Iām a heteroflexible married cis woman in my 40s. Iām also a POS cheater and a catfish. I really fucked up. One year ago, I met an older man in an online fetish forum. He sent me an unsolicited PM, and we have talked for hours every day since then. My husband, whom Iāve been married to for more than 20 years, does not know that I am having an emotional affair. I have no intention of telling my husband what Iāve done. I have been honest with my online boyfriend about everything except my name, my age, and the fact that I have a husband. (I know those are all really big things to lie about.) My boyfriend lied to me early on about his name, age, and relationship status, but came clean out of guilt. So I had the opportunity to say that I lied too, but I...
Conning And Tricking For Intensely Selfish Haven
Far be it from me to question your therapistās assessmentāsheās spoken with you on multiple occasions, and her insights are doubtless more informedābut I think her framing falls short.
She describes your actions as a coping mechanism: You told a stranger lies and abused your husbandās trust to escape your miserable life. If you werenāt so fucking miserableāif other people and/or circumstances hadnāt conspired to make you so fucking miserableāyou wouldnāt have done this. You wouldnāt be doing this still. But despite your therapistās efforts to help you down off that hook, CATFISH, you seem determined to hang there. Sheās offering you absolution, in whole or in part, while you stand around flagellating yourself (āPOS cheater,ā āfucking coward,ā ābad person,ā etc.).
Personally, I think youāre entitled to your feelings. Go ahead and feel terrible. You did a bad thing. Itās not the worst thing someoneās ever done online, and most people know not to take what a stranger tells them on the internet at face value. But if feeling terrible doesnāt motivate you to make changes... well, itās not for me to question your sincerity. But some people think itās okay to do terrible things so long as they have the decency to feel terrible about having done them. If youāre not one of those peopleāif you actually feel badādoing something about it and learning something from it will alleviate your misery.
Hereās what you need to do: End things with your boyfriend. Write him an email, tell him the truth about your age, marital status, and unavailability. Donāt share your real name with him; youāre under no obligation to do so, and if he turns out to be the vindictive type, CATFISH, you donāt want him to have your real identity. Apologize for not coming clean when he didāhe lied to you too at the startāand thank him for the pleasure of his virtual company and the joy he brought to your life. Then block him.
Hereās what you need to learn: You didnāt do this because youāre miserableāor you didnāt do it just because youāre miserable. You did this because it was fun. We call it āplayā when children pretend to be someone or something theyāre not; childās play is also, yes, a coping mechanism. Vulnerable children pretend to be big and powerful superheroes and/or monsters to cope with and momentarily escape their relative powerlessness. And nothing makes a childās playful fantasy feel more real than a good friend who plays along.
Most adults donāt make time for playāmost of us arenāt LARPers or kinkstersābut even adults need play, and some adults need play more than others. You found a space where you could play (that online fetish forum), and you found a playmate who helped make your fantasies feel real (a guy youāve never actually met and who could still be lying to you about all sorts of things). It got out of hand when arousal, orgasms, oxytocin, and promises you couldnāt keep got stirred into the mix. The play made you feel better at first, but the dishonesty and stress of deceiving two people eventually wiped out the benefits you were getting.
You need to find a way to build some play into your life, sexual and/or nonsexual, that doesnāt require you to lie or hide. It would be great if you could do that with your husband, CATFISH, but if heās not willing or able to play with you, get his okay to play on your own.
I am a 70-year-old straight woman, and I havenāt been in an intimate relationship for seven years. I feel deprived of physical contact, but I also have some obstacles to pursuing intimacy at this point in my life. My vagina is seriously out of shape. In fact, it was a challenge to have sex with my last partner, because he was rather well-endowed. I had to work up to it, but it finally worked. My libido is on the low side, but it still flares up now and then. I also have herpes, plus Iām taking an antidepressant that makes it hard for me to orgasm. But even with all that, Iāve enjoyed sex in the past. Would it make sense for me to look for a man who may also have some sexual issues and/or be willing to work with/around mine? Someone who enjoys all the other aspects of sexual intimacy besides penis in vagina? How would I find such a man? Iām not necessarily just looking for sexāa compatible companion would be great.
Need Fresh Input
āNFI can have it allāsex, companionship, orgasms,ā said Joan Price, author of Naked at Our Age and The Ultimate Guide to Sex After 50. āShe just needs to find someone who realizes that partnered sex does not have to mean PIV.ā
Your best bet for finding a man these days? Dating apps and websites, including dating apps for seniors. And donāt be shy about taking PIV off the menu, NFI, at least at the start.
āAs we age, many of us find non-penetrative sex with hands, mouth, and vibrator more comfortable, sexier, and an easier path to orgasm,ā said Price. āAnd that includes men with erectile difficulties or decreased sensation. In her discussions with a potential new partner, NFI should explain that sheād like to get sexual in stagesāand then explore and delight each other sexually, including orgasms, without PIV as the goal. But if she might enjoy PIV in the future, she should keep her vagina active with solo sex including a dildo or penetrative vibrator. Donāt wait until the right penis comes along.ā
Joan Priceās new book, Sex After Grief: Navigating Your Sexuality After the Loss of Your Beloved, will be released soon. Follow her on Twitter @JoanPrice.