<snip>...my husband constantly talks about having a sister wife. <snip> My husband has to mention plural marriage in everything we talk about. For example an old friend reached out to me on Facebook and the first thing he asked was " Do you think she would be into plural marriage?" or he could see a picture of a woman and say "I bet she would be into plural marriage". <snip> . . . but I don't know if he realizes how much it hurts me. <snip> Does anyone have any advice?
Good afternoon,
@Needinghelp. I skipped over most of your post in quoting it, and my only justification in doing so is my sense, after reading everyone's responses, that everything else has been thoroughly addressed by others. So please know that I'm not failing to recognize, based on your presentation of things, that your husband could use some counseling about how to straighten out his own thoughts on plural marriage.
However, I do have one piece of advice for you that may help you see things in a different light. The theme in the sentences I picked out of your original post is that you perceive your husband as being obsessed with having a plural marriage, and you have a negative interpretation of this obsession. Setting aside what would be a much longer conversation about where the causes of feeling hurt lie (as in, it's human nature to blame our emotions on others, but most often we generate them all on our own), have you considered the possibility that one of the parts you are playing in this situation is that you are defining your husband's desire for another wife to be a victimization of you? -- when, instead, you might much more accurately label his 'obsession' as simply part of his male human nature?
I invite you to start looking at this differently by first contemplating the following: there was a time in the past when your husband was just as obsessed with finding you, a state of obsession that began even before he knew you or knew you existed. When he was in that state of obsession, his very best friends, his closest family members and perhaps even some of his trusted coworkers couldn't help hearing about this obsession of his to find a mate. It's likely they even sometimes got annoyed with him for how often he talked about it, just as likely as it is that, over time, this mate-obsession matured in its focus. This kind of talking is especially common among groups of single guys, and even more especially common among best male friends. (I can't even imagine not talking at length about such things with any of the close male friends I've had over the years.) At some point in time, your husband met you, and after that he probably even risked
losing (or did lose) some friends because they sensed they were on the verge of losing
him to
you, given how increasingly obsessed with
you he was becoming.
Ask yourself: would you have wanted him to
not be as obsessed with you? Would you have preferred that he had informed his friends that he someday wanted to get married and then kept his obsession to himself? Would you have preferred that he didn't use his friends as sounding boards to see if his burgeoning obsession with you made any sense at all? If you believe you would have preferred this, then I suggest you contemplate the very real possibility that what he would have done after that wouldn't have likely involved ending up being married to you, much less fathering the child you now want him to pay more attention to.
What has occurred since his obsession led to your marriage is that you have become, in addition to being his wife and helpmeet, one of his best friends -- if not his
best friend. As is natural, he wants to share his new 'obsession' with the closest of his best friends, which is
you. Might I suggest that you consider the honor it is for you to be this closest of best friends? And might I suggest that you shift your focus from (a) declaring that you're being victimized by your husband's wandering eye and incessant mental pursuit of his next wife to (b) giving
very serious consideration to putting your own personal power to its most effective use by taking full ownership of your status as such a close friend to recognize that the fact that your husband runs all his perceptions of women by you is a
privilege within your relationship -- and a privilege that deserves support and encouragement, as well as partner-oriented feedback, from someone who would like to consider herself her husband's very best friend.