Anonymous wrote:As a man, this sounds ideal. I make a lot of money and the idea of having sex with two women would be great. Plus, the wives could get the emotional support from each other that my wife says I suck at.
Anonymous wrote:No high quality man would seek this. No secure woman would allow it.
It’s true that at points in history humans have formed these kinds of families but that’s not relevant to predicting who is seeking it now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am thinking of the book "The Red Tent" a reimagining of the biblical Jacob, Leah, Rachel. The tribal women have community with each other and take care of each other and all the kids, many of the women being married to the same guys.
I have often thought there ought to be two of me (i am DW). This arrangement does not actually appeal to me though. I would not want the sexual jealousy. And what if the sister wife was gross/annoying/ did not agree with me about child raising? I think this communal idea comes up against our individualistic priorities.
NP. Agree with you because of the bold. People who think throuple -- especially throuples with and for the purpose of having children -- sound so ideal are burying their heads in the sand re: the realities for most humans. Sexual jealousy will eventually come up in at least some capacity, one person will feel his or her child isn't getting enough attention compared to someone else's child, there will be (as you note) conflicts about how to raise children, or what resources to spend on which child, or whether two of the three adults should contribute toward (just for instance) the third adult going back to school "because it's good for all of us!" etc. etc. Then there is the possibility of "I've fallen so in love that I can't share you with Other any more and you have to choose," or worse--game-playing to be the alpha woman or alpha man. And what happens if one of the three gets a career move to another place? Isn't it likely that the throuple then breaks up, if the other two adults are established in jobs where they all are living? What then about a child of the departing adult and one of the remaining ones--is it treated like a divorce?
Too many ways to go wrong, and too many things to have to consider for choices which, in a couple, are still tough but simpler to make with only two people and those two people's shared children in the mix.
Anonymous wrote:I am thinking of the book "The Red Tent" a reimagining of the biblical Jacob, Leah, Rachel. The tribal women have community with each other and take care of each other and all the kids, many of the women being married to the same guys.
I have often thought there ought to be two of me (i am DW). This arrangement does not actually appeal to me though. I would not want the sexual jealousy. And what if the sister wife was gross/annoying/ did not agree with me about child raising? I think this communal idea comes up against our individualistic priorities.
Anonymous wrote:Would you join an established couple ( married) to become a throuple? On the table is a child/children of your own plus becoming a parenting partner to other children, friendship with current wife, and romantic relationship with husband?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, in your place I would worry about your potential for abuse. I wonder if this guy is a narcissist, his wife a victim who has not seen the light but would love to have your company there. The husband must see some potential in you to serve his needs. I wonder if he has detected your weak spots. He is offering that you get to have your own child. Is this what makes this worth it? What will you do, write up a contract? Suppose you get pregnant. How do you protect that child in this situation?
These are valid points. But why do you assume the woman is a victim? How do you know it wasn't the woman pushing for this?
Societal norms and experience. I can't know. It's not an assumption but a worry. Could a situation like this work? Sure! But who is generally seeking this. Not necessarily healthy people. More likely exploitative people.
But how many of these people do you actually know?
Anonymous wrote:As a man, this sounds ideal. I make a lot of money and the idea of having sex with two women would be great. Plus, the wives could get the emotional support from each other that my wife says I suck at.
Anonymous wrote:If you want this and they are your special people and you can feel equal amongst them yes, sure why not.
I know of 2 throuples in the UK. One is actually a gay male couple who have had babies with a straight female and they all live together, 3 adults, 2 kids.
The other was 2 straight guys who lived with 1 woman. It was less equal and one of the guys moved out and left them. The couple who were left were shaky for years after but stayed together.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No better way to find out than talk to the fundamentalist Mormons. I think they could talk to you about the lifestyle without dwelling on religion if you can get them to talk to you at all. Sometimes I think I want a sister wife, but really I just want a full time housekeeper and full time nanny. I can’t imagine sharing a husband or living a life that is so abnormal. I think it’d be extremely hard on the kids, especially as they get older, unless you live in a polygamist community.
What would be hard on the kids? Be specific. Lots of definitive statements with zero evidence to back it up.
DP. Everyone has the sister wife fantasy. Basically an au pair you don’t have to take care of. I’m beginning to think I might want a brother husband though… especially if both cook. If I was in love with both, all the better. I can multitask.
I could get with a different husband for different purposes.
PP here. I would place an ad, except I can think of zero guys to whom this would appeal![]()
I can think of 3-5 categories, but true I don't know of any guys who would go for it.
What are the categories? Like a single dad who is raising his own kids? Someone who doesn’t want sole responsibility for his kids? Polyamorous guy who wants half the week off?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No better way to find out than talk to the fundamentalist Mormons. I think they could talk to you about the lifestyle without dwelling on religion if you can get them to talk to you at all. Sometimes I think I want a sister wife, but really I just want a full time housekeeper and full time nanny. I can’t imagine sharing a husband or living a life that is so abnormal. I think it’d be extremely hard on the kids, especially as they get older, unless you live in a polygamist community.
What would be hard on the kids? Be specific. Lots of definitive statements with zero evidence to back it up.
DP. Everyone has the sister wife fantasy. Basically an au pair you don’t have to take care of. I’m beginning to think I might want a brother husband though… especially if both cook. If I was in love with both, all the better. I can multitask.
I could get with a different husband for different purposes.
PP here. I would place an ad, except I can think of zero guys to whom this would appeal![]()
I can think of 3-5 categories, but true I don't know of any guys who would go for it.