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November 12, 2020 9:34 pm  #1521


Re: A gay ex-husband answers your questions

Séan wrote:

 My boyfriend of eight years often claims he's still attracted to women, but only when we're around straight couples. My response is always the same: "Honey tell them the last time you had sex with a woman." He then sheepishly replies, "1993." So even when men are out and in long-term relationships, they still can feel the need to pass as straight. I reckon it's just the programming. End of rant! 

Sean,

I would suspect that your partner is bisexual. My husband hasn’t touched any part of a mans body in over 32 years. 32+ years ago it was mutual masterbation he engaged in. That was the extent of it. Even though he hasn’t done anything with a man in several decades he’d stall call himself bisexual. 

Tangled 

Last edited by TangledOil (November 12, 2020 9:34 pm)

 

November 12, 2020 10:49 pm  #1522


Re: A gay ex-husband answers your questions

Thanks, Sean. I only have the experience of being a straight person, so I appreciate hearing perspectives/getting insights from "the other side."

Before I found myself in the "straight spouse network," I was one of those people who would think "how could she not know?" when a married celebrity would publicly "come out." Surely they weren't having sex. A gay man can't possibly have sex/sustain an erection with a woman. Now I know that's not the case...as many women in here—and other forums I've stumbled into—have talked of having active (enjoyable even!) sex lives before the gay bomb dropped.

That's the thing that sort of haunts me the most. My story is a little bit different than what I've come across. My husband told me he was bisexual about 9 years into our relationship. He admitted that he'd known since about puberty, but that he'd never had any same-sex encounters. I found no porn, no texts, no emails, or  apps...and since we've both worked from home for years and are together 99% of the time...there simply would not have been any opportunity for infidelity. (I did get an STD test anyway!) 

It's been close to 2 years now, and he's never asked for an open relationship or "hall pass" or simulated gay sex (as you call it) or a threesome even...In fact, it seems his attraction to men is more romantic (as I said..unusual)...which is odd because...while we've always had a pretty strong sexual attraction (since the day we met), he's never been particularly romantic...We have lots of sex, but we don't cuddle while watching a movie...or hold hands, etc...for example. So, after a few rough weeks/months post-disclosure, nothing has really changed...except for the fact that I've developed a "waiting for the other shoe to drop" syndrome....and I worry (after reading so many stories): Can he possibly be faking his way through it?...(all of the sex)...or will he (for lack of a better way to put this) grow gayer with age? (He's 36 now)

Wow..I'm rambling. I don't even think I have a question...but maybe someone will find similarities between my story and theirs (and we can commiserate over our shared confusion...haha). Thanks, everyone, for tuning in

 

November 13, 2020 2:52 am  #1523


Re: A gay ex-husband answers your questions

Thank you for writing Julian and others. In reply to Julian's post: 

1. That's the thing that sort of haunts me the most. My story is a little bit different than what I've come across. My husband told me he was bisexual about 9 years into our relationship. He admitted that he'd known since about puberty, but that he'd never had any same-sex encounters. I found no porn, no texts, no emails, or  apps...and since we've both worked from home for years and are together 99% of the time...there simply would not have been any opportunity for infidelity. (I did get an STD test anyway!) It's been close to 2 years now, and he's never asked for an open relationship or "hall pass" or simulated gay sex (as you call it) or a threesome even.

Ok. I have a question for you: if everything appears to be ok with your relationship, why did you join this forum? 

2. In fact, it seems his attraction to men is more romantic (as I said..unusual)...which is odd because...while we've always had a pretty strong sexual attraction (since the day we met), he's never been particularly romantic...We have lots of sex, but we don't cuddle while watching a movie...or hold hands, etc...for example. So, after a few rough weeks/months post-disclosure, nothing has really changed...except for the fact that I've developed a "waiting for the other shoe to drop" syndrome....and I worry (after reading so many stories): Can he possibly be faking his way through it?...(all of the sex)...or will he (for lack of a better way to put this) grow gayer with age? (He's 36 now)

Every journey is unique my friend. I'm also starting to appreciate how difficult it is for gay-in-denial spouses to "just come out." If I think back to my own (long) coming out process, there are similarities to what you've shared. It first started with a sexual disconnect, meaning that while I could mechanically have sex with my (then) wife in my 20s and 30s, there was never any passion. Here are some common "symptoms" I've read about here which apply to my former marriage: 

- Gay-in-denial husband rarely initiates sex
- The relationship is mostly dry kisses and squirmy hugs
- The relationship feels more like brother/sister or roommates than lovers
- As the GIDH ages, sex becomes more infrequent and might even stop

As I've shared many times before, while a GIDH can lie up and down, "I'm straight and I don't want to be in a relationship with a man!" there is no lying in the bedroom, nor online, nor in some sticky adult store backroom.  

I want to thank everyone posting here, asking questions, and challenging me because I've learned something important while discussing men who are "emotionally straight and yet sexually gay." I reckon the reason so many married, closeted men resist just saying "I'm gay" and/or divorcing is because it represents too seismic a shift in their lives. In my opinion, closeted husbands continue to claim they are straight because a married man with a straight wife, kids, straight family, straight friends, and oftentimes a straight congregation has absolutely NO incentive to come out, separate, and divorce. It represents losing everything. Yes there is an argument to be made about gay men being "authentic", but I myself hesitated when that "authenticity" mean tearing my family apart, losing my home, financial ruin, and isolation/loneliness. Even after I'd come out to my wife, our marriage limped along for 18 long months before we finally separated/divorced. I believe this is why many gay-in-denial husbands don't just "come out." It's fear.  

3. Wow..I'm rambling. I don't even think I have a question...but maybe someone will find similarities between my story and theirs (and we can commiserate over our shared confusion...haha). Thanks, everyone, for tuning in. 

Ramble away! That's what this forum is for. This forum is a safe space for everyone to share their innermost thoughts and, most importantly, get the support they need. Be well everyone! 

Last edited by Séan (November 13, 2020 2:55 am)

     Thread Starter
 

November 13, 2020 12:05 pm  #1524


Re: A gay ex-husband answers your questions

Julian,
What you have described sounds a lot like my husband. He wants to have sex but he has more of a connection and gets more enthused and excited about his male relationships. We rarely (if ever) hold hands or cuddle on the couch. I have asked him if he is bisexual and he has denied it but then 2 weeks after that conversation, he wanted to know if I minded if he went on a week long "writing trip" with his best friend (also married) to a beach house. I, of course, told him to go ahead. I want him to do what he wants to do. I want out. But in the back of my mind, I think, who goes on a week long trip with another male, two weeks after your wife has questioned your sexuality?

His male relationships are just that important to him. What I feel like I am missing out on the most, is passion and desire. I know he loves me and cares for me but, that spark where he caresses your cleavage or grabs your thigh, or butt never happens for me because he never touches me like that. He is incapable of doing that. He will have sex with me and those are the only times that I get touched sexually, but then it starts to feel like I am being used. How can you not have desire for me during the day but yet have sex with me at night?

He has a couple or possibly more than that gay friends that he talks with regularly. I wonder if I've just been blind and in denial myself all these years that he has acted this way. I know he doesn't desire me in the ways that he should and I probably should've realized this a long time ago. I also feel like he doesn't respect me in the ways that he should. He can be belittling and demeaning to me at times. He can also be very controlling and manipulative and there is always an element of anger right below the surface. He is also a clean freak and likes to keep things in order and in place. He rearranges the dishwasher and the grocery cart after I have loaded something because his way is the best way.

He has long conversations on the phone with his male friends and they seem to talk about everything. It seems like he can open up more to his male friends than he can to me. He seems to filter everything he says to me. He never really seems to be present to me and always seems to have his mind on other things. I haven't found concrete proof either as far as sexual texts or hook ups, but I know how I have felt for 22 years and I know that I can't spend the rest of my life this way.

One more thing about sex....we don't undress in front of each other. I undress in the closet or the bathroom-same for him. When we are done having sex he straightens the bed and has my pajamas laid out on the comforter for me to put back on. Sometimes during sex (this is weird af) he will readjust the covers or get self conscious if his butt is touching the covers. He will literally move the covers during sex because he doesn't want his butt to touch the covers where his face will be later....who the fuck thinks of that during sex?  Sorry for my language but I've been really angry for a while now. We don't cuddle naked. At the beginning of our marriage, he told me that he did not want to have oral sex because he felt like it was demeaning to me. He never asked for it or wanted it, until 2 years ago when I told him that I needed to have my needs met and he was worried that I was going to divorce him. Only then would he perform oral sex on me, and the first time after he did it, he went to the bathroom and washed his mouth out with mouthwash. nice. He claims that that doesn't mean anything and that he just likes to do that (wash his mouth out). I haven't given him many blow jobs bec he never asks for them or wants them but when I do, he never orgasms and I don't think I am that terrible at it. He is extremely concerned about image, which I believe is why he is so in denial. He used to be a pastor but is no longer pastoring. His Dad was also a pastor.

Anyway, I just wanted to get a bit of my story out there for Julian or for Sean to comment or anyone else. I am so thankful to Sean and to this board for the help that they offer. It feels like being with a group who totally understands everything. I used to look at other women with their husbands and how their husbands touched and caressed them, and how they cherished, and spoke proudly of their wives and I wished my husband was more like that. I thought it was just his personality and that I'd have to live with it because he had a lot of other really good qualities, but now I see that not desiring your wife is a sexual problem not a personality problem. It seems so simple when you write it out like that but when you are living it, it can be very confusing. Love to everyone on this board. We'll get through these struggles.

 

November 13, 2020 2:51 pm  #1525


Re: A gay ex-husband answers your questions

Julian, 

I’m curious. Did your husband tell you why he decided to tell you? I’d guess there had to be a reason. 

Tangled 

 

November 13, 2020 4:15 pm  #1526


Re: A gay ex-husband answers your questions

Sean, thank you for your reply. My son and his wife are both in counseling separately, and she has told him that she doesn't want it to be this way. They have struggled and cried together, mourning what they thought their future would be.  She did tell him she was bisexual at the beginning of their relationship, which he was ok with. I guess that should have been a red flag. She also told him about the abuse from the beginning. I may be blinded by being too close, but I kind of feel like she is sincere, based on their history together and what I have known about her.  I still think you are right, they should divorce and go their separate ways. And as blunt as it is, the marriage died when she came out, as you said. Thanks for the reality check. He just got on antidepressants, I'm hoping that will help him see things clearly, and make it possible for him to plan for the future.

 

November 14, 2020 2:38 am  #1527


Re: A gay ex-husband answers your questions

Thank you for posting SadMom. In reply: 

1. Sean, thank you for your reply.

My pleasure. I hope your son is feeling better. 

2. My son and his wife are both in counseling separately, and she has told him that she doesn't want it to be this way.

I'm not surprised. Please ensure that your son doesn't attend couples' counselling because their marriage is clearly over. I am not a mental health professional so please read my comments accordingly. Following "discovery" or "disclosure" of a spouse's homosexuality, some gay/straight couples attend counselling together. This rarely helps the straight spouse. My (then) wife and I tried couples counselling and it was a disaster. Sadly, our joint counselling sessions did nothing to help my (former) straight spouse as the focus became my sexuality. If a gay/gay-in-denial spouse claims "sexual abuse made me gay", there is also the very real possibility that couples counselling focuses on that as well. I reckon couples counselling should be about fixing a relationship, not a therapy session exclusively for the gay spouse while a long-suffering straight partner looks on....or worse is somehow blamed for the relationship's problems. Based on my own experience and based on my many exchanges here, most straight spouses come away from joint counselling sessions feeling like they have to do more to save the relationship. That's some straight up bullsh*t. 

2. They have struggled and cried together, mourning what they thought their future would be. 

Good. If they're mourning then they both understand the relationship is dead...and will eventually be buried. 

3. She did tell him she was bisexual at the beginning of their relationship, which he was ok with.

Let's rephrase that: "She admitted to hiding/lying about her sexuality from the beginning." 

4. I guess that should have been a red flag.

Amen!

5. She also told him about the abuse from the beginning. I may be blinded by being too close, but I kind of feel like she is sincere, based on their history together and what I have known about her. 

Let me be clear regarding my opinion about gay/gay-in-denial spouses who claim "sexual abuse/assault made me gay" because it's a very common occurrence. There are two possibilities: 1. the gay spouse is lying; or 2. the gay spouse is telling the truth. If the spouse has a history of honesty and integrity, claims of sexual abuse might be true. If however, the gay spouse has a lifelong history of lying and cheating, such claims are likely false. So what's my point? I reckon gay-in-denial (GID) spouses aren't evil. We are simply incapable of being honest about our sexuality because we've lied about being gay our entire lives.    

6. I still think you are right, they should divorce and go their separate ways.

Agreed. Gay/straight marriages simply don't work. If your daughter-in-law is a lesbian, there is no reason for them to remain married other than to continue the lie that she is somehow heterosexual. Please help your son detach with love, separate, and divorce as quickly as possible.. 

7. And as blunt as it is, the marriage died when she came out, as you said. Thanks for the reality check. He just got on antidepressants, I'm hoping that will help him see things clearly, and make it possible for him to plan for the future.

A future without her

Thanks for sharing my friend. Please keep posting. 

     Thread Starter
 

November 15, 2020 3:04 pm  #1528


Re: A gay ex-husband answers your questions

Sean,
In your opinion do you think my husband sounds gay to you? I’m really struggling to know what to do. I really don’t have concrete evidence. I wish I did.

Last edited by Karis (November 15, 2020 3:06 pm)

 

November 15, 2020 4:10 pm  #1529


Re: A gay ex-husband answers your questions

Hi Karis. Your husband certainly ticks all of the "pink" boxes: 

- Has never really had an interest in straight sex
- Boyfriend-like relationships with gay men
- An obsessive interest in gay culture
- Checks men out when you're out with him
- You feel like you're living with a roommate, rather than a husband

I can imagine that the absence of concrete proof, such as a gay porn history or an affair with a man, gives you pause. It shouldn't. When I first started posting here, I'd often tell straight spouses to trust their instincts. I still believe that if a straight spouse is posting here about her husband, he's probably gay. But let's take a step back and just look at your marriage. You're clearly unhappy in your relationship and you were justifiably considering an affair you were so starved for attention. While I've only scanned your message history here, I reckon you're desperately unhappy in your marriage so whether your husband is gay (or not) really isn't the issue. If you are depressed, angry, and sexually unsatisfied, please keep in mind that people have separated/divorced for much less my friend. So is your husband gay? I say it doesn't really matter. What you've shared here is that your husband appears to be more emotionally invested in his gay friends than he's invested in your marriage. Perhaps it's time to consider separation and divorce. I hope that helps in some way my friend.  

Last edited by Sean (November 15, 2020 4:12 pm)

 

November 15, 2020 7:34 pm  #1530


Re: A gay ex-husband answers your questions

Thanks so much Sean. Ive always appreciated your input and your willingness to be on this board. I really feel like it helps so many people. It’s very kind of you. Thanks for reading my post history and providing your thoughts. It’s hard to make such a difficult decision about leaving when there are kids involved. My kids are older now (20 and 17) but it still feels tough. Thank you again!

 

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