People With Multiple Significant Others Revealed How It All Came To Be, And It's So Fascinating
Briefly

People With Multiple Significant Others Revealed How It All Came To Be, And It's So Fascinating
"In college, I was in a three-way relationship. Basically, my girlfriend informed me, early on, that she was bi and would want to have sex with women on occasion. I'm bi too, so I told her, so long as I could experiment with men, it was a deal. We had a lot of open-sexual encounters at first, threesomes and whatnot, but nothing that lasted longer than one night."
"I realized, after that interaction, that her friend was way more into me than she was my girlfriend. Soon after that, she came to stay with us for a weekend, then longer... pretty soon, the three of us were dating. There wasn't any jealousy. I think, ultimately, my girlfriend liked girls more than boys, her girlfriend liked boys more than girls, and I liked having two girlfriends quite a lot."
A college triad formed after both partners disclosed bisexuality and agreed to reciprocal sexual exploration. Initial casual encounters and threesomes progressed into a committed three-person relationship when a friend became more involved. The triad experienced little jealousy because partners had differing gender preferences and complementary attractions. The three people shared housing, a car, finances, and mutual support, finding practical and emotional benefits in cohabitation. The relationship ended due to life transitions: one partner transferred colleges, another moved for school, and the narrator graduated and relocated, with long-distance efforts ultimately failing.
Read at BuzzFeed
Unable to calculate read time
[
|
]