
One thing I've found that is important to address early on is expectations about time and arrangements, and making sure everyone is on the same page.

My very limited experience has been that non-polyamorous people have no framework for how a non-monogamous relationship functions on a practical level, so they either fall back to assuming things will look similar to a monogamous relationship, or they have fears of the unknown and are hesitant to move forward.

If you haven't already talked to your husband about this, it would be a good idea to address how often you might see this other person. Once or twice a week? Every day? All day on a weekend? What about sleepovers?
How soon would you like your husband and potential partner to meet (if at all)? What are they comfortable with?
Do you anticipate being able to spend time as a threesome, or would it be mostly separate?
Are you out to your friends and family, or do you need to keep this relationship private?
How do you feel about displays of affection in front of each other? What about in public?
How much do you share about one when talking to the other?

Once you and your husband are in agreement, you have something concrete to offer your potential partner in terms of time, attention, affection and privacy. It's helpful for the new person to see that you've thought this out, and have a good idea of what to expect, and that you and your husband are in agreement, and accepting of the relationship.
 
Does anyone have any advice to offer regarding our entry in to polyamory or about how to approach people that we are interested in that are non-poly?

Hey Imajica,

A couple starters:

1. Be prepared for the cowboy/cowgirl syndrome. Advertising that you are "open" to many people will mark you as easy pickings for fun times, and some can sing a pretty convincing song. I don't mean this to sound cynical, but the fact is that knowledge of real polyamory is still minimal in the world today, and this is the stereotype that rides along with it. A lot of the work you'll end up putting in will be educational. Yeah, you may get used (or be a user) at first. Only time and experience will get you past that.

2. Similarly, prepare to reinforce your heart muscles to withstand the likely shock of caring for someone who chooses (or is forced) to move on because they are simply incapable at this time in their lives to do the work that's involved. Unless you are blessed, you'll likely experience this too. It's part and parcel, but knowing that doesn't make it any easier.
 
I am the husband. I had a freakout on here about a month ago. I too am terrified about going back into the scene. I think we can do it together though. I know I can't do it alone.
 
How can I trust again?

Lunshbox and Imajica,

I wonder how things are going for you, too, for informational and strictly selfish reasons. My wife (of less than two years) and I have been going through a struggle for most of our marriage about her feeling a need to be polyamorous, and me being scared and outwardly resistant to her having a physical relationship with anyone other than me. I love her and want her to be happy, but the thought of her being polyamorous leads me to feeling unsafe, taken advantage of, and that I should run away from this marriage and never look back.

Prior to getting married, she spoke of wanting to eventually have sex with someone other than me. I told her how uncomfortable I was with that idea, but to express my commitment to her, I gave her basic guidelines of how I thought I could eventually be comfortable with the idea.

First off, was for us to build a safe and secure relationship between the two of us and the understanding that this could be expected to take years. I told her I imagined such a time being when we were both committing ourselves at least nearly equally to our relationship, household, and family. At that time, I was the sole income earner and she was an unemployed student. I made attempts to explain that if she were to have another relationship right then, that I would feel used and abused, as I worked 40+ hours at a job I strongly disliked to support both of us, while she got to take advantage of the support and security I provided to pursue sexual and emotional adventures outside of our relationship.

Internally, I felt that if she had time for other lovers, why couldn't she be using that time to get a job, and work at a job, so I would not have to work so much?

Another guideline I gave that I thought (and still think) might help me feel safer with the idea of her being with another guy physically, is if we started out by experimenting with someone else together. But she has no interest in women sexually. Been there, done that, doesn't want to go back there. Even though I'm not attracted to guys, I said I'd be interested in trying the idea of the two of us sharing a guy. She said she had no interest in doing this, either.

I have tried to explain that such a situation might (I emphasized might) help me feel safer with the idea of her being with a guy without me. She continued to give excuses, such as, she wouldn't be interested in any guy unless she felt a strong attraction to him. The couple of guys that she mentioned, I had absolutely no interest in, mainly because she had had past sexual encounters with them. My biggest stipulation was that the guy had to be someone new to each of us, so that she and I would be equals going into the encounter.

So, we got married. Then, a few months later, she met someone. She told me he was just a friend and, as a way to help me be comfortable with her hanging out with him after school, while I'm at work, and on weekends, reassured me she had no interest in him beyond friendship, and that he felt the same towards her. Oh, then he was giving her foot massages, and sucking her toes, because he had a foot fetish that his wife didn't satisfy.

But my wife and he were still "just friends," and all my wife was getting out of this was awesome foot rubs for her sore feet.

Then a month or so down the road, she told me they were making out and giving each other hand sex. I flipped. She says that she thought I'd be okay with those things, because several months back, before getting married, along with the above guidelines, I said that at the moment all I could ever possibly imagine being comfortable with was her making out and mutual manual stimulation.

I thought I'd made it clear back then that I wasn't currently comfortable with that, but that was the point I imagined I could actually get to, if we did the work together to build a strong enough bond with one another.

So, after several tumultuous months of me suffering in agony, and making it clear how uncomfortable, used, and tossed aside I was feeling, she and he finally broke off acting like more than friends. They still fence together and go to lunch and work on projects together. My wife still wishes I could be okay with her continuing a physical relationship with him. But I can't imagine when I'll ever be okay with it, especially him. Trust is a big problem for me.

She eventually admitted trying to press him into having sex with her, and him refusing, because he knew I wouldn't be okay with it. From what she had told him, I was okay with the rest. When I told him I wasn't, he felt they were already too "in love" with each other to break up on my accord.

My issues:
How can I ever trust her with someone else if she can't/won't stay within the guidelines of what I say I'm comfortable with?

Being in a polyamorous relationship requires lots of open communication. She had trouble both talking about her feelings and listening to mine. How can polyamory ever work for us until she can stand to hear my feelings without taking them personally? By the way, I am careful to use "I feel X when I experience Y" statements, and have read books and taken non-violent communication workshops, and even taken a class all about being effectively assertive.

My wife was abused sexually for years of her childhood and early teen years, so there are remnants of such treatment that make it difficult for her to deal with her own feelings, and especially the feelings with others. But I'm hard pressed to see how focusing on a relationship outside of ours (other than the relationship she has with herself) is going help improve her being able to empathize with my feelings.

We are both now unemployed students. I lost my job when I entered nursing school. I will graduate as an RN in the spring of 2013. Until then, we are living on credit. I'm scared that either a) she's going to decide to have another relationship without my blessing, and I'm going to have to end our marriage, or b) she's going to leave me because she wants to pursue another relationship, and knows I'm just not going to be okay with it.

The longer we go on, the deeper I get into debt, and the more I feel I have to lose. I know money is petty, but I don't want to deal with the issue of being an extra $20-30K in debt and having to spend additional years paying that off alone because she gave up.

Okay, this post is going on way too long. There are just so many details and so much complexity.

But just a couple more things...

So, yes, I could be pursuing an outside relationship for myself, but I can't imagine having the time for that for years to come, until I'm out of school and have earned my Master's degree. She, on the other hand, can snap her fingers and have guys lined up to hop in bed with her. I feel this part of the situation is unresolvably inequitable, at least for the foreseeable future.

Maybe I'd be a bit more open to "sharing" her if I were feeling anywhere near being sexually satisfied. Her "friend" denied her sex, which she says has never happened before. After having had sex with 200+ guys, that rejection came as a total shock to her. And now, her sexual desire, at least with me, has gone from a 9 to maybe a 1. I've never said so out loud, but in my mind, it is hard for me to not deny that if she hadn't tried to go there with him, she wouldn't have been denied, and she wouldn't have felt rejected, and we'd be having sex several days a week still. But that's something I know just isn't right to say, and not even very right to be thinking.

Our current lack of a sex life surely doesn't lead me to feel like I can ever be comfortable with her having sex with someone else. Maybe if it was the other way around, and she were sexually insatiable, and I was a once-a-month person, I'd give her my blessing to get satisfaction elsewhere. But I'm here, I'm available, and I'm a good (if not great) lover. She used to say I was the best lover she'd had, and the only guy that could bring to orgasm almost every time. She didn't even think she could get there prior to me.

Arrgghhh!! And ahhhhh! It's been quite a relief getting all this out. I hope no one minds my hijacking this thread, but I had no idea all this would be coming out when I began replying to this thread.

Thanks for listening,
Jason
 
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Jason,

It's hard to come back from cheating. Trust is a huge thing in a relationship, and when that is damaged, it can take years to rebuild. I feel for you.

It sounds like she is trying to suck it up for you, and be what you want her to be. No doubt that would have an effect on her connection to you, and therefore your connection to her. This is something that needs a lot of work to resolve. It sounds like you are both too knee deep in other things to be able to spend time on working on the foundation of your relationship. I think this is where to start before opening up to other men.

I take it you are monogamous in identity. There are a lot of threads that might help sort out how a mono/poly relationship can work, and what pitfalls they have, if you do a search for "mono/poly." You might want to have a look at the term "cheating" also, in case that yields some results that are helpful.
 
A check-in

Hello again everyone,

This has been a busy year indeed for Imajica and me. We decided to dip our toes into the water of polyamory, and decided that it was going to work. Both of us entered into relationships and things have been going swimmingly ever since. The best part is that we found another couple who we were attracted to, and everything worked out great. So we have a nice little quad that works for us.

This is not to say that we don't have our fair share of problems. We still have jealousy issues pop up now and then, and we have to constantly work on communication. It takes a lot of work to maintain an open marriage, but it is working for us.

Jason, I am not sure what advice to give you. It took a lot for me to be okay with everything that happened. Everything happened in steps, until both of us were comfortable enough for the other to progress into a sexual and then an emotional relationship. The biggest thing, and something that will be a recurring theme on this site, was, and still is, good communication. If neither one of us listened to the other person, or we just inferred what we thought the other person meant, then it surely wouldn't have worked. I wish you luck.

Thanks to everyone for the advice,
Will
 
The best part is that we found another couple who we were attracted to. We have a nice little quad. We still have jealousy issues pop up now and then, and we have to constantly work on communication. It takes a lot of work to maintain an open marriage, but it is working for us.

Congrats! That is so nice to read.

Do come back every now and then to keep us abreast of what's happening. So many people just share when things are rough and problematic, and we don't hear enough from folks when things are going well, especially with quads (though that may be because with four people, you're so busy!). :)
 
Lunshbox,

It's good to hear things are going well for the two of you.

Redpepper, thanks for your response. Yes, I do identify as monoamorous. I tried to be a good polyamorous guy, but I have a real hard time focusing on more than one romantic or sexual relationship at a time.

As far as doing research, reading, seeking knowledge and such, that's where we come up with what I feel to be another inequality between my wife and me. I have spent time reading books, blogs, and through forums (especially this one) for how to best build a poly relationship, be a mono with a poly, and how to work towards all the issues that arise after cheating. My wife, on the other hand, says she doesn't have time for that, and that the experience of others doesn't have much to do with what we are trying to deal with. Any time I try to mention an idea I read about, or make a suggestion to try something that I have read, she insists that just because what I am mentioning or suggesting worked for someone else, doesn't mean that it would work for us. I agree that there is no way to know what will work for us. However, the only way we will know is if we try.

To move on to the thing about our now infrequent sex life... she insists I find someone else to satisfy my needs. I really have barely any idea how to do this. I'm very busy with school and family life, managing the house, the bills, being the only driver, caring for our 6 year-old daughter (my step-daughter). I am hard-pressed to find the time and energy to find someone else, build up that relationship, and keep balance between another relationship and our marriage. If I could find a woman to whom I was attracted, who was attracted to me, and was as sexually insatiable as me, who had no more time, energy, or desire than for a friend with benefits relationship... well, that would be perfect. But it seems unattainable and unreasonable to ever expect that.
 
Hey amuk,

I am sorry that you're going through such a rough time. Your poly journey isn't something I enjoyed reading. It feels wrong on many different levels.

First of all, don't try to be someone you simply are not. If you are mono, you simply are. Full stop. Don't try to be a good poly guy if you don't feel like that. If you don't need another relationship, don't force one onto yourself.

The biggest issue I have with your situation: What kind of attitude is your wife giving you there? That's gross and unbelievable, kind of. She doesn't have time to work on her relationship and heal the wounds she inflicted on you? She doesn't respect your boundaries, and went on to do her thing, cheated on you and lied to you about everything, and when she finally came straight about it, she told you she didn't think that you could be hurt, because you stated that you would be okay with that much? That's utter bullshit.

I take that she is still seeing this other guy? If this is the case, she is satisfied, and neglecting you in regard to intimacy now, and tells you to go look elsewhere? Does this woman care about you at all? This sounds like someone who is abusing you, only taking and staying in the situation because it is comfortable for her (you paying the bills and such). Please correct me if I am wrong, but that is kind of what I got out of it.

Regards,
Phy
 
She has time for other lovers, but no time for you. Hmm... That doesn't seem to fly, does it? Why did the relationship not last with the little girl's dad? Is there a pattern here?

Good for you for educating yourself. I think that, regardless of what happens, you will find that useful.
 
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