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Sexplain It: My Girlfriend Can Date Other People—Just No Cis Men :malefeminist::marseyindignantturn:

https://www.menshealth.com/sex-women/a45641497/sexplain-it-polaymory-no-cisgender-men

:#marseycuckfiction:

Dear Sexplain It,

I (FTM/30) have a (cisgender/32) girlfriend, and we are polyamorous. My ONE boundary is I don't want to be in a relationship with someone who dates cis men because of the emotional labor it takes for me and the degree of dysphoria it sends me into. She is free to date all others, including cis women, trans women, and trans men who are pre/non/post-op.

I've done a lot of work in therapy around this, and it is not out of jealousy but truly uncontrollable dysphoria and a sense of safety I need in a sexual relationship. We want to be together, but it seems that lately, she is not happy with this boundary despite her having access to everyone else. She's had s*x with a ton more people than me since we've been together for three years.

Is there any hope that we can make it work without me having to loosen that boundary? I feel letting this boundary go will not only damage my internal world but also that I won't be able to look at her or our relationship the same anymore. Please help!

—Anyone But Cis Men

Dear Anyone But Cis Men,

Is this really your ONE boundary in the relationship? I'm sure you have other boundaries regarding mutual respect, communication, honesty, condom use, STI testing, and so on---which is a good thing. Having multiple agreed-upon boundaries makes relationships healthy and sustainable.

I think the reason you're claiming you have ONE boundary is because you're trying to make yourself seem reasonable. But "reasonable" is subjective: some poly people may be totally fine with your boundary, because, as you say, they'd still have "access to everyone else." Others might say you're infringing on their sexual and romantic autonomy, and they're opposed to their partner having veto power in their relationships.

Don't get me wrong: there's nothing wrong with you establishing that boundary. After years of therapy and self-reflection, you've realized that you would not feel comfortable with your partner dating a cis man because it would trigger your dysphoria and make you feel unsafe. I'm proud of you for coming to that revelation, as I'm sure it wasn't easy. I'm proud of you for knowing what it would take to feel supported and safe in a relationship.

But I also respect your girlfriend for knowing what she needs in her love life, and it sounds like what she needs is to date some cis men. If you're not open to loosening your boundary, and she doesn't want to adhere to it as is, then I don't see how this can work without at least one of you being unhappy. That doesn't mean either of you has done something wrong, or that you don't have lots of love for each other; it just means you two might not be compatible.

I know it's not what you wanted to hear, but I don't support you reining her in against her will (just like I wouldn't support her pushing you to accept uncontrollable dysphoria). Assuming neither of you wants to budge on your boundaries, I say it's time to look for a new partner who's cool with your needs.

:#marseypoonerretard:

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I (FTM/30) have a (cisgender/32) girlfriend, and we are polyamorous. My ONE boundary is I don't want to be in a relationship with someone who dates cis men because of the emotional labor it takes for me

Now I think about it I've never heard a bioman ever sincerely use 'emotional labour'

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It's a real thing, it just means something completely different, like a doctor's bedside manner, having to smile and nod while your boss goes on one of his tirades, pretending to care about someone's day, acting interested in a coworker's idea so they'll shut up and listen to your better one, or trying to talk a stranger out of jumping off of Mt. Rushmore. When you bring that into relationships, it's a two way street, and the sort of people who talk abut it online invariably have awareness only of their own. Thinking about relationships transactionally like this on a regular basis is also a surefire way to smother the spark.

This basket case thinks dealing with his shit like a man [or woman -- just being careful not to accidentally misgender him] is emotional labor on behalf of his girlfriend, with nary a thought to the actual emotional labor his girlfriend is doing by putting up with this crap.

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The emotional labor is that even this :marseypoonerretard: knows she will never be a man

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