Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:From my perspective it is only ok if you are gay. Hanging out alone with a member of the sex you are attracted to seems to create problems of commission and/or omission, so it is best to avoid those situations. You can still have and maintain those relationships, but without excluding your spouse.
How little self control do you possess?
Anonymous wrote:Obviously you don't have to share a gender to be friends but you also don't have to feel the need to often hang out alone with an opposite gender friend if both of you aren't single. There is a reason infidelity rates are so high.
Anonymous wrote:My now DH has a friend who is a girl and once I came home and they were watching a movie together on a couch. Curtains drawn, under (separate) blankets. At one time he had told me he was surprised the two of them had never hooked up.
I told him I was not ok with the situation and he understood. They still hang out occasionally (usually with spouses now) but in public.
Anonymous wrote:I disagree with your presumption about what the accepted standard is.
If I am in an exclusive relationship, no, I am not okay with him going one on one to the movies, dinner, etc. That's called a DATE.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:From my perspective it is only ok if you are gay. Hanging out alone with a member of the sex you are attracted to seems to create problems of commission and/or omission, so it is best to avoid those situations. You can still have and maintain those relationships, but without excluding your spouse.
Do you realize that people of the opposite sex work and interact together every day often having lunch together? I spend more of my waking hours with male colleagues than I do with my husband. Some of these guys I classify as friends. A mature adult can handle it, but maybe a Stepford wife can not.
For gods sakes, no one’s suggesting the occasional lunch or business related socializing is a huge issue. Don’t be daft.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a woman and no man ever wanted to just hang out with me as a friend. They would suggest moving it to intimate direction. Also, I tried to "friend zone" men I dated and they all declined saying "we can't be friends after all that happened sexually".
How are all these women able to keep men strictly as friends?
Anonymous wrote:From my perspective it is only ok if you are gay. Hanging out alone with a member of the sex you are attracted to seems to create problems of commission and/or omission, so it is best to avoid those situations. You can still have and maintain those relationships, but without excluding your spouse.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t have close friends of the opposite sex that I hang out with on any sort of regular basis. Nor do any of my close female friends. That would be weird if you’re married, come on.
I have a few guy friends who I text with occasionally - mostly on larger friend text chains and occasionally off the main chain- but I’m not having a lot of one on one time with them.
I think lots of people are telling you it's not weird and their spouses don't find it weird. "Come on" is not a particularly convincing argument.
My friends would find it odd. We all have tons of same sex friendships. We don’t need to hang with married men. Tbh I think people who can’t cultivate friendships with same sex friends likely have other issues.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t have close friends of the opposite sex that I hang out with on any sort of regular basis. Nor do any of my close female friends. That would be weird if you’re married, come on.
I have a few guy friends who I text with occasionally - mostly on larger friend text chains and occasionally off the main chain- but I’m not having a lot of one on one time with them.
I think lots of people are telling you it's not weird and their spouses don't find it weird. "Come on" is not a particularly convincing argument.
Neither is other people saying it's not weird it's an equivalent to a teen saying " but all my friends parents let them"
Lots of people who are married flirt.
Lots of people who are married have work spouses.
Lots of people who are married have affairs.
Lots of people doing it doesn't make it not weird or wrong.
What's wrong with either of these? You sound like a blast.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why put yourself in vulnerable situations? Human feelings are complex and confusing. Do it in groups, not as couples, unless you are dating.
PP exactly. My dh isn’t going to freak if a guy friend from my college friend circle is in town and we meet up for a drink for an hour or two. But maybe once a year at most. I would not ever make this a regular thing. No way. It would be disrespectful to both our partners
Anonymous wrote:I don’t have close friends of the opposite sex that I hang out with on any sort of regular basis. Nor do any of my close female friends. That would be weird if you’re married, come on.
I have a few guy friends who I text with occasionally - mostly on larger friend text chains and occasionally off the main chain- but I’m not having a lot of one on one time with them.