Bobbi
Well-known member
This is true.I'm probably going to explain this badly because I'm quoting from a therapist friend.
When you guys have this as your "pivot point", like the thing that must stay the same, you start navigating some really unchartered territory in terms of building healthy relationships.
You see, (again, I'm trying to apply a wider point to your specific circumstance), whether it is nature or nuture, humans tend to need some sort of clear boundary around the categories of their relationships. Even if you are poly, feeling like you're committed to living with an ex for the next decade plus, and you have to navigate all your romantic relationships around that fact, prompts you to try and think laterally to just make it all work. It's pretty unconventional.
More importantly, it's unconventional purely because humans seem to have found they simply cannot have healthy relationships with anyone without these boundaries and the convention of "moving on". Again, that might be nature, or it might be nurture, either way, it is. Or seems to be the case in the vast majority of cases, at least.
In my case, we actually did it and made it work, so it can be done. I’m not saying it was easy or that anyone can do it. In my case, we went into separate bedrooms, eased contact beyond cordial salutations, and became like distant roommates for several weeks, to emotionally break apart, mourn and heal. You have to have separation of the relationship and both understand that it’s over and have strong boundaries, or it will linger on, just confusing things. You both have to be clear it’s over and not read into anything that might be giving mixed signals. Stop checking in with one another (unless it’s about the kids). Being cordial, asking "How was your day?" sharing where you are going, etc., needs to stop. Those things can slowly restart after you have both emotionally disconnected from the habits of your romantic relationship.
He now has his life, I have mine and we share a home wonderfully. I love him. He’s family to me and vice versa. I’d say we now relate closest to a sibling relationship. Love, family, and a forever relationship. My other partners know him as a platonic life partner and understand the commitment we have to each other. He may eventually move out, as he does have dreams of living elsewhere and I’m not interested at all in moving where he wants. But that’s the nature of relationships. They continue until someone chooses something different.