wanting to come out?

TrixWolfSox

New member
I am wanting to come out to my family so I don't have to pick partners in my life to go to things to. I feel like it isn't fair because I am married to one of my partners and the other I am only dating so in the situation of my family, Wolf would clearly be the choice of who I want to take. I don't feel like it's fair and I feel like my family should be understanding that 2 people occupy my heart. They are very Christian and it will be a strange experience but I hope that they can look past their beliefs and love me for me being their daughter. It doesn't matter really if they are accepting but I really wish they would be.
any advice?


Trix-30f, wife to Wolf, gf to Sox
Wolf- 34m, husband to Trix, BF to Sox
Sox-31m, BF to Wolf and Trix
 
Hello TrixWolfSox,

There is a great video on coming out, it is found at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MJ-8ocmtb_8

I think the thing you need to do is, let your family know that you are nonmonogamous, and that you will be inviting Sox to go with you to some of the things you want to go to. You hope your family will be accepting of this, but you understand if they're not, and you are just telling them this so that they won't be shocked when Sox shows up to go with you.

If only our families would be willing to *think* before they decide to condemn us. They're willing to do so much for us; why aren't they willing to *think?*

I hope your coming out goes well.
Sincerely,
Kevin T.
 
My family is also very religious. I came out to my parents and they do not approve at all. They know that if something is in my space, both partners will be welcome. They make the rules in their spaces though, so boy is not welcome at family functions. Not normally an issue since we live far away.

If my parents invited me somewhere and I said I could come but boy would be with me, I just wouldn't go if they said that they weren't comfortable. If I invited them, I would tell them so they can decide their comfort level before accepting or rejecting the invite

So useful advice part is - go for it! Come out to your family if you want, but don't have any heavy expectations that it's actually going to mean your non-spousal partners will actually be accepted. Maybe your family will be awesome but they might be like mine where there's cordialness and acceptance that I make my own choices but no real embracing of anything.
 
I agree with AlwaysGrowing. I don’t regret coming out to anyone, but be aware that coming out doesn’t always mean acceptance.

I came out to my parents and they were great. My mom was a little confused, but fine with it and my dad had no concerns at all. My sister was uncomfortable at first, but really only because she was the first person that I told and so she felt like I was asking her to carry the burden of a SECRET for a few months. As soon as I told my mom, though, she was fine with meeting Ponytail. Two years later, all my family met Whiskers too and loved him. Ponytail is traveling to visit my family for Christmas and will be sleeping in the same bed as me at my sister’s house. Everything is great.

Glasses’ parents are a totally different situation, though. His sister is a lesbian (which they initially struggled with a bit as well, but eventually became fine with) and so I had some hopes that they would come around in time. It has been two years and they cannot be reminded of our “lifestyle” in any way without it becoming a fight. We do not mention any hints of our other partners and they pretend it doesn’t exist. For a long time, they wouldn’t even make eye contact with me and everything was just always so tense....now at least they act more normal — provided that we maintain the polite fiction that our other partners do not exist.

I don’t regret coming out to them, but it has definitely been a pain in the ass.
 
I have always been the black sheep of my Roman Catholic, Republican family. First I am a die hard Centrist Democrat. Then I came out as a Wiccan at 22. That was hard for everyone to take. Then after my divorce at 32, I came out as bi-sexual. My parents were more accepting of it. But my elder sister took it as I was corrupting her kids (at that time 11, 15 & 17). My second sister, Elaine, said "That is impossible, you had Dexus. You can't be bi." I laughed at her and told her I wasn't a lesbian. Liked both women & men. Her brain just seemed to explode.
Approximately 8 yrs ago I learned about Polyamory. And around that time I came out to my parents. They said they would support me in whatever form my relationship took. My 27 yr old niece kinda outed JR and I when he was dropping me off one night during the summer. Mom asked me flat out about it at that time & I told her the truth. And Mom really likes JR so that is a plus. :D:D Only Elaine & her boys (12 & 14) are the only ones in the house that do not know. But after her previous reaction I refuse to discuss my romantic relationships.

My advice, pick your battles. There will always be people you just can't convince that this is what you want.
 
I did the divide and conquer approach. I told my mum and left her to tell my dad.
 
I just recently came out to my family. Actually it's still ongoing.

I'm in two very serious long term relationships and not being out with my family was causing tensions with the partner they didn't know as my partner. I also live very far apart from my family (6 hour flight) and we aren't close, I speak with my mom every few months, and everyone else maybe once a year, and we see each other every couple years. That being said, having one partner excluded from something that is such a big part of my past wasn't feeling okay. I want my family to know about my partners and I want my partners to be able to know my family.

I told each immediate family member on their own, I started with a couple easy ones, my dad and sister, and then went for my mom. My dad (my parents are divorced many years ago) and sister are both very easy going and accepted it immediately. My mom was another story and I knew it would be. She is very religious, and very emotional, but also very loving to me (not that those are exclusive things) so she was soft and accepting of me, and my partners, while not accepting it on a spiritual level. I called her and spoke with her for an hour on a Thursday, then gave her the weekend to process it, and called her again on the following Tuesday. This time was with her even more religious husband. Surprisingly they kind of just accepted it. They said they don't agree with my lifestyle but they accept me as I am. I spoke with them about possibly visiting over the holidays, with all three of us, and they said that we were welcome in their house to come for dinner, and I would be welcome at the family dinner.

After them I told the rest of my extended family members and everyone accepted us to varying degrees so far. I still have one aunt and one uncle to talk to, and mt Grandfather who has dimensia so I don;t even know what do do there.

I was wary of this for a long time, but it was really important to my partner who my family didn't know, and through that it became extremely important to me. Having an imbalance between my 16 year relationship and my 4 year relationship isn't working for us any more so breaking down these barriers that seemed unimportant in the past is becoming my top priority.

One thing I would say against what Evie explained, based on the information provided, is that we should consider whether it's right to make it anyone's burden to tell someone else. Generally I didn't feel it was okay to ask my mom to tell my Grandmother or aunts or her husband while she was still processing how she felt, but she insisted she should be the one to tell her husband. I was clear that I would do that work, she didn't have to do it, but she wanted to. Lots of situations would make this divide and conquer approach make sense, existing family dynamics that make things more complicated, communication skills (doesn't it always come down to communication?) or closeness of a relationship, but I think it should be used with caution. It could easily be avoidance on our part.
 
Yeah, so I don't really "come out" so much as just...assume that what I do is completely normal and needs no explanation. Dude lives with me and MrS and comes to family functions as he pleases - he has an open invite (i.e. T-giving and X-mas dinners but not a week of Family Camp unless it is at our place).

This may cause plenty of talk and speculation behind my back, but no-one asks and I don't talk about it. (Like many areas of my life TBH.) I'm clearly happy - so what does anybody need to know, more than that?
 
Yeah, so I don't really "come out" so much as just...assume that what I do is completely normal and needs no explanation. Dude lives with me and MrS and comes to family functions as he pleases - he has an open invite (i.e. T-giving and X-mas dinners but not a week of Family Camp unless it is at our place).

This may cause plenty of talk and speculation behind my back, but no-one asks and I don't talk about it. (Like many areas of my life TBH.) I'm clearly happy - so what does anybody need to know, more than that?

I want to heart this
 
I want to heart this

Yeah, I wish there was a "Like" system so we could show our appreciation for a post even if we have nothing to add.
 
Yeah, so I don't really "come out" so much as just...assume that what I do is completely normal and needs no explanation. Dude lives with me and MrS and comes to family functions as he pleases - he has an open invite (i.e. T-giving and X-mas dinners but not a week of Family Camp unless it is at our place).

This may cause plenty of talk and speculation behind my back, but no-one asks and I don't talk about it. (Like many areas of my life TBH.) I'm clearly happy - so what does anybody need to know, more than that?

I love this but it’s totally foreign to my existence - people absolutely ask and/or talk behind my back and I feel I definitely have to explain. This may be because of the social dynamics of my particular life - much of my social life centers around a group with a rather in each other’s business kind of dynamic! While it’s accepting of poly enough that Ethical Slut mentioned it as a good place to meet people, it _also_ has a certain fetishization, almost, of publicly traditionally romantic couples. (This is sort of hard to explain from the outside without identifying the group, sorry!) anyway Knight and I had a very public face there for a while, then disappeared for a while with mini me, and when we came back we had other publically acknowledged partners (we always _had_ other partners but they were private affairs.) Sooooo people talk, and it tends to be amusing to me.
 
I love this but it’s totally foreign to my existence - people absolutely ask and/or talk behind my back and I feel I definitely have to explain.

I am a fairly private person and generally have only a few intimate friends. Anyone who felt close enough to ask about my private business, would already be "in the know". Our families (mine and MrS's - Dude doesn't associate with his) do not tend to be nosy about such things (at least to us - if they want to speculate amongst themselves, that's their business.)

This may be because of the social dynamics of my particular life - much of my social life centers around a group with a rather in each other’s business kind of dynamic!

As an introvert, my social life centers around the few people that I genuinely love and share everything with. Dude is the most social of us, but his social circle is, by its very nature, accepting of oddballs and weirdos with a live-and-let-live life philosophy. By the time MrS and I meet any of them, they are already aware of the household dynamic.

BUT, this is all from my perspective! If you ask the boys, I am sure that they have their own takes on the situation.:rolleyes:
 
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