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'My husband constantly pestered me for sex. It was unbearable - then it suddenly stopped.
'It was obvious he was getting it elsewhere, but we've never spoken about it. I don't ask questions when he's late home and we get on better. It's an arrangement that suits both of us.'
It's an unconventional set up, but if you would be prepared to tolerate your partner cheating to save your relationship, then you've become 'tolyamorous'.
Dan Savage, a US columnist and podcaster (Savage Love), has coined the term to describe relationships where one or both partners put up with – or tolerate – the other persons outside sexual or romantic contact.
It's not an open relationship because the couple have never acknowledged or discussed the infidelity. Instead, one of both turn a blind eye, look the other way and pretend nothing is happening.
Socially, the couple continue to present as monogamous, even though the relationship isn't.
'Tolyamoury' describes relationships where one or both partners tolerate the other's infidelities
TOLYAMORY IS MORE COMMON THAN YOU THINK
It sounds unsavoury but tolyamory has been around for as long as marriage has. It now just has a catchy name.
This kind of relationship is especially prevalent where there's already a clear trade: one person has lots of money and power and the other gets to enjoy their privilege and lifestyle…as long as they put up with certain things.
It's also common in relationships where splitting up doesn't suit either of you. Why did Hillary Clinton stick with Bill when his infidelity was exposed? Because staying with him helped her political aspirations.
As Dan Savage points out, tolyamory doesn't necessarily mean one person is being fooled or taken advantage of. There are circumstances where it suits both perfectly.
Relationships and sex expert Tracey Cox (pictured) explains that tolyamoury is not the same as an open relationship because the couple have never acknowledged or discussed infidelity
WHY TOLYAMORY SUITS SOME COUPLES
Sometimes, the positives make the cheating tolerable. It can even improve the relationship. Especially if…
You don't want sex with your partner and are happy to have that need fulfilled elsewhere. I see it a lot in couples with mismatched libidos. One person wants a lot of sex, the other might not want any sex at all. They didn't start out that way but have reached this place after a long time together. If you love your partner but don't want to have sex with them or deny them their pleasure, outsourcing it is one solution to the problem.
You don't want to lose or compromise your lifestyle or income. Divorce usually means splitting what you have by half - at the very least it means losing some material possessions. If marrying someone with a high income was important to you, living the lifestyle you want might be more important than a spouse being faithful.
You don't want to upset your children and family. Not wanting to hurt your children is probably the most common reason for tolyamory. Ending a long-term relationship is complicated, messy and heart-breaking. And it's not just the children whose world crumbles, it's everyone around you as well. Mutual friends, parents and siblings suffer; grandparents are fearful their access to grandchildren will be compromised, friends worry they'll have to choose sides. Splitting up with their family can be more painful than splitting up with your partner.
You can't imagine life without your partner and would rather put up with cheating than live without them. A desperately sad reason to stay, but still preferable to the alternative for some people.
The relationship has morphed into deep friendship and, while you don't want sex anymore, they do. Older couples sometimes slide into this arrangement without ever condoning or discussing it. You love them enough to not want to deny them something they really enjoy.
WHY IT DESTROYS OTHERS
In the past, it was more often women who were expected to tolerate their husbands' indiscretions. The closing of the infidelity gap means either gender could now find themselves in this situation.
As you can imagine, tolyamory comes with many downsides.
If can cause emotional distress. If you're looking the other way because your self-esteem is in shatters and you don't think you deserve respect from your partner, it's clearly not a good solution. Ditto if putting up with it makes you feel betrayed, sad and lonely.
There's an erosion of trust. Trust is the cornerstone of a healthy relationship – and you don't just need it for sex and love. You need to be able to trust your partner to do the right thing by you, manage shared finances responsibly, be a good parent, behave well with people you love. If you lose trust in one area, it can erode it in others.
There are health risks if your partner isn't having safe sex.
Resentment and bitterness can build over time. It's not easy being faithful long-term. Take away morals and consequences and we'd all probably have a lusty fling now and then. What stops us is commitment, our moral code and doing the 'right thing' by our partner. Watching your partner have their cake and eat it too, isn't easy when you're denying yourself a slice.