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Dating a man with sexual compulsions

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Hi there- long-time lurker and first time poster. Thanks for reading and for any feedback in advance!

I’ve been dating my boyfriend for the past 1.5 years. We are both late 20s/early 30s, Ivy-league educated with advanced degrees. We have progressed in our relationship to the point where moving in together and discussing an engagement is on the horizon. We enjoy each other’s company and families, and love each other. I value my boyfriend's sense of humor, care for me, ambition, and curiosity about the world. While my boyfriend and I agreed to be monogamous at the beginning of our relationship, the actual experience has gone otherwise. While I have remained monogamous, my boyfriend has sexted with guys on Grindr and Scruff, and hooked up with guys behind my back. When we try to block hook-up apps on his phone, he finds other means. For the duration of our relationship, my boyfriend has said he has sexual compulsions that feel out of control; he’s been seeing a therapist since before we met and has had other relationships ruined by his behavior (in his words). I grew up in a house with an alcoholic brother, in an otherwise stable family environment with loving parents and other siblings, so I thought I could handle this issue with my boyfriend, particularly because he has been open to getting help and because it is easier for me to deal with if I view it as a compulsion like drinking to excess rather than as a personal attack on me. Our sex life has been non-existent at times, but my boyfriend says he is physically attracted to me.

Given this background, we have reached a really pivotal crossroads in our relationship and I’m not sure what to do. For the past 6 months I was under the impression that my boyfriend was progressing in being able to regulate and control his compulsions, but he really has not (upon recent discovery). He sometimes states that he should just be in an open relationship with someone else and that he doesn’t have compulsions; other times he states he wants a monogamous relationship with me and he has compulsions. While he has been going to individual therapy, he does not go to the sexual compulsivity group therapy for gay men his counselor recommended and has seemed pretty resistant to tackling this issue head on. We’ve both read work from sex addiction researchers like Robert Weiss and Patrick Carnes and most of the time we agree he fits the bill; sometimes though my boyfriend says he has doubts he is sexually compulsive. I feel like this has become a toxic relationship in a never-ending cycle: I snoop and discover inappropriate things, we fight about it, he apologizes and says he’s going to do better, it gets better for a week or so, and then he’s back at it, and the cycle continues. We’ve talked through everything that I’ve posted, many times. The constant lying to my face about his behaviors until I discover then is the hardest to handle.

My question then becomes: do I stay or go? And how do I deal with the aftermath of staying, or of going? It seems so painful to walk away, but it’s also become so painful to stay. Sometimes I think I should stick this out and see how he progresses; other times I think this is a lost cause and I should find someone who I can develop a different relationship with. Sometimes I enjoy my relationship, and sometimes I feel so alone. I try to simulate life with my boyfriend 10 years from now if we were married and had a child; is this the sort of environment I would want to raise the child in? Is this a life partner who can fulfill my needs? We’ve talked about opening up the relationship but this doesn’t seem like a sustainable option because of trust issues and my boyfriend’s compulsions. I’ve been in serious relationships before so I’m not afraid of being alone, and a year and a half is nothing in the grand scheme of life. A breakup is something that would be hard but that I could get through. I’ve tried breaking up with my boyfriend twice because of this issue, and because of its effect on me, and both times he’s called and messaged and emailed me over and over and over to get me to respond and give him another chance. I just don’t know what to do.
 
why not just friends with benefits instead of "boy friend" ?
 
I only have a minute to respond to this so let me say two things and then maybe I could post more later.

First, if you read what you wrote to us here as if it had been post by someone else, a complete stranger, what would you think.
I believe that within your post you have already given yourself the answer. What you have written is very cogent and well thought out. There is much that could be said here but that is what I don't have time for.

Secondly, and this is VERY important. Do NOT move in together or get married and certainly do NOT have a child together.
If you think about it, this is a good as the relationship is going to get. Marriage does not make things automatically better. It adds it's own stresses. What makes you think that someone who cannot commit to you now will do so just because you made it legal? I idea of bringing a child into this kind of a mess is more than frightening to me. You deserve better and certainly a child would, too.

Welcome to JUB, You should be able to get some good and sound advice even if it is very diverse.
 
I think you should go. This sounds like a deal breaker for you...

Being honest potentially comes with a price tag ....and his honesty has allowed you both to look at your relationship and see what it is....and isn't....you should be thankful for that. Alot of people lie to themselves and/or their partner and then it changes the whole scenario....

Walking away is always painful. It is part of the process. It passes...and you can find someone more compatible in the future....

It will be easier for him to find an open relationship and easier for you to find a monogamous one..once you are apart.
 
Addicts can't control behavior on their own. Loving an addict who is active in their addiction makes you a co-dependent. Whether you stay or go you need to seek recovery. If not, you'll fall in love with your next addict.
 
Addicts are narcissist pure and simple they do not value anyone above their own wants (not needs), ultimately he has shown you how much he values you and it up to you to say that that is unacceptable that you are worht more (and you definitely are), sure people make mistakes but he is walking over you at this point knowing your too desperate not to forgive him, i know it hurts trust me but trust me there is hope for a happy future for you. there is onyl misery for him and anyone who choose to tie their cart to his. run, run fast !
 
I just don't get some relationship stuff with Americans (and many North Europeans)
First of all how do you decide to be monogamous at the start of a relationship? You don't even know if you really like each other.
And moving together after only a year and a half? Marriage and family? And you know your guy wants to fuck around and you are still asking yourself what to do? Live your life and take it easy with the next one. That what you should do.
 
I just don't get some relationship stuff with Americans (and many North Europeans)
First of all how do you decide to be monogamous at the start of a relationship? You don't even know if you really like each other.
And moving together after only a year and a half? Marriage and family? And you know your guy wants to fuck around and you are still asking yourself what to do? Live your life and take it easy with the next one. That what you should do.

I think its pretty damn easy to decide to be monogamous at the start of a relationship. You date for 2-3 months and then have the conversation so that expectations are set. Why is that so foreign to you and Southern Europeans? Just because you don't know if he is the ONE, does not mean you should not try to be committed while figuring it out.

1.5 years is a long time. Why do you see a problem in them moving together? Saves money, and transportation costs of trying to see each other, and it can strengthen a relationship by being around that person 24/7.

If he wants to have a certain life including marriage and family at a young age, whats wrong with working towards that?

On another note, I agree with SixthSon. This is probably as good as the relationship will ever get. Pursue those things with someone else lj5081, and keep in mind that person might not be an Ivy-leaguer, and thats ok.
 
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