T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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635.1 | | NECVAX::VEILLEUX | | Tue Jan 05 1988 11:14 | 27 |
| Holly,
You have hit the button for me on this one! When I married both
my SO and I both agreed that if in the future we found that it was
not working we would be grateful of the good times and go our separate
ways. What I find is that now that the times are bad something keeps
me and possibly him from calling it quits. Maybe we are both afraid
of being alone or going through the process of trying to find someone
else.
I have discovered that when I agreed to marry that I was in that state
of "romantic love" where everyone lives happily everafter. (it won't
happen to us) Well the real world is a sure eye opener! I know now
that I am the kind of woman that wants the forever. I have proved
this to myself by still trying to make my current relationship stay
together. Its not because I have a child either, because I know
this can have just the opposite effect on her. Maybe it is because
I feel that by leaving the relationship I would have failed somehow.
But I also know I can not continue this relationship as it is currently.
So in conclusion, I can only say that I am currently in counseling
to answer some of the questions you have raised here in this
conference. Hopefully I will be able to answer my questions and
go forward.
Helena
|
635.2 | | GRECO::HSCOTT | | Tue Jan 05 1988 11:31 | 18 |
| Generally, I think it's culturally inbred (at least with my
Irish-Catholic background) that marriage is forever. The implication
of divorce always seemed to be that you 'failed' or 'didn't try
hard enough' somehow.
The basic element for me in deciding to marry my SO was that he
was the first person that I felt deeply enough about, that I was
willing to work with on the good and bad that comes up. I've often
reminded myself of that, too, in the last 4 years, as we've worked
through some very hard times. That willingness to work/communicate
has gotten us both through the hard times.
On a romantic level, he was also the first person I could envision
growing old with, and feeling comfortable old -- together --. I
hadn't even thought on that level in previous relationships.
Lynn
|
635.3 | All or nothing works best | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | aware sentient being | Tue Jan 05 1988 11:39 | 10 |
| If a person can't at least *want* to commit to forever in the beginning
when they are "madly in love" then what's the sense of commiting
to anything? If I can't feel secure with someone's feelings I'd
just as soon be able to come and go as I please knowing it's nobody
else's business. (I can be totally committed to someone I'm in
love with and I can deal with being totally free, but anything in
between sucks. It's when you get hurt the most.)
Lorna
|
635.4 | | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | aware sentient being | Tue Jan 05 1988 11:47 | 14 |
| By anthing in between I mean people who say things like "Love never
lasts forever, but as long as I do love you, maybe a year or two,
we can live together and be monogamous." No thanks. We can date,
we can be friends, but we ain't going to be monogamous.
How many people reading this really feel like they can trust another
human being again anyway?
We all know that love doesn't always last forever, but I just feel
that if people don't at least FEEL in the beginning of a relationship
that they'd like it to, that the relationship is doomed anyway.
Lorna
|
635.5 | For me Forever is good to hope and work for | PSYCHE::SULLIVAN | Singing for our lives | Tue Jan 05 1988 12:11 | 33 |
|
I think people really differ on this issue. I have known some people
who can enter into a relationship knowing that (and feeling ok about
the fact that) it may end.. in a while. And when their partners have
felt the same way about the relationship (mutual understanding is, I
think, a key element here), they have been happy for a while, then
separated, and remained friends.
I personally have never been very good at that kind of thing. I
hate endings, and with the exception of a few "flings" (and in these
cases my partners and I both knew that's what they were), I have
considered every adult relationship I've been in as a possible forever.
It may be that I hate endings and deal with them badly, but I also
think that I like the stability and comfortable-ness of a committed
relationship. I like the feeling that staying together is important
to both of us.
There's a line there, I guess, that each of us has to draw for herself.
My first significant relationship lasted almost 4 years, but it
would have been healthier for me if I'd ended it after about 4 months,
but I hung in there (at great risk to myself) because I was afraid
to end it. Anything was better than being alone, I thought.
I think I've learned to deal with endings better, but I feel ok
saying that I hope I don't have to. I think I now know the
difference between hanging onto a bad relationship as if it were
a life raft and wanting a good relationship to last and making the
effort required to make it last.
Thanks for starting this topic, Holly, and good luck in your new
role as moderator :-)
Justine
|
635.6 | Does it have to be forever and only? | SSDEVO::YOUNGER | God is nobody. Nobody loves you. | Tue Jan 05 1988 13:56 | 22 |
| While the notion of having one person, forever, is a nice one, I
don't think it is realistic.
I don't view a relationship that lasts a few years, weeks, or hours
a failure, as long as both got some lasting benefit out of it.
As people grow, they may grow in different directions, so that the
best thing for both of them is to part and live their lives separately.
This does not mean that the people don't, or never did love each
other.
Monogamy? Is it really necessary? While I agree that it's a bad
thing if one person is running around with others, and hurting their
SO, I think there are more important things to worry about. If
both people can get out of the "one and only forever" mindset, it
doesn't have to hurt. I agree with .5 - the key element is mutual
understanding, and living up to agreements.
Monogamy also has its roots in patriarchy. If a woman is not
monogamous, how is the man to know who his children are? In the
early matriarchies it didn't matter.
Elizabeth (above are my opinions only)
|
635.8 | is it forever, or is it memorex? | CADSYS::SULLIVAN | Karen - 225-4096 | Tue Jan 05 1988 15:16 | 35 |
|
RE: .0
Forever is very important to my current relationship.
Forever lets us plan things. Even if we can't afford something now,
we can plan to save up the money and do it in 2 years, in 10 years, in
20 years.
Forever changed the level of commitment we had in our relationship. I
can't exactly describe it, but our relationship really felt different
after we decided to marry and stay together forever. I think saying
forever makes you really work at the relationship. Now I'm not
stupid, and if it really turns out that we grow apart so much that we
can't live together, we will divorce. But that wanting to be together
forever is what makes us work at it.
Forever helps with financial planning. A 30 year mortgage seems like
forever anyways. We plan how much money we will need together when we
retire. It keeps us from thinking about what belongs to whom. When
we lived together, we kept track of who owned what.
If we ever decide to have children, it will take both of us to rear
them. That's a long term commitment.
I think bottom line: We can't imagine not loving each other forever.
It sometimes surprises us to think of the time before we loved each
other. We're not being naive to think our love will last, we will
make every effort to make sure it lasts.
...Karen
p.s. This is how my relationship is. It has nothing to do with
how I view other people's relationships or even how I viewed
mine before I met Tom.
|
635.9 | Know who your children are... | SSDEVO::YOUNGER | God is nobody. Nobody loves you. | Tue Jan 05 1988 17:06 | 27 |
| Re 636.3 (Jim Baranski)
I'm not sure that there are more men around who don't care if their SO
is monogamous or not than there are women who don't care. In some
sectors of society, men playing around is "boys will be boys", while
women playing around is "I'll %$## kill that sl%%%!"
Even if your asertation is true (I don't know), it is probably because
it is part of the traditional marriage "contract" - if she has sex with
other men, she will be left without means of support. There is also the
emotional conditioning involved with this (remember, monogamy was not
invented yesterday!).
The fact remains, that no matter who a woman sleeps with, she knows
who her children are. A man has no such way of knowing. It is
certainly to his advantage to only have "his woman" sleep with him.
For survivability of the race, a wide variety of combinations within
the gene pool are desirable. For a woman to have several children
by different fathers is the best way of assuring the survival of
some of her offspring.
As a rhetorical question, Jim, what would your reaction be if you were
to find out that one or both of your children were not actually yours?
Elizabeth
(These dual-sex notes make it hard to reply to the other sex)
|
635.10 | | SUPER::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Tue Jan 05 1988 18:18 | 12 |
|
re 636.7
Kerry, please read the questions in the basenote again.
Although I asked men and women to reply separately (partly to see how
it would work to have consecutive basenotes, and partly because I was
interested in seeing if the sets of answers were significantly
different), I did *not ask* which sex wants committment and which sex
wants to get off. That has been discussed at great length, I agree.
|
635.11 | Dual notes are a tad awkward, methinks... | MANANA::RAVAN | Lookin' for a dream | Wed Jan 06 1988 09:48 | 17 |
| Re 636.9 (YODA::BARANSKI):
>RE: 635.9
>
>>"The fact remains, that no matter who a woman sleeps with, she knows who her
>>children are."
>
>Not if she has sex with more then one man within a few days of the appropriate
>time.
Nit - "she knows who *her* children are". The statement never claimed
that she knew who the father was, only that she knew that *she*
was the mother. (Nowadays, if childbirth occurred under anesthesia,
I suppose the argument could be made that the mother can't be certain
either, though!)
-b
|
635.12 | how malleable me is... | LEZAH::BOBBITT | easy as nailing jello to a tree... | Wed Jan 06 1988 10:19 | 29 |
| Something in me likes to think it's forever. I think it's probably
the part that doesn't want to repeat the hurt and heartbreak I felt
when it "wasn't forever". Breaking up with someone feels no better
than having someone break up with you.
I really wish I could be that "anchorless" and "free" and feel
confident enough about myself as a person to say, "it's okay if
it ends, it was good while it lasted and I grew..." but sometimes
it seems that the stakes are higher than I like them.
Unfortunately, my relationships with men have been almost constant
(no "time off" between relationships) for the past 6 years. It
seems best to describe it as each man is like a trapeze, and when
I am in the air between I am afraid to look down for fear there's
no net. So I latch on to another as soon as possible...
Fortunately, I've been getting better matches as I go, and have
been growing as a person. If what I am a part of ends, I will be
okay, the world will go on. This relationship with my current beau
offers new forms of exploration - most recently in his request for
"time off" to find out who he is and what he really wants. This
affords me something I have not experienced in a long time...time
and space to be alone. Or make new friends. Or take up new hobbies.
Part of me has no idea what to do with this time/space, and another
part of me is breathing a sigh of relief that I can have time off,
too.
-Jody
|
635.13 | | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | aware sentient being | Wed Jan 06 1988 16:17 | 10 |
| Re .636.11, (I *think* I'm replying in the right note for my gender
but I'm getting confused jumping back and forth to read this stuff!)
At any rate, I'm also confused about this discussion in regard to
the benefits of monogamy. I would think the main benefit of monogamy
would be that you know you're more special to the person than everybody
else.
Lorna
|
635.14 | well spoken | YAZOO::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Wed Jan 06 1988 18:21 | 3 |
| Lorna - I think that you are right!
:-) Bonnie
|
635.15 | Treatise on non=monogamy | SSDEVO::YOUNGER | God is nobody. Nobody loves you. | Wed Jan 06 1988 20:19 | 14 |
| Re .-2
Perhaps, Lorna. But I think there are other ways of telling someone
"you're special" than reserving yourself for them sexually.
Consideration, sharing, caring readily come to mind. It has always
been quite easy for me to love more than one person at a time.
I think that they are all special. In fact, I think everyone I
have ever loved (sexually or not) is special, even though I may
not be able to see them anymore.
Besides, monogamy doesn't "value the differences" of bisexuals,
who may want a lover of each sex.
Elizabeth
|
635.16 | | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | aware sentient being | Thu Jan 07 1988 11:30 | 21 |
| Re .15, funny, I never thought of bi-sexuals as being people who
need to always have a relationship going with one of each sex.
I thought of it more as, if I were bi-sexual, I might have a monogamous
relationship with a person of one sex and then if that ended for
one reason or another, the next relationship might be with the other
sex just because I wouldn't be limited to only being attracted to
men (the way I am in real life). I guess what I'm saying is that
I think of bi-sexuals not as being people who have a *need* to have
sex with both sexes, but as people whose choices are not limited
to just one sex so they could, therefor, wind up with either one
- whichever sex the person they love happened to be! Oh, well.
As far as loving a lot of people and thinking of them all as special,
there are quite a few people that I love and consider to be special
but they are in addition to (and on a slightly less important level
to me) than a monogamous love relationship would be. It is important
for me to have one person who is more special than everybody else
I know and who feels the same way about me.
Lorna
|
635.17 | Another impression | SSDEVO::YOUNGER | God is nobody. Nobody loves you. | Fri Jan 08 1988 12:05 | 9 |
| RE .16 (Lorna)
My understanding is that there are both kinds of bisexuals. By
rights, the term "ambisexual" should be used for those who enjoy
either sex. "Bisexual" actually breaks down to wanting a partner
of both sexes. Since this is not possible, many of them may want
2 partners, one of each sex.
Elizabeth
|