Anonymous wrote:Tbh, relationships never lasted so long as they do now because of life expectancy and comfortable life. My both grandmas lost their spouses in the wars in their 20s and 30s. They both had several partners afterwards without leaving anyone. It was very uncommon to stay with one partner for 50 years, because usually the man would be dead after 10-15 years for one reason or another (war or illness).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t agree. I’ve been married multiple decades and marriage is like any other skill. If you both keep trying, you both get better at it. If you don’t both keep trying, eventually you neglect it and it unravels.
The problem when both want monogamy, but one spouse just isn’t in to having more than once a month and isn’t into it when it happens.
Seems like men, inin this situation, don’t know how to handle monogamy when needs aren’t met.
A spouse removing sex from the equation is 100% equivalent to cheating.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t agree. I’ve been married multiple decades and marriage is like any other skill. If you both keep trying, you both get better at it. If you don’t both keep trying, eventually you neglect it and it unravels.
The problem when both want monogamy, but one spouse just isn’t in to having more than once a month and isn’t into it when it happens.
Seems like men, inin this situation, don’t know how to handle monogamy when needs aren’t met.
Anonymous wrote:Is it reasonable to expect in marriages lasting nearly 50 year, that each partner will be able to fill all of the needs of the other partner? I simply think dont think it is realistic expectation to require one person, your spouse, to meet all of the emotional, physical, spiritual, family, and intellectual intimacy we need for the rest of our lives. In our longtime sexless marriage, it has been "open" more because I as the female need it, more so that him than. I'm trying to stick it out and not have our poor marriage lead to a torn home for my children though. I don't now if the fighting and being married is better, or it would just be better have a calm home --and two separate ones.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honestly it sounds exhausting. Don't know where people find the time to be non monogamous.
+1. On other parts of the Internet, I see dudes complaining how women's expectations are so unreasonably high that it's nigh impossible for men to get any action. I haven't been in the game for decades, but that corresponds with my memory of it taking some serious effort to get into a sexual relationship. With work and family responsibilities being what they are, I can't see having the time or energy even if my morals were more flexible than they are.
Anonymous wrote:Honestly it sounds exhausting. Don't know where people find the time to be non monogamous.
Anonymous wrote:You are modeling an unhealthy marriage for your children.
They will grow into healthier adults if they have happy parents who made choices that were in their best interests. Not a fighting couple with no romance. Is that what you want them to seek in a spouse?
Anonymous wrote:I don’t agree. I’ve been married multiple decades and marriage is like any other skill. If you both keep trying, you both get better at it. If you don’t both keep trying, eventually you neglect it and it unravels.
Anonymous wrote:I would go so far as to say monogamy is not natural.
Anonymous wrote:Is it reasonable to expect in marriages lasting nearly 50 year, that each partner will be able to fill all of the needs of the other partner? I simply think dont think it is realistic expectation to require one person, your spouse, to meet all of the emotional, physical, spiritual, family, and intellectual intimacy we need for the rest of our lives. In our longtime sexless marriage, it has been "open" more because I as the female need it, more so that him than. I'm trying to stick it out and not have our poor marriage lead to a torn home for my children though. I don't now if the fighting and being married is better, or it would just be better have a calm home --and two separate ones.