whose. need that extra jolt of caffeine this am. had to carry the pup outside at 3am and stay up with him until 5 to make sure he was ok. i think his diabetes is really more of an issue than his cancer at this point. i'm changing how i feed him as an experiment. rather than two meals a day i'm switching to same amount of food but spaced out every 6 hours or so to try to level out his blood sugar.
anyone with vet experience please feel free to weigh in. i'd appreciate any suggestions.
he was fine after he had some food.
M 20+ T25+ S ~15.5 (BD) BD 4/6/15 D 12/23/16
"Someone I loved once gave me A box full of darkness. It took me years to understand, That this too, was a gift." ~ Mary Oliver
I share bttrfly’s concern that, more often than not, one partner is going along with it in a desperate attempt to pretzel themselves and salvage the relationship. Otherwise I have no problem with it, although why not just stay single and non- monogamous then?
G, I totally get what you're saying and I even agree with it, in theory. I wouldn't consider it but who am I to tell someone how to live their life or negotiate their marriage.
Originally Posted by kml
although why not just stay single and non- monogamous then?
I completely agree with this ^^^ K. Some dating apps are offering it as an option in the section where people say what they're looking for in a relationship.
It's now on CNNs home page. The CNN article focused on couples who were dissatisfied in their marriages for a number of reasons - sexual incompatibility, boredom, lack of the excitement that comes with a new relationship ... in short, so many of the reasons we read in Newcomers and MLC when newbies first land here. What we call The Script.
I know someone whose spouse floated the idea, my friend went along with it because they were scared not to ... within two years they were separated, heading for divorce. The article didn't go into any research about how often that happens.
I would still like to see a follow up with honest stats showing how many of these couples are still together and happy versus divorced, or separated in 6, 12, or 18 months.
M 20+ T25+ S ~15.5 (BD) BD 4/6/15 D 12/23/16
"Someone I loved once gave me A box full of darkness. It took me years to understand, That this too, was a gift." ~ Mary Oliver
Can a monogamous couple happily become nonmonogamous? It’s possible but not easy, experts say.
Among the things that strike me and seem to be a part of our crazy world is “experts say”. Just who are these “experts”? The same experts who told us millions would die from Covid in the first months? The same experts who can’t accurately predict a snow storm 5 days away but try to to tell us what the temperature of the earths surface will be in 10 years? The same experts who told us it was a 97% certainty Hillary would beat Trump? Todays media is all full of experts and unnamed sources. Our mainstream media can’t even spell or use proper grammar but we still want to believe what they write.
As for the topic, how is this different than the open marriages of years past? There’s quite a bit of research on how well that all worked out. Fixing the problems between 2 people rarely happen by adding a third or one of the two turning away from their partner towards another person.
DonH Midwest Me 56 WAW-EXW 55 Met 11/95 / Married 5/00 Bomb 6/20/05 / She Filed on 6/2/06 / Divorced on 10/9/06 4 who'd qualify as GF since D & dated about 25 women since D