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by Dan Eldridge
It’s a perfectly crisp early evening in the summer of 2007, and Carrie and I are slouching into one of the squishy booths in the back of a dark Pittsburgh pub called Le Mardi Gras. Anyone familiar with the neighborhood will tell you it’s a fairly serious alcoholic’s bar, mostly because the drinks are strong to the point of being ridiculous.
Also, the bartenders never seem to kick anyone out at closing time. The place has a bit of a clubby feel to it, because almost everyone is a regular. But Carrie and I don’t come here too often—only at the tail end of those nights when we’re feeling particularly naughty, or immoral. I guess that’s partly because there’s an odd energy here that seems to almost encourage decadent behavior. And besides, most of the people we know wouldn’t be caught dead drinking here, which makes the whole experience feel something like a hidden, secret escape—a respite from the hateful social hierarchy of Pittsburgh’s few hipster bars, where everyone judges everyone else, just like a high school cafeteria.
Carrie and I have been doing a lot of sneaking around lately. And to be perfectly honest, it does feel adventuresome, in an illicit sort of way. In fact, all of this started because of Carrie’s boyfriend. Sort of. It’s a complicated story, but I think it’s one worth telling. Because if I’ve learned anything about alternative partnerships over the past couple of years, it’s this: Almost no one in this country seems to understand anything about them. And personally, I think they teach a very valuable and a very important lesson. At any rate, this is a story that I think does a pretty decent job at illustrating their worth. And here’s the big shocker: It has almost nothing to do with sex.
Carrie and her boyfriend have an open relationship. They’ve been together for six years, and the partnership has been open for about five. But like most couplings, their relationship is very far from being black and white. It’s complicated, in other words. For one thing, their arrangement has a surprising number of rules. No falling in love, for instance. No lying about who you’re seeing, or when, or in what capacity. And since Pittsburgh is a small city where everyone seems to know everyone else, they’ve also agreed that there will be no parading around town while on dates—keep it discreet, please.
Carrie’s boyfriend runs his own business in the construction industry, so when they first decided to open up their relationship, it was mutually understood that the employees would not be privy to the intimate details of their boss’s sex life, or for that matter the sex life of the boss’s girlfriend. All that made perfectly good sense to me, and if you’ve ever had the displeasure of spending an hour or two with a construction crew, it should make perfectly good sense to you as well. I think it’s pretty clear that your average hammer-and-nail meathead is going to have a difficult time respecting the boss once he learns that the boss’s girlfriend occasionally has sex with other men. (And other women.)
But despite all the rules, the fact of the matter is that neither Carrie nor I have been doing a very good job at keeping anything discreet lately. We’ve been groping each other in restaurants in the middle of the day, for instance. Once, we brought along a promiscuous female friend to this very bar, and after a few rounds, the three of us took turns eagerly licking each other’s faces and lips. And yes, I understand that drunken displays of sexual affection don’t always turn heads in the bars of larger cities. But they most certainly do in ours. And unfortunately for all of us, Carrie’s boyfriend has recently been getting reports about our public behavior from his friend and co-workers, and he is not happy. “Yo!” His friends have been saying. “Who’s that dude I keep seeing all over town wit’ yo girl? They was all over each other, cuz! Right in the middle of the bar!”
And that, right there, is the reason alternative relationships can so often be so difficult to maintain. It’s the same reason gay men and women sometimes stay in the closet their entire lives: Other people don’t understand. Or maybe other people don’t approve, or maybe other people feel torn up inside when they see someone who has come to terms with their own uniqueness, especially if that uniqueness isn’t necessarily pretty.
I’m well aware that humans are curious and knowledge-seeking by nature. It’s understandable for almost anyone to become curious after learning of a couple who are non-monogamous. But as citizens of an educated society and a well developed culture, we also know damn well that those intimate details are none of our business. We know that prying is a decision only a child would make—or an adult with the mind of a child. Unfortunately, America seems to be increasingly proficient in producing just that sort of adult.
And what of those people who tattled on Carrie? Those supposed friends who in one fell swoop managed not only to humiliate her boyfriend, but also to stifle the healthy relationship that Carrie and I were trying our best to explore? Did they decide to snitch because they were truly looking out for the welfare of Carrie’s boyfriend? Or were they maybe envious—maybe even a little furious—to have seen an attractive woman so freely flaunting her sexuality without any apology or any excuse?
Whatever the reason, the fact remains that there were details about our arrangement that none of them knew. For one thing, Carrie’s boyfriend was well aware of my presence in her life. After all, I spent the night at his house at least once or twice a week. During the first few months of our courtship, he mentioned that Carrie often seemed happier after spending the day with me. He joked that I was something of an antidote to the depression she’d been suffering from for years. And because he truly loved and cared for her, and was interested in protecting something other than his own ego, he actually encouraged us to continue spending time together. What do you figure those so-called friends would think if they knew any of that?
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1 Leo Miller // Aug 4, 2008 at 3:30 pm
Dan,
I appreciate the apparent honesty in these columns. It is good to read a first-hand account of something I know very little about. Thus far, your columns have been rather general in their focus, which is fine, but I’m curious to read about a detailed incident between you and Carrie that was tough to handle, or vice-versa one that worked out very nicely.
Your proposed holding company is also interesting. Most people do not understand the legal implications of a marriage, and that without a prenuptial agreement, couples are simply signing onto the State’s de facto nuptial contract. This is why divorce is such a lucrative element of the legal market.
Anyway I’m glad you don’t claim to be a subject-matter expert when it comes to relationships, marriages, women, or life (unlike Cris and Margaret, who seem to think they have all the answers for all of us). The ordinary chap approach is easily accessible.
2 Lisa // Jul 10, 2008 at 11:27 pm
Great journey piece — I think it’s wonderful that you are sharing with us and including us in your exploration of an alternative relationship and how that works.
It cracks me up the condemnation comments — do people realize that in biblical times the idea of having just one wife was sacriledge? I think fear makes us demonize things we don’t understand and I think it’s very courageous of both of you to be so honest. With our 60% divorce rate (yeah, I know the stats say 50% but that doesn’t count the homicide rate for domestic violence — some people just off their spouse rather than deal with divorce!) I think it’s refreshing that you two are willing to take apart the mechanics of what a relationship is, inspect it thoroughly, and figure out what works for you.
BTW — I think it’s your honesty with each other that keeps either of you from creating “rules” that in truth you know you can’t live with. You gotta be real if you’re going to get outside the box! (no pun intended there.)
Keep writing!!
3 NYCer // Jun 27, 2008 at 9:35 am
I’d like to offer an alternate opinion. I too was in an open relationship for two plus years, and learned very well how to “manage” my emotions. I suppressed my rage, anger, jealousy and hurt at his liasions because expressions of them were against our “rules.” After all, my partner felt I had no recourse to confront him with them, because it was my choice to stay. By the end of the relationship, because of all this suppression I began to feel quite emotionally numb, and accepted that I might never feel full intimacy again in another relationship because I had put my natural feelings on such lockdown. I finally left him when, after finding a near rolodex of women’s business cards and numbers on his desk, I had a minor breakdown from the stress of all of our “freedom.” It was only after therapy, and the reading of a couple of seminal psychological texts on relationship dynamics (see, in particular, Otto Kernberg’s “Love Relations” for elucidating details about what may actually be happening to a couple’s capacity for mature love within open relationships) that I confronted the feelings that I had shut down in order to give him the ability to have his experiences. To this day I have not yet tried to have a another relationship, monogamous or otherwise, because I am so paranoid that all men are inclined to cheat rampantly and would secretly prefer an open relationship. While I’m sure some people find these types of partnerships liberating, they can have a significantly darker side. Reading Dan’s essays was actually very difficult for me as I recalled all of the “emotions” I had to “manage” so well that I eventually caved under the pressure of them. Ironically, for me, all of our freedom began to feel as stifling as a jail sentence, and I longed simply to feel secure, happy, and loved as the sole partner to my partner.
4 Shannon // Jun 10, 2008 at 4:32 pm
I don’t see what’s wrong with not wanting to flaunt alternative relationships, This is the friction between my boyfriend and I. He wants secondary relationships with his close female friends for one-stop-shopping and I cringe in horror at the idea of all the speculation getting around town as a result.
I don’t want this to be in the open under a microscope and am wary of those who do. It’s like, do our preferences make us special and unique enough to give insight into other people’s lives? Probably not.
I’ve been searching the interwebs all morning looking for advice on how to resolve my own inter-relationship issues and I found your article.
Why is fading into the background such a bad thing?
5 Dan Eldridge // Jun 6, 2008 at 2:48 pm
Awww… thanks Belgie! (Do I know you?!)
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