Why I Want My Partner To Sleep Around With Other People

How my partner being with other people strengthens our relationship.

man and woman pressing foreheads together with sunset in background oneinchpunch / Shutterstock
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My partner and I are in an "open" relationship, in the sense that either of us can, at any time, take a lover.

We have a few ground rules, of course, the most important of which is the honesty inherent in the relationship.

RELATED: Why People In Open Relationships Are Happier, According To Research

Without honesty, there is no trust. Without trust, there is no relationship, because there is no relating.

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Speaking as the male in this scenario, I would like to point out my personal feelings. 

If my woman were to meet someone she liked, would want to be intimate with that person, and the other person was similarly inclined, I would be offended if she did not pursue it.

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Allow me to reiterate, for those who missed it the first time: I want my woman to "sleep around."

It would upset me if she were to *not* pursue physical pleasure if it was offered, and she wanted it.

If I thought that she had turned it down out of deference to me and my feelings of jealousy, or out of some sense of duty to me, I would be horrified.

Our household runs on rational thought. Our feelings, just like everyone else's, have little to do with rational thought.

RELATED: What Counts As Cheating, According To Experts

This is an enormous barrier to communication, but if you can figure out how to surmount it, then you're in a very good place.

We communicate constantly, and to be quite honest, our external "affairs" are few and far between. Having the freedom to have emotions, on the other hand, has made this one of the easiest and best relationships I've ever been in.

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The honesty was specified up front, the trust built on that, and we have been quite happy for over 7 years now.

We have found that intimacy and being intimate are not synonymous.

We have both been in relationships where intimacy was a substitute for intimacy and found them lacking.

We have both been in abusive, controlling relationships and found them to be unhappy and unhealthy. I have the (ahem) special privilege of having been on both sides of that, having been both the abuser and the abused, at various points in my life.

RELATED: The Weird Reason Why Women Initiate Open Marriages Way More Than Men

We have found our intimacy, and (surprise!) being intimate has very little to do with it.

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Don't get me wrong, the intimacy is still fun, we still chase one another through the living room occasionally, but it's not a *substitute* for anything.

Now, being physically together, on the other hand, is intimate, but that's more than a physical act.

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It's cuddling, caressing, murmuring, focusing 100% on each other, getting inside each other's hearts and minds, sharing life and love, and warmth and happiness.

In other words, it's intimate. And yes, it's intimacy. But the two are no more required for one another than they are mutually exclusive.

The intimacy I have gained with my woman is invaluable to me, and I wouldn't trade her for the world. Because we communicate, I know she feels the same way about me.

RELATED: 5 Hard-To-Talk-About Things I Wish I Knew Before Agreeing To An Open Relationship

Alex Alexander is a pseudonym. The author of this article is known to YourTango but is choosing to remain anonymous.

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