GrowingTogether
New member
Hi everyone,
I'm here pretty unexpectedly. I started up this account following some recent conversations with my wife. I'm a 34 year old Canadian man, married and with children. My wife and I live a very conventional life, and we are probably what you would consider conventionally successful. We met when we were teenagers, started dating in our early twenties, and were married in our mid twenties. We hold down stable, steady, well-paying jobs that afford us a lot of comforts. We don't want for much in a material sense.
We have a sex life that has also been pretty conventional, even conservative - neither of us has had many sex partners and we have been completely exclusive to one another in that regard since marriage. I am a person who spends a lot of time delving into subjects that interest me, and I happen to find relationships (romantic, sexual and otherwise) fairly interesting. I've read a lot about how people relate, about what sort of behaviours encourage the types of relationships people desire, how to be a good sexual partner, about how to be the sort of man a woman wants, etc. I'd never say that I'm very good at applying the knowledge, but I do try, and I find the subject matter intriguing at very least. It's just what I do when I become interested in something - try to learn what I can about it.
I think partially as a result of that, and my attempts to put some of it into practice, my wife and I have become quite a bit more communicative about our sex life over the last couple of years. Raising little kids doesn't make it easy to put conversations into practice, but it does bring the subject to the fore, and sometimes when you keep a topic like sex and your collective sexuality on your minds it does some good on the practice side of things also.
Recently we've had some theoretical or conceptual conversations about monogamy and its counterparts. We're both philosophically on board with it. By that I mean that we both see monogamy as something fairly arbitrary, more rooted in convention and tradition than inherently being the "right way to live". While we've yet to talk about whether we SHOULD open up our relationship or take any practical steps toward it, we have discussed it in theory - would it work for us, could it work for us, how would it work, what are the barriers, what would be the benefits - that sort of thing.
I think one of the barriers we've identified (or I have, anyway) in our (my?) desire to learn more has to do with the terminology and the way people talk about polyamory, non-monogamy, swinging, and any of the other related topics. I've always been uncomfortable with doctrine that try to pigeon-hole people into categories. At the same time, I understand categorization to be a bit part of how people learn, and I think that's mainly why I'm here - to learn.
So I thought maybe I would describe the general ways my wife and I have discussed this new found topic of interest and how we could see it working for us, and see if there is any advice you might have in terms of helping us understand what you call what we're after and how we might explore it in a bit more informed way.
Why we are intrigued by the idea:
1) Fulfillment can't be achieved through a single individual. We both love each other, we're fully committed to each other, but we share a belief that relying on one single person to meet all of your needs is an impractical pipe dream.
2) We'd both like some novelty in our sex lives. We like having sex with each other just fine, but I realize my wife (5'4, blonde, tanned) is never going to be a tall freckled redhead. We also realize that my 5'11 is never going to be 6'4. And both of us want to experience "the other" in that way.
3) We'd both like to be "who we are". This one is a bit more complex. When you've known someone for over half your life, you have a concept of who they are that is pretty complex. It factors in a lot of their past - what you know of who they WERE as much as what you know of who they are. We both feel like it would be fun to have our current selves reflected off of new partners, who would only know us for who we are currently, without the biases that come with that long term familiarity.
4) We're not very jealous. I'm not naive enough to think we could go down this path without any jealousy. However, my wife and I have found that we are pretty good with jealousy - pretty good at seeing it for what it is, and channeling it positively (to be the best we can for each other, etc.). We are both intrigud, even turned on at the notion of our partner being pleasured by someone other than ourselves.
Intriguing theoretical arrangements:
1) Another couple. We've talked about how it would be nice to meet another couple (or couples) that are thinking along these same lines. Maybe they're more experienced, or maybe they're still at the theoretical stage like us. I don't think we're really after a group sex sort of arrangement (this makes me think we're not "swingers"), but more like one where we'd be able to have individual relationships with the members of the couple(s) which would allow us to have some of the benefits I identified above. There are a number of other practical safety / stability related benefits we see with respect to pursuing this with another couple, but maybe I'll save those details for another conversation.
2) Individual friends with benefits. If the couple idea isn't feasible, then we also see some merit in simply allowing each other to pursue sexual relationships with other people.
In neither case are we really all that interested in being present for each others liasons. I don't know that it's totally undesirable, but it's definitely not what we see as a major benefit.
The two major hang-ups we both share are:
1) How would we deal with the privacy / anonymity question? We live in a small city. A lot of people know each other. We wouldn't be excited about the idea of this becoming common knowledge.
2) The natural tendency to want to compare ourselves to our partner's playmates. This is something we've mostly identified as being a challenge rather than a deal-breaker. We've both noted that this is sort of the downside of wanting the variety that I mentioned above - if you want to have sexual experiences with people who are different from your partner, than you're going to have to accept that those people have different characteristics than you do.
If any of you are still reading, my apologies for the brain dump. I'd really be curious to hear any insights you may have had while reading through that treatise. Can you help us understand what we should call ourselves, or point us toward any relevant resources or sub-communities?
Thanks.
I'm here pretty unexpectedly. I started up this account following some recent conversations with my wife. I'm a 34 year old Canadian man, married and with children. My wife and I live a very conventional life, and we are probably what you would consider conventionally successful. We met when we were teenagers, started dating in our early twenties, and were married in our mid twenties. We hold down stable, steady, well-paying jobs that afford us a lot of comforts. We don't want for much in a material sense.
We have a sex life that has also been pretty conventional, even conservative - neither of us has had many sex partners and we have been completely exclusive to one another in that regard since marriage. I am a person who spends a lot of time delving into subjects that interest me, and I happen to find relationships (romantic, sexual and otherwise) fairly interesting. I've read a lot about how people relate, about what sort of behaviours encourage the types of relationships people desire, how to be a good sexual partner, about how to be the sort of man a woman wants, etc. I'd never say that I'm very good at applying the knowledge, but I do try, and I find the subject matter intriguing at very least. It's just what I do when I become interested in something - try to learn what I can about it.
I think partially as a result of that, and my attempts to put some of it into practice, my wife and I have become quite a bit more communicative about our sex life over the last couple of years. Raising little kids doesn't make it easy to put conversations into practice, but it does bring the subject to the fore, and sometimes when you keep a topic like sex and your collective sexuality on your minds it does some good on the practice side of things also.
Recently we've had some theoretical or conceptual conversations about monogamy and its counterparts. We're both philosophically on board with it. By that I mean that we both see monogamy as something fairly arbitrary, more rooted in convention and tradition than inherently being the "right way to live". While we've yet to talk about whether we SHOULD open up our relationship or take any practical steps toward it, we have discussed it in theory - would it work for us, could it work for us, how would it work, what are the barriers, what would be the benefits - that sort of thing.
I think one of the barriers we've identified (or I have, anyway) in our (my?) desire to learn more has to do with the terminology and the way people talk about polyamory, non-monogamy, swinging, and any of the other related topics. I've always been uncomfortable with doctrine that try to pigeon-hole people into categories. At the same time, I understand categorization to be a bit part of how people learn, and I think that's mainly why I'm here - to learn.
So I thought maybe I would describe the general ways my wife and I have discussed this new found topic of interest and how we could see it working for us, and see if there is any advice you might have in terms of helping us understand what you call what we're after and how we might explore it in a bit more informed way.
Why we are intrigued by the idea:
1) Fulfillment can't be achieved through a single individual. We both love each other, we're fully committed to each other, but we share a belief that relying on one single person to meet all of your needs is an impractical pipe dream.
2) We'd both like some novelty in our sex lives. We like having sex with each other just fine, but I realize my wife (5'4, blonde, tanned) is never going to be a tall freckled redhead. We also realize that my 5'11 is never going to be 6'4. And both of us want to experience "the other" in that way.
3) We'd both like to be "who we are". This one is a bit more complex. When you've known someone for over half your life, you have a concept of who they are that is pretty complex. It factors in a lot of their past - what you know of who they WERE as much as what you know of who they are. We both feel like it would be fun to have our current selves reflected off of new partners, who would only know us for who we are currently, without the biases that come with that long term familiarity.
4) We're not very jealous. I'm not naive enough to think we could go down this path without any jealousy. However, my wife and I have found that we are pretty good with jealousy - pretty good at seeing it for what it is, and channeling it positively (to be the best we can for each other, etc.). We are both intrigud, even turned on at the notion of our partner being pleasured by someone other than ourselves.
Intriguing theoretical arrangements:
1) Another couple. We've talked about how it would be nice to meet another couple (or couples) that are thinking along these same lines. Maybe they're more experienced, or maybe they're still at the theoretical stage like us. I don't think we're really after a group sex sort of arrangement (this makes me think we're not "swingers"), but more like one where we'd be able to have individual relationships with the members of the couple(s) which would allow us to have some of the benefits I identified above. There are a number of other practical safety / stability related benefits we see with respect to pursuing this with another couple, but maybe I'll save those details for another conversation.
2) Individual friends with benefits. If the couple idea isn't feasible, then we also see some merit in simply allowing each other to pursue sexual relationships with other people.
In neither case are we really all that interested in being present for each others liasons. I don't know that it's totally undesirable, but it's definitely not what we see as a major benefit.
The two major hang-ups we both share are:
1) How would we deal with the privacy / anonymity question? We live in a small city. A lot of people know each other. We wouldn't be excited about the idea of this becoming common knowledge.
2) The natural tendency to want to compare ourselves to our partner's playmates. This is something we've mostly identified as being a challenge rather than a deal-breaker. We've both noted that this is sort of the downside of wanting the variety that I mentioned above - if you want to have sexual experiences with people who are different from your partner, than you're going to have to accept that those people have different characteristics than you do.
If any of you are still reading, my apologies for the brain dump. I'd really be curious to hear any insights you may have had while reading through that treatise. Can you help us understand what we should call ourselves, or point us toward any relevant resources or sub-communities?
Thanks.