T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1062.1 | | VMSZOO::ECKERT | Jerry Eckert | Sat Aug 18 1990 19:32 | 2 |
| Perhaps your wife would be more likely to accept your female friends
if she were to make friends with some males.
|
1062.2 | close minded-ness | LUDWIG::SADIN | Reality is a leading cause of stress | Sun Aug 19 1990 09:41 | 25 |
| RE: < Note 1062.1 by VMSZOO::ECKERT "Jerry Eckert" >
> Perhaps your wife would be more likely to accept your female friends
> if she were to make friends with some males.
I wish my wife would make some male friends....but she just
doesn't. She doesn't work with any males, and she never really has
had a male friend besides her brother. I don't know if it's a mental
block on her part or what. She just won't associate with other men.
I have always been very open with her, but this is one subject
that I have to stay away from...she's just too unstable about it.
Anyone else have an idea?(thank you for yours...any help
is always appreciated)
Ciao
jim s.
|
1062.4 | Hmmm....good idea.... | LUDWIG::SADIN | Reality is a leading cause of stress | Sun Aug 19 1990 15:23 | 19 |
| RE:< Note 1062.3 by SFCPMO::TEGLOVIC "This note's for you!" >
Hmmmm....I like your idea, maybe it would work. I don't know
why I didn't think of it...guess I closed off the 'easier'
possiblities.
Thanx...I'll give it a shot...
jim s.
p.s.- Keep the suggestions coming though...I love a good brainstorming
session! :*)
|
1062.5 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Sun Aug 19 1990 18:22 | 6 |
| Regarding the title of your note - the Employee Assistance Program
provides free counselling for employees. You may want to give it
a try and talk about your feelings to an EAP counselor, who may give
you some helpful ideas.
Steve
|
1062.6 | | WR1FOR::HOGGE_SK | Dragon Slaying...No Waiting! | Sun Aug 19 1990 19:12 | 22 |
|
You know, I was writing a long and elaberate note about my relationship
with my girlfriend and the fact that I too have many female friends,
when it struck. How close of a "friend" is your wife to you? I
mean you obviously love her and she you, but have you made her a
friend and confident in your life? Do you sometimes come home at
night and say "Hun, let's get a sitter for the youngin' and go out
for a couple drinks and some chit-chat. Have her meet up with some
of your other friends and introduce them. She may not be jealous
of the fact that you have female friends so much as the fact that
she is jealous of there friendship with you.
I like to think that my girlfriend who isn't jealous of my varied
friendships with other girls, understands that she too is my friend
and my closest confident. That as far as friendship goes, she is
one of my best friends and due to the fact that I also love her,
she has an advantage over all of them.
Just something to think about. I can't say for sure that it's the
reason we seem to get on so well, I just know that we do.
Skip
|
1062.7 | you slipped a clue in at the end of your note | DEC25::BERRY | UNDER-ACHIEVER and PROUD of it, MAN! | Mon Aug 20 1990 03:27 | 13 |
| re: .0
>>>If ya trust me so much hun, why can't I have a female friend call without
you giving me the third degree afterwords, hmmmm?
Perhaps she doesn't mind you having female friends at your work place... but
perhaps she doesn't like them calling you at home.
Just a thought, based on your on words above. I can see potential problems
with that.
-DB
|
1062.8 | | DUGGAN::MAHONEY | | Mon Aug 20 1990 11:02 | 14 |
| I think that fimale friends are only good to a certain point...why do
you need to share so much friendship with them and not with your wife?
It is OK to have friends, but I think I would also object to receive
calls for my husband from other females that were not related to work
or business or whatever... when a person loves another person it is
difficult to share with someone else without a VALID reason... but of
course, this is my personal opinion. Love is possesive, I would be
careful not to hurt your wife with unnecessary or unimportant
reasons... try to bring her in, to share your circle of friends, she
might like them and will start feeling less jelous of the female side
of the group... you could also measure how much it means to you your
female friends versus your wife's friendship... in my humble opinion
your wife wins.
|
1062.9 | | SCHOOL::KIRK | Matt Kirk -- 297-6370 | Mon Aug 20 1990 11:28 | 11 |
| re .8
Being too posessive is a good way to push someone away. Friends are friends,
whether they are male or female, so I would have problems maintaining a
relationship with an S.O. if she couldn't respect that. I doubt I would
ever marry someone like that.
re bringing her in...
Yes! Find common ground - something you all enjoy doing (e.g. go to the
theatre, dancing, beach, whatever).
|
1062.10 | | JJLIET::JUDY | Your wish is my command | Mon Aug 20 1990 12:34 | 22 |
|
A lot of people are shocked at the relationship my husband
and I have. I have many male friends and it doesn't bother
him. Most of them I met long before I knew him, some are new
friends but he accepts them as friends of mine and doesn't read
anything else into it. He has a few female friends but none
that I think are really close except for one close girlfriend
of mine. The three of us go out alot together and have a good
time. An acquaintance of ours that also frequents the places
we do had a friend of hers ask 'who' my husband was married to.
Who meaning me or my girlfriend. My friend dances with my
husband more than I do for the simple fact that they dance alike.
And they hug and give each other hello and goodbye kisses. And
it doesn't bother me at all. We all have a strong closeness
with each other so it's just like old hat when we get together.
A lot of 'outsiders' don't understand how I can let my husband
and my one of my best friends act like they do when we're together.
It's called trust. My husband would never do anything to hurt me
nor would my friend...and I trust both of them implicitly.
JJ
|
1062.11 | It's a matter of trust | REGENT::WOODWARD | Yet Another Writing Newbie (YAWN) | Mon Aug 20 1990 13:30 | 2 |
| It's her problem, not yours. She has to learn to trust you.
Until she changes *her* attitude, there's nothing you can do.
|
1062.12 | Another View | HENRYY::HASLAM_BA | Creativity Unlimited | Mon Aug 20 1990 14:20 | 12 |
| If you do end up inviting your female friends over to meet your
wife, suggest that they bring along their spouse/so or boyfiend.
When your wife sees that your friends have other romantic interests,
she may feel less threatened. Other than that, I would suggest
counseling for your wife to discover why she feels so jealous.
If your female friends call for reasons other than business, I can
understand how your wife might feel insecure, especially if she
has low self-esteem. I agree with others who have suggested that
you spend more quality time with your wife.
Good Luck!
Barb
|
1062.13 | | SWAM2::SIMKINS_GI | | Mon Aug 20 1990 18:56 | 28 |
| I think this situation has to be handled very carefully. I was married
to someone who played in a band and the lead singer was a woman. They
became friends and my thought was why just because she is a woman can't
can't they be friends, I should not hold this against her. So I opened
my home to her and they had an affair right in my home. I was very young
and naive.
Now, I am still best friends with my high school sweetheart and see him
and talk to him on the phone often (13 yrs later). He is married and
has 3 kids. It took awhile for his wife to accept me but now we are good
friends, too. And it's all on the up and up.
The key here: I think it is important you include your wife in your
friendship with your woman-friend. That doesn't mean you can't have
some privacy, but it is important your woman-friend makes an effort to
let your wife know she is also interested in her, too, to build trust
and because your wife is very important to you. This means being able
to socialize with the two of you and with your other friends, but always
letting your wife be the spotlight in your life. In my marriage it
became clear to me shortly after that this woman had no interest in
me whatsoever and was clearly just interested in my husband to the
point of ignoring me. If I call my high school sweetheart and his wife
answers I take the time to talk to her, or if he isn't home I do. Why?
Because I like her but more because I want her to know (and I told her
long ago) that there is no reason to feel threatened by me.
Honesty and openess is the key.
|
1062.14 | popular attitudes can be dangerous too | DEC25::BERRY | UNDER-ACHIEVER and PROUD of it, MAN! | Tue Aug 21 1990 03:02 | 15 |
| The last noter has made an excellent point. Caution and wisdom must be used.
Only a fool goes on blind trust. We are all human, and therefore have limits,
including limits of willpower.
People are too quick to say that the "wife" of the base noter has a problem and
must change. We haven't been given enough information. We don't know the real
story of the husband receiving calls and home, and as to what type of calls
he's getting. We don't know anything about his female friends nor their
motives, if any.
I'd suggest using caution when telling the base noter that his wife is sick and
needs help and that he is on track. Maybe his wife knows something about him,
about them, that we don't know. Is that possible?
-dwight
|
1062.15 | All you need is Love!! | HAMPS::LUCKHURST_B | | Tue Aug 21 1990 10:12 | 14 |
| I can't see any reason why my 'other half' does not have friends
that are female, but I wouldn't like it if he kept them a secret.
He will have lunch now and then with a friend (female), but tells
me so I don't feel threatened.
I have some male friends, which he knows about - we often go out
as a group - no problem for us.
Does the original noter on this subject reassure his wife enough?
Maybe she doesn't feel loved enough and is feeling very insecure.
I certainly see her reaction to his friends and insecurity, and
maybe with lots of love and reassurance, she will relax.
Brenda
|
1062.16 | Jealousy - YUK | SFCPMO::GUNDERSON | | Tue Aug 21 1990 14:32 | 8 |
|
Excessive jealousy is so unbecoming, however, if your wife is not the
overly jealous type, then maybe you should be asking yourself "how
friendly am I with my female friends", "is this a friendship or a
flurtatious gesture".
-Lynn
|
1062.17 | | CADSE::GLIDEWELL | Wow! It's The Abyss! | Wed Aug 22 1990 00:29 | 47 |
| Jim,
An observation:
> ... I don't intend to be
> cold to my female friends just because my wife doesn't like it.
The structure of that sentence is quite hostile. The format
is most commonly found in sarcastic statements:
I don't intend to drive 50 miles in the pouring rain
because she's too cheap to spend $5 for a cab!
I don't intend to spend the rest of my life
picking up after you!
Are you flaunting your friendships like a subtle challenge?
No? Are you sure? Could this be "I'm such a
wonderful, friendly person and your such a crab."
> What I want to know is: is this normal?
No.
As an adult, you must know or have know several hundred women
well enough have casual conversations with. How common does
it seem to you.
However, a good way to plant a bomb on Anyone ... is to regularly
commit unfortunate comparisons ... dumping on Pat for doing X badly,
then praising Tee to Pat for doing X very well. (This is a good
one for sibling rivalry. Also a good way to express hostility.)
Frankly, my take is, your wife is a bit extreme about this, but
I also feel there is some kind of hostility or one-up-man-ship
going on here.
> If ya trust me so much hun, why can't I have a female friend
> call without you giving me the third degree afterwords, hmmmm?
So what's the third degree? One question? Two questions?
Are you forcing a game of 20 questions?
who was that? a friend.
what's her name? Jill.
where from? work.
why's she calling? to talk to me.
How come? Why the third degree?
Meigs
|
1062.18 | | LUDWIG::SADIN | Reality is a leading cause of stress | Fri Aug 24 1990 19:15 | 69 |
| RE:< Note 1062.17 by CADSE::GLIDEWELL "Wow! It's The Abyss!" >
>Jim,
>An observation:
>> ... I don't intend to be
>> cold to my female friends just because my wife doesn't like it.
>The structure of that sentence is quite hostile.
I think that it just came out wrong. I have known my wife for over
8 years (we've been married just over 1) as just a friend. She was
my best friends sister so we used to go out as friends, but that
was it. We had good times...and still do.
I think that the reason I responded (wrote) hostily is the fact
that I can't stand for anyone to pick who I have as friends. I can
understand expressing a concern ("Did you know he does coke?") but
not blatantly saying, "you can't see that person because I said
so!"...kind of bad parentish, doncha think? It has never actually
come to this sentence, but when I ask her for her reasoning on not
liking some of my female friends, she can't give me an answer.
Just the other day, she said to me, "Those girls you used to hang
out with were just your sluts!". Now, these people were my friends
that I did alot of growing up with (non-sexual) and that statement
hurt alot. She apologized immediately because she realized she phrased
herself wrong, but it says to me that that's what she's thinking.
Can you see where I'm coming from here?
>Are you flaunting your friendships like a subtle challenge?
I don't challenge my wife. Never. I love her and trust her explicitly.
I also know how it hurts to be challenged...
> who was that? a friend.
> what's her name? Jill.
> where from? work.
> why's she calling? to talk to me.
> How come? Why the third degree?
That's about the extent of a conversation. Except when you get
to the third degree part, she answers, "I'm just asking!". How do
you refute that one? I usually answer the first 4 questions right
off the bat too...just to clear up any confusion.
I think I'm going to start setting up meetings with my friends
so that I can bring my wife along and ease her tensions. I just
wish that it didn't have to come to this...I wish she could trust
me as much as I trust her. She says she does, but her actions say
otherwise. Sad....
Thanx for all your help everyone...ALL replies have been thoroughly
read and taken into consideration....
Thanx again,
jim s.
|
1062.19 | I can see thru' my tube too ! | BTOVT::BOATENG_K | What do U know that we don know? | Fri Aug 24 1990 19:59 | 5 |
| Re.18
>> Can you see where I'm coming from ?
Yep ! you are coming from the east of west.
|
1062.20 | my edits on the 3rd deg. conversation | MCIS5::WOOLNER | Photographer is fuzzy, underdeveloped and dense | Fri Aug 24 1990 21:47 | 46 |
| .18, I think I read Meigs' imagined conversation a little differently.
I thought the striking thing about it was the monosyllabic nature of
the responses:
>> who was that? a friend.
>> what's her name? Jill.
>> where from? work.
>> why's she calling? to talk to me.
>> How come? Why the third degree?
> That's about the extent of a conversation. Except when you get
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
> to the third degree part, she answers, "I'm just asking!".
^^^^^^^^^^^
> How do you refute that one?
I can't refute that she's just asking!! But based on my assumptions of
monosyllabic answers, I can assert that it seems from your wife's point
of view that you're not really *answering*. What if the conversation
went like this...
> who was that? Oh, that was Jill <surname>, you know, from the
Widget department at XYZ Co?
[I think your wife wants to know WHO it is, not that it's merely a
"not-enemy."]
> what's her name? [now you've precluded the need for these parts of the
> where from? "3rd degree."]
> why's she calling? ["to talk to me", IMO, would be insulting. You don't
need to play back a transcript, but you could give
her a *little* info:] Aw, she thinks Honcho
Pinstripe is a jerk, and she just wanted to know if I
think she said the right thing at lunch.
> How come? [Now, it's how come H.P. is a jerk, or how come
Jill didn't know what to say at lunch, or even how come
Jill can't "get a life" without calling YOU. But
it's a *conversation* with your wife now, not a "Why
the third degree?"
Just the view through MY lens,
Leslie
|
1062.21 | | CADSE::GLIDEWELL | Wow! It's The Abyss! | Sat Aug 25 1990 03:00 | 44 |
| > Just the other day, she said to me, "Those girls you used to hang
> out with were just your sluts!".
Ouch! That hurts! Right smack in the pride and affection
departments.
Her lack of communication is certainly frustrating. Hmmm, and
the above ^^^ communication is not exactly a bouquet. A stab
in the dark ... could your wife be suffering from an attitude
of zero-sum-game-ishness?
[for those who haven't bumped into it yet:
A "zero sum game" is a game that has a fixed amount of stuff
to win. So anything You win takes away from the amount I
can win. Like poker. An "open sum game" is a game that
has an unlimited amount of stuff to win.]
I've known a few zero-sum-ers, and their attitudes were often
perplexing and frustrating to me. When I finally realized
that their sometimes out-of-character smallness of spirit was based on
a kind of zero sum attitude toward life ... well it clarified a lot.
Also, I like what Leslie said in .20 about the monosyllabic
answers. After the next phone call, you might describe the
call a little more thoroughly. By the way, what do the
conversations sound like from her end? If the caller
is doing most of the talking, and your end is sorta
content free ...
( ) "You really think so?
( ) "Right!"
( ) "OK"
( ) "Tomorrow!"
( ) "I love it."
( ) "Me Too!"
( ) "Yes."
( ) "G o o d N i g h t."
Well, one can project a lot into ( ).
As a matter of fact, you worthless bum!!!!
That a joke, Jim. A Joke, A JOKE!!! I'mmmm Sorrrrrryyyyy!
:) :) :)
Meigs
|
1062.22 | | LUDWIG::SADIN | Reality is a leading cause of stress | Sat Aug 25 1990 08:58 | 35 |
| RE:< Note 1062.21 by CADSE::GLIDEWELL "Wow! It's The Abyss!" >
>Also, I like what Leslie said in .20 about the monosyllabic
>answers. After the next phone call, you might describe the
>call a little more thoroughly.
That's the thing though...I go out of my way to describe my
conversations right off the bat. I make sure I tell my wife whom
I was speaking with, why they called (extensive explanation here),
and I pretty much review the conversation with her. Still, I get
the cold shoulder for about an hour after this happens....
My conversations are anything but monosyllabic.....
>As a matter of fact, you worthless bum!!!!
Ouch! Meigs, what are you doing? I may be a bum but I'm worth
something... :*)
>That a joke, Jim. A Joke, A JOKE!!! I'mmmm Sorrrrrryyyyy!
>:) :) :)
Oh....a joke, I see! Well, since you put in THREE whole smiley
faces, I guess I can forgive you....we'll let it go this time. :*)
Ciao,
jim s.
|
1062.23 | Is a puzzlement | MCIS5::WOOLNER | Photographer is fuzzy, underdeveloped and dense | Sat Aug 25 1990 10:01 | 23 |
| Looks like I had the right solution, wrong problem! I'm glad to
hear the extent to which you're explaining and describing calls (but
that and six bits buys you a cup of coffee, right?).
Well, the cerebral me is always amazed and a little amused at the
viscerally-jealous me (the most innocuous things can set me off, if I'm
in love %'} ), and it does take me a while to re-enter reality after
a surprise "suspicious event". Probably everyone feels that way (I'm
not *that* special!). Some consolation for you is that the jealous
reaction is almost certainly in direct proportion to the intensity of
her feeling for you.... I bet she feels bad after these episodes,
knowing that she acted/spoke inappropriately to the *real* situation,
and I think that's evidenced by the way she retracted, immediately, the
hurtful out-of-left-field assessment of your friends. The green-eyed
monster hissed and spat before she could get a grip on it.
I'm babbling, I guess, but I agree that inviting your friend, and the
friend's SO if applicable, to your house (or on an outing) with your
wife would be a good way to start defusing individual jealousies.
Maybe EAP (as suggested earlier, I know) can help more with the overall
problem. Best of luck.
Leslie
|
1062.24 | a thought... | COBWEB::SWALKER | lean, green, and at the screen | Mon Aug 27 1990 11:16 | 5 |
|
Maybe the reason she's so suspicious is that the two of you *were*
friends for so long? She might, therefore, see your other female
friends as "backups in case this doesn't work out".
|
1062.25 | my 2c's | VNABRW::TRAXLER_B | 37 days and counting..... | Thu Aug 30 1990 08:12 | 41 |
| Maybe I can understand her (your wife's) situation very well because I am
the same jalous type. I really don't know where it comes from (looking
at my childhood) but I do know now that it's a point of having not enough
self confidence.
It has nothing to do with love. I always knew that my SO loved me and
cared for me and didn't inted to betray me. But whenever he talked to
another woman or one called I got so jalous that it made me sick. I then
didn't ask him any questions but became kind of ignorant against him.
Like:
He: What's the matter?
Me: Nothing. (Veeeeery cold voice!)
He: Well, there is something, come on!
Me: No, nothing, or would 'you' know something, hm????
He: Me???
Me: Well, there's nothing happend with me!
etc etc etc.
I know now that it has to do with not having enough self-confidence. Because
what comes immediately to my mind when he talks to other women is: Maybe
he thinks this woman is more attractive than I am? Hm, her breasts are bigger
(smaller) than mine, maybe he suddenly likes that better? She has long hair
(mine is short), every man likes long hair, don't they? And so on and on on...
Maybe the way would be: Try to give her the feeling that she is - for you -
the most attractive woman in the world, that you love every part of her brain
and body, with all it faults.
That's what my fiance is doing and it really helped a lot. Besides this
I must admit that he is the first man in my life who is as jalous as I am
(!) and so he really understands me (and I him!). That doesn't mean that
we don't have friends of the opposite sex, but we don't get angry if the
other one is jalous after we met with our friend. We understand completely
how the other feels and try everything to chase away the bad thoughts.
And besides, inviting this friend of the opposite sex *together with his/
her SO* is a great idea!
Good luck,
Billie
|
1062.26 | In my opinion (no, i'm not humble about it!)... | AHIKER::EARLY | Bob Early Dtn 264-6252 T&N EIC Engineering | Mon Sep 24 1990 13:29 | 80 |
| re: -< Too poor for counseling... >-
Prologue ...
Some of this view may look as being sexist or bigoted in one
context of another. The view I present here is based on "first
person" experience .. my own.
It is offered as support for the base noters hurt, and not as being
the only view, but just one view, and no hurt feelings are intended.
If you are feeling vulnerable or hurting today, I suggest you skip
it for today.
Bob Early
>My wife get's extremely jealous when I am around, near, or
>talk about, other women. I never say anything that could be construed
>as a come on or a pass, but I am friendly....I don't intend to be
>cold to my female friends just because my wife doesn't like it.
Believe it or not, there are still some women in this world, that
when they get married to a man; there is an expectation that men
will have men friends, and women will have women friends. That's
the way it is with some of these people. I feel equally confident
that there's few men like that, also.
Another aspect is that "some" women ***KNOW**** how clever, witty,
charming, seductive, etc that other women CAN be, and their hubbies
are so desirable (but vulnerable implied) that these temptresses
will 'go for their husband', and will use any pretext to 'disarm'
the poor guy, and lull him into a state of complacency. At the
right moment !! Snap .. she's his, and the wife loses her husband.
The note from the guy who was friend with the bands singer
exemplifies this as being "proof".
Some women have male friends, but because of their own personal
commitment to the marriage, its ok, because THEY aren't going to
seduce their friend, and certainly their (male) friend won't seduce
them ! (or so they believe).
The sad bottom line is this: Any person might be vulnerable to
being seduced by any person of either sex. A womens' female friends
could be viewed as possible seductresses of their wife as the man's
female friends are !
The up side is: A person can only be seduced if they cooperate in
the deal, and somehow this needs to be ingrained into your wifes'
knowledge .. it is not the other woman who needs to be trusted, but
rather the knowledge of your commitment and trust that needs to be
validated.
>What I want to know is: is this normal? Do most of you women
>hate to hear the men in your lives talk about female friends? Do
>you let them associate with female friends? Most of the folks I
Normal ? I love that word !!
In this case, what is normal, is what is right for the people
involved.
There is the Judeao-Christian ethic of normalcy, just as there was
the Charles_Manson view of Normalcy just as there is the
Business_Ethic view of Normalcy. Normal depends on who you talk to,
and in what context.
Friends of mine were astonished that their 86 year old mother were
having an affair in a nursing home, and almost moved her to Nuns
(all female) nursing home, until they validated their mothers' right
to live her own life. Initailly, these friends felt the normal
women could get "too old" for a sex life, and should stop such stuff
by some <arbitrary> age.
|