Over the past few years, my
husband and I have realized that he has needs that I cannot meet. I do
not begrudge him these needs, and I would fill them if I could. I want
him to be happy and satisfied, not just for him, but for myself as
well. We discussed opening our relationship, but our therapist recoiled
at the idea. If I can’t help him and we can’t have someone else help
him, what can we do? We can’t imagine breaking up, but if we’re both
unhappy, then I can only assume that we will split eventually. We have
been together for over a decade and love each other deeply. I am sick
over this situation, and I don’t know what to do. I don’t know that I
fully trust our therapist, and I would like to hear an informed second
opinion. I value your advice.
Life...
...know that I
fully trust our therapist, and I would like to hear an informed second
opinion. I value your advice.
Life Decisions
Here’s an informed second opinion: Fuck your
asshole therapist. And here’s a better-informed bonus third
opinion:
“It’s incredibly unfortunate that some
therapists either aren’t educated about open relationships or buy into
common myths about them,” says Tristan Taormino, activist, author,
pornographer, and author of Opening Up: A Guide to Creating and
Sustaining Open Relationships. Way too many therapists, she says,
“pathologize people who want to open their relationships and try to
convince them that they have intimacy or commitment issues. The truth
is you can be both intimate with and fully committed to more than one
partner, or be committed to one partner and have sex with others.”
Tristan interviewed scores of couples in
successful open relationships, and she found that many initially opened
their relationships because of an issue of sexual incompatibility.
“The scenario you present is not uncommon,”
she continues. “If both of you really are committed to giving it a go,
I’d advise you to find a new therapist, one who has experience
with—and not a prejudice against—non-monogamous clients.
The right therapist can help you figure out your limits, set
boundaries, and make an agreement about this new type of relationship
that works for both of you.”
You can also check out the stories, advice,
and references at Tristan’s website
www.openingup.net. Good luck, LD.
I’ve enjoyed your column for
years and always found you to be well reasoned. That’s why your
agreement with Perez Hilton on Miss California was so shocking. I’m a
straight guy totally for gay rights in all respects. Still, it’s
beneath you to call someone who disagrees with your position a “dumb
bitch.” You’re better than that, Dan! Don’t you see that you and Mr.
Hilton are promulgating hatred against a person for that individual’s
beliefs, something you both claim to abhor?
Basically On Your Side
I don’t think Miss California is a dumb
bitch for her beliefs, BOYS, but for her actions. (“Love the
sinner/dumb bitch, hate the sin/dumb bitchery.”) For the record: There
are lots of reasonable folks out there who oppose same-sex marriage,
and I can interact with them in a civil fashion. Heck, I voted for an
opponent of marriage equality back in November.
What sets Miss CA apart from reasonable
opponents of marriage equality, BOYS, is her opportunism coupled with
her stupidity.
I thought Perez Hilton went too far when he
called Miss CA a “dumb bitch” after the pageant—and said so on my
blog. But I started to come around to Hilton’s POV after Miss CA,
despite having said at the pageant that she thought it was “great that
Americans are able to choose” gay marriage or “opposite marriage,”
joined a political campaign to deny marriage rights to gays and
lesbians. Miss CA is leveraging her spat with Hilton for her own
personal financial gain. Ghostwritten books, speaking gigs at
evangelical churches, a potential guest-host gig on The
View—beats work, huh? And so what if it oppresses gays and
lesbians?
And that’s when I thought, “Hmm, I guess she
is a bitch.”
And then came her interview on Fox News:
“You know what, Greta? I don’t have the answers to everything,” Miss CA
told Greta Van Susteren when asked about civil unions. And when Van
Susteren followed up by asking Miss CA “what [she] thinks” about civil
unions and gay people adopting children, Miss CA responded,
“I’m not a politician, so I can’t give you an answer to that.” So
seeing as she’s not a politician, Miss CA can’t be expected to
know what she herself thinks about adoptions and civil
unions.
And that’s when I thought, gawd, she’s dumb,
too—and that’s when I had to concede that Hilton was right.
I’m a 17-year-old girl. My
16-year-old boyfriend doesn’t like condoms, and I don’t like what birth
control pills do to my emotions and my skin. Now what?
Pregnancy Isn’t Looking Likely
I’ll be with you in a minute, PILL. But
first…
More stupidity and opportunism: Bristol
Palin is now a spokesperson for an organization that encourages
teenagers to abstain from having sex. “Regardless of what I did
personally,” Bristol advised America’s youth last week, “abstinence is
the only… 100 percent foolproof way you can prevent pregnancy.”
Here are a few other 100 percent foolproof
ways to prevent pregnancy, Bristol, right off the top of my head:
mutual masturbation, oral sex, anal sex (aka “saddlebacking” when
practiced by Christian teens), outercourse, sex toys, cybersex, GAY
SEX. There are actually lots of “foolproof” ways for teenagers (and
adults) to be intimate without risking an unplanned pregnancy.
Instead of telling teenagers to say no to
sex—which will work about as well as telling them to say no to
drugs—we should tell them there are ways to be sexual that carry
no risk of pregnancy. But if they do decide to have sex, of course,
they’re going to need to know about and have access to contraception
and the “morning after” pill—and, yes, abortion services. But if
we continue to present being sexually active as either/or—either
abstinence or vaginal intercourse—we’re going to see more
outcomes like yours, Bristol.
When you explain to nervous, inexperienced
teenagers that they don’t have to jump right into full
intercourse—that there are degrees of intimacy, and risk, and
they can have enjoyable sexual experiences without vaginal (or anal)
penetration—they’re often relieved. (And just imagine what we
could have been spared—all of us, Bristol, from your family to
Levi’s family to the McCain campaign—if Levi had limited himself
to inseminating your tonsils.)
So, PILL, here’s what you do: Enjoy
outercourse, oral, masturbation, and sex toys—and tell your
boyfriend that these aren’t consolation prizes for teenagers, but
honest-to-God sex acts that adults enjoy—until you and your
boyfriend find the condoms and lube that work for you.
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