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December 13, 2017 4:30 am  #811


Re: A gay ex-husband answers your questions

One of the things that irks me the most about 'gay think' is this idea that straights don't know what it's like to be gay.  I agree with that of course.  It's not the bit I am objecting to - it's an omission I object to - gays never seem to make that logical step to recognise it goes both ways - that they don't know what it's like to be straight. 

Here's an example of the mind-bending stuff it leads to.  From my younger gay friend - gays make superior lovers because they understand the equipment.  What you got is inferior.  It just blows my mind.  Excuse me.  If you were straight you would understand how much a straight male wants what a woman has.

So Sean you have stood tall in my eyes when you have said so consistently that mixed orientation marriages don't work. Were they working before discovery/disclosure?  Why muddy the waters now?

 

 

December 13, 2017 5:32 am  #812


Re: A gay ex-husband answers your questions

Thanks for writing Lily. In reply:

1. So Sean you have stood tall in my eyes when you have said so consistently that mixed orientation marriages don't work.

​Correct. I don't believe that gay/straight MOMs can work. Mine certainly didn't.

2. Were they working before discovery/disclosure? 

No. Most of the marriages I've read about here are the same as mine: little to no sex; abusive; and unhappy.    

3. Why muddy the waters now?

I'm sorry if I've confused you. I think my opinion on MOMs has always been consistent: I don't believe a mixed orientation marriage between a straight spouse and a gay spouse can survive. Why? Because without sexual desire, I don't believe any marriage can last. We need only look to heterosexual couples who divorce because there is no longer any desire. Before separating, my (then) wife and I hadn't had sex in years. I spent decades longing for a same-sex relationship; watching gay porn; denying my wife the intimacy she deserved; bullying her (via narcissistic rage/control); and near the end, cheating. When she came anywhere near to questioning my sexuality, I'd fly into a rage. So my opinion is clear: gay/straight relationships like the one I had can't survive in the long-term. Mine certainly didn't.

​However, I don't know if MOMs can work between bisexual/straight spouses. This is where things can get 'muddy' to borrow your term. Perhaps a marriage can survive if there is a genuine attraction and intimacy between husband/wife...even after one of the spouses has admitted same sex attraction. I myself am 100% gay with ZERO attraction to women so I can't express an opinion about bi/straight MOMs and whether they can work. I'd prefer to let those identifying as bisexual (or their partners) to share their opinions here or perhaps on the MOMs thread.  

​Interesting exchanges friends. Thanks for posting!

Last edited by Sean (December 13, 2017 12:39 pm)

 

December 13, 2017 11:20 am  #813


Re: A gay ex-husband answers your questions

Thank you Sean. I can’t wait for my whatever he is husband to move on and experience some real life gay sex so he can once and for all figure out what he is. At 33, he’s only had sex with women and fantasized about men since 13. I hope one day he’s a reformed narcissist or whatever it is and can finally put into words what he was going through and if he indeed had any attraction to women or was just masturbating into us all these years. It’s a total trip, religion and fear of diseases has held him back for so long, but now there’s nothing more to lose, because I let his parents know he’s gay and that’s why we had split before and are splitting again. Was a little passive aggressive of me, but he screwed me over one too many times and my loyalty is gone and I’m out of his closet. Anyway, it does make it hard thinking all the sweet things he said to me were fake, “the smell of your breath turns me on”, who says that? It was the sweetest thing ever. It’s a mind screw.

 

December 13, 2017 12:33 pm  #814


Re: A gay ex-husband answers your questions

Thank you for the update Jamie. First and foremost, I hope that you got tested for STDs and that your results were negative. I also hope that your heath has improved as I seem to recall that you were suffering from anxiety/depression due to gay-in-denial relationship stress. Please provide an update if you can to let us know you're safe and healthy. (WARNING: If you're new to this forum and have recently found out your husband/partner is on Craigslist or gay hook up apps like Grindr, Hornet, or Scruff, looking for "discreet/casual encounters", PLEASE do two things immediately: first get tested for STDs; and second, always use condoms if you continue having sex together. ​There appears to be a pattern to gay-in-denial behaviour. It first starts with gay porn and then inevitably moves on to real-life sex with other men. Exchanging messages about sex via Craigslist or hook up phone applications isn't just curiosity, it's cheating. So err on the side of caution and please protect yourself.)   

Looking back at our initial exchanges in September (http://straightspouse.boardhost.com/viewtopic.php?pid=9803#p9803), you questioned whether your husband was gay or bisexual. I also had the impression that you were willing to work things out and stay with this guy: despite the pot; emotional abuse; cross dressing; and a total lack of interest in sex with you. Following your last post, I have a few questions, namely:

​1. You wrote "move on" so does that mean you've made a decision to separate/divorce?
​2. If yes, what was the breaking point for you?
​3. How did he and his parents react when you outed him?

​Please only answer if you feel comfortable doing so. Lately we've been discussing mixed orientation marriages so your answers might help straight spouses thinking about opening up their relationships. I seem to recall that for a time you were ok with him watching men masturbate online, cross dressing, and knew about his attraction to mature men ("daddies" as they're called in the gay community). I hope to hear back from you.

Be well!   

Last edited by Sean (December 13, 2017 1:02 pm)

 

December 13, 2017 12:58 pm  #815


Re: A gay ex-husband answers your questions

lily wrote:

am I missing something, since when did MOM not stand for Mixed Orientation Marriage - surely it simply means that and doesn't have anything to say beyond that.

I consider myself to have been in a Mixed Orientation Marriage, or are you going to tell me I wasn't because I didn't know I was!
 

This is an interesting point of debate.  Clearly we are all welcome to define things as we chose.  I just think it's interesting to discuss and hear other perspectives. 
I was married to a lesbian for 16 years myself, but I don't consider my marriage to have been MOM.  To me.. i was in a normal marriage, but happened to find out later that she was a fraud.  Since I didn't know or consent to it, I don't define my experience of marriage as being mixed-orientation.  

What if a person was married to a cheater?  Would we define that marriage as an "open marriage"?  I don't think I've ever heard it called that.  The only time I've ever heard the term "open marriage" is when both parties have knowledge and consent to one or both spouses being intimate outside their marriage.  If one of them has no idea the other is cheating i don't think that's an open marriage.   by proxy I think the same way about a MOM.  My experience of the marriage was not as mixed orientation.  I was tricked into thinking she was straight.. and had little to no sex drive and rejected me all the time because of that and a million other excuses of the day.   

Anyhow.. just an interesting debate. 


-Formerly "Lostdad" - I now embrace the username "phoenix" because my former life ended in flames, but my new life will be spectacular. 

 
 

December 13, 2017 4:07 pm  #816


Re: A gay ex-husband answers your questions

this is like that Shroedinger's cat thing!  Is the cat in the box alive or dead, it could be either since you can't see.  Either is not both.

It can't be both alive and dead.  that's specious logic in my book - it's one or the other.  You just don't happen to know which it is.

If we both bend down to pick up the same something from the floor at the same time we will knock our heads together.  reality is more than what you believe.

Your wife knew all along it was a mixed orientation marriage.  Was she wrong?  You didn't know.  She misled you into believing she was straight but all the denial in the world doesn't change her being a lesbian - it was always a MOM, she never was straight.  all that's changed is now you know you were in a MOM.

she's lesbian, you're straight.  Mixed orientations.  got married.  

From our perspective as heteros, it hurts so much to lose the beliefs you were duped into having because it is so faithless, it is to take on board such a betrayal of your trust and love.  But it is healing to know what is reality.
 

Last edited by lily (December 13, 2017 4:11 pm)

 

December 13, 2017 4:37 pm  #817


Re: A gay ex-husband answers your questions

Sean wrote:

I don't believe that gay/straight MOMs can work. Mine certainly didn't.
.....
However, I don't know if MOMs can work between bisexual/straight spouses.

I'm going to be bold here Sean and baldly state the conclusions I have come to -

gay is gay, i.e. same sex attracted.  There's a range of emotionality between being able to perform with a woman through not being able to, to running a mile at the very thought of it.  There's been consistent feedback that as gay men age their ability to perform with a woman declines dramatically.  

Leaving sex addicts out of it for the moment, the gay men who can perform with a woman are the ones who like the company of women and make friends with them easier than men.  

These are the people who often call themselves bisexual.  From my perspective it sounds like denial-speak, and a bisexual is a closet gay.

but I won't be making this argument again - people get so upset.  the point I think is that whatever a bisexual might or might not be, what they are not is straight.  My ex identified as bisexual but really he was gay and in a lifelong snit over being rejected by the love of his life, his school mate.  
 

 

December 13, 2017 7:35 pm  #818


Re: A gay ex-husband answers your questions

I absolutely think bisexuality is real and is on a varying spectrum thereby making it hard to define and understand.  That being said, many gays in denial use bisexuality as a stop over on the way to admitting they are gay and this is why bisexuals have been suspect.
As for a MOM between a bisexual and a straight person?  It depends.  I think if everyone is aware of what’s going on from the outset then it has as good a chance of any marriage to last.  Once you introduce deception into it the chance of it lasting is greatly diminished.
Just my two cents

 

December 13, 2017 8:19 pm  #819


Re: A gay ex-husband answers your questions

majenco wrote:

I absolutely think bisexuality is real and......
Just my two cents

 
Thoughtful post Majenco. I now see bisexuality as a fluid sexuality


KIA KAHA                       
 

December 13, 2017 9:48 pm  #820


Re: A gay ex-husband answers your questions

majenco wrote:

I absolutely think bisexuality is real and is on a varying spectrum thereby making it hard to define and understand. That being said, many gays in denial use bisexuality as a stop over on the way to admitting they are gay and this is why bisexuals have been suspect.
As for a MOM between a bisexual and a straight person? It depends. I think if everyone is aware of what’s going on from the outset then it has as good a chance of any marriage to last. Once you introduce deception into it the chance of it lasting is greatly diminished.
Just my two cents

okay so you believe bisexuality means they are attracted to both sexes and can choose either? fair enough you're entitled but I do have questions - what about all that percentages thing.  How can they say they can choose either if they are not equally attracted to both sexes?

And that's if you believe a double sexuality is commonplace.  I think it stands to reason it must be uncommonly rare.

I think the percentages thing is real - how emotionally capable they are of having sex with a woman but I don't think the desire is there for women at all.

But who cares what bisexual is in a sense, other than for your children so they can understand themselves.  From the point of view of marriage, if you're straight you need another straight of the opposite sex, just just like a gay needs another gay of the same sex for a partner.  Can you imagine what it would be like to be a straight male married to a gay man?   It would be lonely, isolating.

Emotionally speaking it's no more workable than a straight woman married to a gay man.

Have you considered the possibility that your bisexual partner is duping you into believing he desires you?

Here's another question.  How often do you think bisexuals form opposite sex marriages with each other?

wishing you all the best.  

Last edited by lily (December 13, 2017 10:07 pm)

 

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