Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hells no. We are an EQUAL partnership. No wonder the GOP thinks the way it does
No such thing. It's an allusion.
That said, marriages thrive when both do more than an equal part.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hells no. We are an EQUAL partnership. No wonder the GOP thinks the way it does
No such thing. It's an allusion.
That said, marriages thrive when both do more than an equal part.
Anonymous wrote:Creepy thread title
Anonymous wrote:Meh. My DH has strengths. I have other strengths. We each take the lead in areas that we (a) feel passionately about and (b) have developed expertise in. For example, he loves to cook, and can make a meal out of all the crap left in the fridge at the end of the week. I have an advanced degree in finance and handle all the micro and macro budget and finance issues.
My DH told me early in our marriage that he didn't want to make all the decisions. He does that at work. I think we divide all that labor up fairly evenly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So, to the people on this thread who actually consider their marriage to include this dynamic:
Please give some examples of how this dynamic plays out in your every day life. What is a decision in which the dominant spouse makes the call? What input does the submissive spouse have into that decision? If the submissive spouses's desire is different from the dominant spouse's opinion, how is that difference resolved?
In thinking about my own marriage, some examples I can come up with are things like this. My husband makes about twice as much money as I do and sometimes, he wants to buy things that I don't see the point of/think are too expensive/would suck up money I'd rather use for other things. Provided that the other things I'd rather do with the money are not essential things, I generally let him buy the thing he wants to buy, knowing that he works really hard to earn a ton of money. I do ask him to explain the purchase to me so that I can understand why he wants it, and I explain to him why I don't think it's a good idea. It is OUR money, but since he brings home a lot more of it than I do, if he really wants a thing, if we do not need the money urgently for something else, and if he listens to my objections and still wants it, I let it happen.
He basically submits to me in all matters pertaining to childcare and management of the house. I do the shopping, meal planning, and cooking because I'm good at those things and he's terrible at them. If I need him to do stuff around the house, I tell him what the stuff is and how I want it done and when I'd like it to be done by, and he makes it happen.
I would not say that either one of us is dominant, though, and mostly these are not huge decisions being made. For huge decisions (e.g., buying a house or a new car), we have to agree before anything will happen.
I'd say some variation on this is probably where 90% of people in the bell curve of dominance in marriage fall.
Yup DCUM bubble strikes again lol
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So, to the people on this thread who actually consider their marriage to include this dynamic:
Please give some examples of how this dynamic plays out in your every day life. What is a decision in which the dominant spouse makes the call? What input does the submissive spouse have into that decision? If the submissive spouses's desire is different from the dominant spouse's opinion, how is that difference resolved?
In thinking about my own marriage, some examples I can come up with are things like this. My husband makes about twice as much money as I do and sometimes, he wants to buy things that I don't see the point of/think are too expensive/would suck up money I'd rather use for other things. Provided that the other things I'd rather do with the money are not essential things, I generally let him buy the thing he wants to buy, knowing that he works really hard to earn a ton of money. I do ask him to explain the purchase to me so that I can understand why he wants it, and I explain to him why I don't think it's a good idea. It is OUR money, but since he brings home a lot more of it than I do, if he really wants a thing, if we do not need the money urgently for something else, and if he listens to my objections and still wants it, I let it happen.
He basically submits to me in all matters pertaining to childcare and management of the house. I do the shopping, meal planning, and cooking because I'm good at those things and he's terrible at them. If I need him to do stuff around the house, I tell him what the stuff is and how I want it done and when I'd like it to be done by, and he makes it happen.
I would not say that either one of us is dominant, though, and mostly these are not huge decisions being made. For huge decisions (e.g., buying a house or a new car), we have to agree before anything will happen.
I'd say some variation on this is probably where 90% of people in the bell curve of dominance in marriage fall.
Anonymous wrote:So, to the people on this thread who actually consider their marriage to include this dynamic:
Please give some examples of how this dynamic plays out in your every day life. What is a decision in which the dominant spouse makes the call? What input does the submissive spouse have into that decision? If the submissive spouses's desire is different from the dominant spouse's opinion, how is that difference resolved?
In thinking about my own marriage, some examples I can come up with are things like this. My husband makes about twice as much money as I do and sometimes, he wants to buy things that I don't see the point of/think are too expensive/would suck up money I'd rather use for other things. Provided that the other things I'd rather do with the money are not essential things, I generally let him buy the thing he wants to buy, knowing that he works really hard to earn a ton of money. I do ask him to explain the purchase to me so that I can understand why he wants it, and I explain to him why I don't think it's a good idea. It is OUR money, but since he brings home a lot more of it than I do, if he really wants a thing, if we do not need the money urgently for something else, and if he listens to my objections and still wants it, I let it happen.
He basically submits to me in all matters pertaining to childcare and management of the house. I do the shopping, meal planning, and cooking because I'm good at those things and he's terrible at them. If I need him to do stuff around the house, I tell him what the stuff is and how I want it done and when I'd like it to be done by, and he makes it happen.
I would not say that either one of us is dominant, though, and mostly these are not huge decisions being made. For huge decisions (e.g., buying a house or a new car), we have to agree before anything will happen.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This thread is horrifying
I think there's kinky freak on DCUM lately starting thread's he hope will turn smutty.
I just popped in to see why so many are taking this OP seriously.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Husbands- what is it about having a submissive wife that's appealing? What do you find challenging about it?
Hi OP. DH here. I have been married twice. The ex was American and not submissive at all. It did not last. DW is from overseas. She grew up in Asia with a more traditional view of gender roles. She is highly accomplished and educated yet as a family we subscribe to more of the power dynamic that you describe. It has worked really well for both of us over the last 10 years. the one thing that does frustrate me sometimes she has a hard time articulating what she wants.
I just wanted to share this to make the point that not every relationship is 50/50.
As an Asian woman, may I just say ewww. Asian woman are not submissive. But they are willing to make compromises for the sake of the family.
PS... she has a hard time articulating what she wants because she is passive aggressive. That's how Asian women like to make you think you make all the decisions.