I'll give you one piece of advice, listen to your upbringing. Feelings should be discredited. They are very deceptive and almost always selfish.
I'm not sure that I would agree completely about no PDA in front of a SW.
In general, I agree with you Zec. We often let our emotions get the best of us in the face of overwhelming facts. But,there are whole psychological studies based on "intuition" or "sixth sense". These feelings are based on prior experiences all rolled up into learned reactions.I'll give you one piece of advice, listen to your upbringing. Feelings should be discredited. They are very deceptive and almost always selfish.
Mojo, that's pretty sage advice for a non-practitioner....
No PDA in front of a SW sounds boring to me, but to each his own. I can't keep my hands off of 'em....
cmj, just to piggyback on what Mojo and mystic have already said, plan on the next few years giving all of you a major reorientation re what Christianity's all about. Focus on love and forgiveness and honesty and acceptance more than what you think is the right and wrong of it. Your husband got a little ahead of himself, now everybody's reacting to the event and then reacting to others' reactions.
All three of y'all should agree now that you're going to love each other through the mistakes, and take each glitch as an opportunity for some fresh, open communication about what you want to do differently in the future, rather than who messed up and whose fault it is and what the punishment is going to be. Not to scare you, but what just happened will be laughed at later as insignificant compared to some of the things you have yet to work out.
I mean that in the same sense that parents of six or eight or more children chuckle at younger parents who think they 'have their hands' full with, say, three kids. Or you can look back at your life as, say, a teenager, and just gotta laugh at some of the things that seemed so important to you back then.
I strongly recommend the book Language and the Pursuit of Happiness for anyone who wants to improve their communication skills.
Final thought: Having the first wife oversee the development of the intimacy between husband and second wife is problematic, or maybe I should say can be problematic, or is problematic in my experience, in case there's someone out there that that worked for. In any event, that's not my family's story, and in a handful of cases I'm familiar with that strategy creates structural problems.
Mojo, that's pretty sage advice for a non-practitioner....
No PDA in front of a SW sounds boring to me, but to each his own. I can't keep my hands off of 'em....
cmj, just to piggyback on what Mojo and mystic have already said, plan on the next few years giving all of you a major reorientation re what Christianity's all about. Focus on love and forgiveness and honesty and acceptance more than what you think is the right and wrong of it. Your husband got a little ahead of himself, now everybody's reacting to the event and then reacting to others' reactions.
All three of y'all should agree now that you're going to love each other through the mistakes, and take each glitch as an opportunity for some fresh, open communication about what you want to do differently in the future, rather than who messed up and whose fault it is and what the punishment is going to be. Not to scare you, but what just happened will be laughed at later as insignificant compared to some of the things you have yet to work out.
I mean that in the same sense that parents of six or eight or more children chuckle at younger parents who think they 'have their hands' full with, say, three kids. Or you can look back at your life as, say, a teenager, and just gotta laugh at some of the things that seemed so important to you back then.
I strongly recommend the book Language and the Pursuit of Happiness for anyone who wants to improve their communication skills.
Final thought: Having the first wife oversee the development of the intimacy between husband and second wife is problematic, or maybe I should say can be problematic, or is problematic in my experience, in case there's someone out there that that worked for. In any event, that's not my family's story, and in a handful of cases I'm familiar with that strategy creates structural problems.
Not only this CMJ, but as long as your DH and FW are not under the authority of scripture, you will have no unifying approach to not just your marriage, but to life in general. Right now, he is an authority unto himself, and without scripture, he has no other guide. How many books, besides scripture, describe what plural life should look like?I believe that if they are strong, moral people that a successful plural relationship is a possibility. However, any relationship, mono or plural, is at risk if all parties involved are not under the authority of Jesus Christ.
Well said thank youWhen Samuel and I got married I wanted 6 kids. He wanted 3. We settled on 4 probably being the optimum number.
We now have 6 children with a 7th on the way.
Does this mean that any children after number 3 should feel that their father doesn't really love them and didn't really want them?
Perhaps number 7 should feel that both of us don't want him and he isn't really an asset to our lives because I previously wanted to stop at 6?
Or then there's the fact that when I got pregnant with number 6 I had a 3 month old baby and literally freaked out over the fact that I was going to have them so close together. Should she feel she wasn't wanted?
All of my children are different and they all bring something new and exciting and valuable to our family. How can 6 children from the same two parents be so vastly different? I don't know, only YHWH knows. Yet they are all loved as much as each other. Our plans changed, and that's OK.
When we got married we planned for it to be only Samuel and I for the rest of our lives. We couldn't see how things would change and that we would be open to him having another wife. It was YHWH that opened our eyes. Samuel's love for another woman won't be any less than his love for me.
I know the whole idea of PM is a pretty crazy concept at first. You wonder why one woman is just not enough. It messes with your head because of the society we live in and everything we've been brought up to believe. Society tells us we should have only 2 or 3 children too, any more is a burden and isn't wanted. Yet we have found such great satisfaction in having our children, and we would never change it. There are positives that people with smaller families just don't see. In the same way there are positives in PM that others don't see.
You're playing a numbers game in your head. One should be enough. He said one was enough. Two isn't needed, too many. You're missing the fact that this has nothing to do with numbers at all. It's about relationships. It's about expanding the family. It's about love. It's about following YHWH. It's about the fact that you are such an incredibly wonderful person that he wants you as well. Rather than that being a bad thing, that should be a huge compliment.