OurPath Open Forum

This Open Forum is funded and administered by OurPath, Inc., (formerly the Straight Spouse Network). OurPath is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit that provides support to Straight Partners and Partners of Trans People who have discovered that their partner is LGBT+. Your contribution, no matter how small, helps us provide our community with this space for discussion and connection.


BE A DONOR >>>


You are not logged in. Would you like to login or register?



October 22, 2016 12:07 pm  #11


Re: A thread for those staying in their MOMs?

jkpeace, of course, you're right. I know that you are. Each marriage, each relationship is different, probably unique. There is no one size that fits all. And there are simply no painless ways out or forward. Whatever we do or do not do, there is and will be pain. But we are a discouragingly small band who are still trying to make our marriages work. On MonMOM, yes, we are almost all still trying. On MMOMW, the marriages that are still mostly working are open ones or heading that way - and so I found that, for me, unhelpful. So I dropped it. I find a lot of understanding and support on the MOM forum of the Gay Christian Network.

I'm not suicidal, but I am so weary of the struggle. I think that I would honestly welcome a fatal disease, or an accident. Or at least something to kill all sexuality and desire. They are. for me, a curse and not a blessing.

Andrew

 

October 22, 2016 1:42 pm  #12


Re: A thread for those staying in their MOMs?

of course each relationship is different, and unique.  Of course it's unique, we're all snowflakes aren't we?  Doesn't mean those snowflakes don't all obey the laws of gravity.

I was 37 years into my MOM before I knew that was what I was in.  I was 19 when we met and brought up a Christian, we shared the same religious beliefs, were in the same group and it wasn't til I left and became an atheist that I even twigged to the fact that my ex was a GID.  By then it was 'all over red rover' for me - I was past child-bearing age and deep into grief.  But oh, now that I knew the secret keeping us apart we could become close again, like in the early days, we could be emotionally intimate, good friends, couldn't we?

well no we couldn't.  He still kept me at arm's length.  The warmth and affection in the relationship was all from me and what I got back in the early days was his satisfaction in what a good-looking couple we made and when I became middle-aged that changed.  I put on a bit of weight, I got sad - the years of living on a one way street caught up to me.  He didn't get the same satisfaction and that's when it got worse.  But I had learnt to look after myself more in the intervening decade. 

So 18 months after TGT hit I was moving into my own home and grateful to be doing so.  Some part of me relaxed from day one.  Another part of me woke up.  This is the bit of me that was frightened of feeling lonely.  Now I could face up to it, of course I was frightened, loneliness hurts a lot - it was better to be facing up to it tho, maybe I could do something about it but I knew how increasingly lonely I was in my MOM.  

It is 3 years later now.  If you want to ask what that's like, feel free.  Meanwhile I'm wondering what it's like for you to have stayed.

 

October 23, 2016 12:30 am  #13


Re: A thread for those staying in their MOMs?

My wife's just turned 70 and I'm 68, so that's one important factor. Another is that we are still friends, rarely quarrel, enjoy doing many things together. Talk, share. I think I'd say we have a good marriage in every way. Only there's no desire,  nor can there be, so no sexual expression or connection. That's what makes our MOM hard. So for me, the trauma is ongoing, daily.  Not an event at a point in time in the past, moving away from us. It's not a closed chapter that I can move on from.

I do wonder if my daily reading on fora shouldn't stop. Am I not just scratching the scab on my wound? Don't I just have to accept that this is the life I have, I've chosen, even though I didn't know that I was chosing it? A lesbian church minister friend told me that all things change, and a couple can grow apart, without that invalidating all of the past. Which is true. But the painful truth of our marriage is that was founded on two misconceptions or errors : that it was 'an arranged marriage', it was God's will, so he would give and strengthen the feelings of love. My wife accepted to marry me trusting that the feelings would come, and they never did, never have. And then she also believed that God could and would take away her ssa. And he didn't,  couldn't.

So on we go...

     Thread Starter
 

October 23, 2016 10:54 am  #14


Re: A thread for those staying in their MOMs?

Thank you for posting Andrew! That took a lot of courage my friend. And thank you to everyone else who shared here as well. This particular passage struck me: 

"...we are still friends, rarely quarrel, enjoy doing many things together. Talk, share. I think I'd say we have a good marriage in every way. Only there's no desire,  nor can there be, so no sexual expression or connection. That's what makes our MOM hard. So for me, the trauma is ongoing, daily.  Not an event at a point in time in the past, moving away from us. It's not a closed chapter that I can move on from." 

Thanks to what you so bravely shared here, I now know I made the right decision to divorce. I came out to my wife in May 2012. Roughly two years later, we were still together, living under the same roof. We too thought of ourselves as "best friends" and "life partners" as you so honestly shared. But it was killing us both. I was living a double life while she desperately held on to our rotting corpse of a relationship. Things were civil but largely unbearable. We were at a crossroads. 

One Sunday afternoon, my ex-wife sat me down for a meeting. She told me in no uncertain terms that we were going to stay together despite 'the gay thing.' We'd remain married until our three children were grown. I calculated this meant another 12-15 years together. She accepted that I was gay, she claimed. Thanks to her belief in God and the strength of her faith, she would accept a celibate relationship but only if I would do the same. I surmised that I could be a gay man, but never tell our children, and never have sex with a man. Roughly two weeks after we had this conversation, I told her I wanted a divorce. Given what you shared above, I know it was the right decision for both of us. 

Please don't take what I've shared here as an attempt to paint myself as the victim. I see my former self in so many horrifically painful posts here. Like many gay ex-spouses, I denied, lied, cheated, and unleashed a shameful narcissistic arsenal on the mother of my three children. I did all of this to hide the simple truth that I was gay. I am so deeply sorry for what I did and how I acted. Coming here is a form of penance I guess. Like so many of you, my ex-wife deserved better. Post-divorce, I can only hope she finds the love and passion she truly deserves. We divorced a year ago and have been separated for two years. 

As a gay man who chose straight marriage, sharing my life with the wrong gender was a bit like eating food without taste. When I started this long journey, I too made the mistake of equating sex with love. I need not explain that gay men generally have a voracious appetite for sex and there is no shortage of ways to get it. But a life based solely on sex, the pursuit of sex, and sexual conquest is a bit like a diet composed solely of fast food. We only spend a fraction of our lives actually having sex (less than 0.45%). In a lifetime, this equates to 117 days of sheet time. Why am I sharing all of this? 

Andrew's post reminded me that I wrongly defined my sexuality by where I put my penis. Love is so much more than just the mechanics of sex. This is why I believe MOMs are so hard on both spouses. I now have a male partner and yes we have sex. But our relationship is so much more than that. This makes me realize I couldn't continue living a lie. This may be why I hated my wife for a time. Being gay means that I wanted to share my life, and not just my bed, with another man. Every time I kissed a woman, including my wife, it felt like kissing my sister. This was painful for both of us. The first time I kissed another man, it was like an electroshock. And there was no going back. In retrospect, no matter how strong my resolve, my faith, or my wife's sheer effort, nothing could change the fundamental truth about my attraction to men. And staying with a woman for another 15, 20, 25, or even 30 years would be to condemn both of us to a slow and painful death.

Andrew's wrote: "Only there's no desire,  nor can there be, so no sexual expression or connection. That's what makes our MOM hard. So for me, the trauma is ongoing, daily." 

My heart aches for both of you Andrew. But I so appreciate what you've shared here. You've confirmed for me that once a spouse comes out, the only honest way to move forward is to end the relationship and move on. Thank you for helping me. Thank you for helping all of us. 

 

October 23, 2016 2:21 pm  #15


Re: A thread for those staying in their MOMs?

Wow, Sean and JKpeace. Thank you both for your honesty. I'm humbled and touched. This isn't what I cam here for, but perhaps it's 'collateral benefits'. I came to get help and support in continuing with our MOM. Is that possible? Is anyone able to help? Perhaps not. There are so few of us even trying. That's part of what makes it so lonely. We do still share so much; our relationship isn't hostile or dead or full of lies. But it is dead in terms of attraction and desire. Can it survive without that? Well, it has so far. When we started therapy three and a half years ago, it was with me saying I'm not ready to go on like this in a marriage with so little intimacy and sex. And here I am, with none, frustrated and unhappy, but still there... But I have absolutely no sense of judgement for those who chosen the course of separation. If my wife had come out ten years earlier, if I'd made my ultimatum all those years earlier, would we still be together? Perhaps not. But we have to find our way forward from here, from now.

We started with a sense of calling. I've been wondering whether perhaps we have together a calling to incompleteness and that we're called to do our best living through this incompleteness. I'm not a masochist! If you could see us, spend a day with us, you wouldn't see two miserable people who hate each other...

     Thread Starter
 

October 23, 2016 3:55 pm  #16


Re: A thread for those staying in their MOMs?

We share trust and commitment, deep fellowship and friendship. But I am a sexual being with a strong libido, but who has never come near to being unfaithful,  or falling for another woman. So am I happy with all of that? No. I've searched high and low for some way out, some way to kill my libido, and so be as at peace with a sexless existence as my wife is, but so far, no luck. I remain a lusty and so frustrated male.

     Thread Starter
 

October 23, 2016 7:30 pm  #17


Re: A thread for those staying in their MOMs?

I don't think there is a way of dealing with your sexuality as a separate issue to your marriage for you or for your wife.  It's so very very basic.  And how do you live with the person who is stymieing it?  however you view it philosophically, it still comes down to what's happening between the two of you.

Sean talks about hating his wife.  He knows she doesn't deserve it but he is feeling hate for his wife and that is what I saw happening with my husband.  He would screw his face up if I went to kiss him, even way back I can remember him doing that.  And as time went by it got worse, the last time I kissed him the taste of his skin hurt my lips.  I could see it was involuntary, he couldn't help but resent me and me giving free affection only made it worse, he could only keep resenting me more and more if I didn't call him to account.   He needed to let me go but it was me who had to make it happen.

When I realised he was gay in denial it made it possible for monogamous me to do it.  Even tho I was in my late 50's.

 

Last edited by lily (October 23, 2016 7:34 pm)

 

October 23, 2016 10:47 pm  #18


Re: A thread for those staying in their MOMs?

Hey Brassyhub.... I know this is not what you wanna hear (since it is a struggle for you) but good on you for being 'lusty' at 68yo.  I hope I am.

Don't wish that away. I hope you find an outlet soon.

Last edited by Steve (October 23, 2016 10:47 pm)


You have a future. A good one. It begins as a flicker of hope. Nurture it until it becomes a dream and when you are strong enough you will make it a reality. NEVER give up. 
 

October 24, 2016 2:56 am  #19


Re: A thread for those staying in their MOMs?

Thanks, Steve and Lily. Yes, Steve, I know that I'm still alive! The sap is still running in the old tree. And for my wife too. The day before her 70th birthday - and with no children, there's no-one else to prepare such occasions - she confessed to me that she had a crush for a new, much younger woman friend. After feeling suicidal, I thought, 'She too is still alive, still able to feel desire, but just not for me!'

One of the only other straight men married to a lesbian posted, in response to a thread on 'what we feel we've learned': ‘I think I’ve learned: 
•    All of us in a MOM are in it for a reason.
•    Love knows no boundaries; even sexual orientation is not a limitation.
I find both those thoughts very simple and rather inspiring. Yes, perhaps, there could be inspiration here for me. And in church yesterday, I noted another thought: ‘Could we still have a calling, together, to brokenness and incompleteness? Called to show that brokenness can still bear healthy fruits?’

We live in such a sex-bathed world. There are other precious values, even if I miss this one until the day I die.

Warm regards, Andrew

     Thread Starter
 

October 24, 2016 8:16 am  #20


Re: A thread for those staying in their MOMs?

Hi Andrew, I felt a little easier about my situation last week, but looking at the new entries over the weekend I am starting to have doubts again, not about myself but whether what I have shared with my wife is enough to hold us together. I think I mentioned that we had a heart to heart last week and yes I am missing sex but at least I get to hold the woman I love everyday but I know that her holding me does not give her the same sensation.
​Am I fooling myself in thinking this can work? We are both trying and as I said, my wife has said it is not 'happy families', she still loves me. I do feel a little like a swan, all nice and serene on the surface but paddling like mad to try and keep my head above water.
​I have just requested to join MonMOM so I hope to find some solace there.

 

Board footera

 

Powered by Boardhost. Create a Free Forum