Sketch Zero
TMF Novice
- Joined
- Aug 28, 2015
- Messages
- 68
- Points
- 8
Hey all. This is mostly a cathartic "put pen to paper" attempt at processing but I hope to get some experience-based input from those who would share it.
I've been seeing a young woman and she is wonderful: kind, creative, clever, funny, beautiful, sexy. I really enjoy spending time with her, swapping booze, sharing recipes, roasting movies. The other day I ventured to be a little more physical and discovered that she is not ticklish -- at all! I felt disappointed when I found out (as of course I had fantasized reducing her to a giggly mess), but I was surprisingly less disappointed than I felt I would be... if that makes sense. I have long felt that tickling is a huge part of my sexual identity, but at that moment, it didn't seem to matter so much.
This is such a different problem from my typical concerns of "what if my partner isn't into it?" because in this case it's not a preference or opinion but a physical impossibility. In fact, she told me a couple times while I was testing for sensitive spots that she really wished she were ticklish.
My gut feeling is that I want to keep this going! She's such a lovely person and I really feel like we've got a good thing on. I feel like maybe tickling doesn't necessarily have to be as big a deal to me as it has seemed for the past 25+ years, and that maybe with the right person I won't even really miss it. I feel like ending things now just because of this one aspect of a relationship would be really premature. And at the same time in the back of my head is the quiet but insistent worry that if we do stick together for something more long-term, then sometime in the future I'm going to find that my kink has become an incessant itch that can't be scratched. I feel worried that maybe I won't feel fulfilled, or that she might internalize a sense of guilt of being literally incapable of doing anything about it. Or both. I don't want that for either of us. I also don't want to be so risk-averse that I fail to foster what could be a wonderful bond.
Maybe I'm too far in my own head right now. I'm still processing -- like I said, this is mostly cathartic.
Many folks here would say I should just cut and run. I've seen advice like that a lot here. I've read how some of you have ended long-term relationships, including marriages, due at least in part to lack of fulfillment caused by your partners' inability or unwillingness to indulge you in your fetish. (And that's why I feel frustrated and disheartened; I believe that if she could wave a magic wand and make herself the most ticklish woman on the planet, she'd do it... but there is no magic wand.)
I don't remember reading anything on the other side of the scale though.
Has anyone here made a long-term relationship work in spite of kink incompatibilities? I mean, I believe that all relationships require compromise. And I know that everyone's situation is different and ultimately no one can answer this but myself and my partner. I guess I want to know, if you did make it work and have been satisfied with the results, how have you done it? And what was that process like for you and your partner?
Thanks. I think I'll be ruminating on this for quite a while. I appreciate your thoughts.
I've been seeing a young woman and she is wonderful: kind, creative, clever, funny, beautiful, sexy. I really enjoy spending time with her, swapping booze, sharing recipes, roasting movies. The other day I ventured to be a little more physical and discovered that she is not ticklish -- at all! I felt disappointed when I found out (as of course I had fantasized reducing her to a giggly mess), but I was surprisingly less disappointed than I felt I would be... if that makes sense. I have long felt that tickling is a huge part of my sexual identity, but at that moment, it didn't seem to matter so much.
This is such a different problem from my typical concerns of "what if my partner isn't into it?" because in this case it's not a preference or opinion but a physical impossibility. In fact, she told me a couple times while I was testing for sensitive spots that she really wished she were ticklish.
My gut feeling is that I want to keep this going! She's such a lovely person and I really feel like we've got a good thing on. I feel like maybe tickling doesn't necessarily have to be as big a deal to me as it has seemed for the past 25+ years, and that maybe with the right person I won't even really miss it. I feel like ending things now just because of this one aspect of a relationship would be really premature. And at the same time in the back of my head is the quiet but insistent worry that if we do stick together for something more long-term, then sometime in the future I'm going to find that my kink has become an incessant itch that can't be scratched. I feel worried that maybe I won't feel fulfilled, or that she might internalize a sense of guilt of being literally incapable of doing anything about it. Or both. I don't want that for either of us. I also don't want to be so risk-averse that I fail to foster what could be a wonderful bond.
Maybe I'm too far in my own head right now. I'm still processing -- like I said, this is mostly cathartic.
Many folks here would say I should just cut and run. I've seen advice like that a lot here. I've read how some of you have ended long-term relationships, including marriages, due at least in part to lack of fulfillment caused by your partners' inability or unwillingness to indulge you in your fetish. (And that's why I feel frustrated and disheartened; I believe that if she could wave a magic wand and make herself the most ticklish woman on the planet, she'd do it... but there is no magic wand.)
I don't remember reading anything on the other side of the scale though.
Has anyone here made a long-term relationship work in spite of kink incompatibilities? I mean, I believe that all relationships require compromise. And I know that everyone's situation is different and ultimately no one can answer this but myself and my partner. I guess I want to know, if you did make it work and have been satisfied with the results, how have you done it? And what was that process like for you and your partner?
Thanks. I think I'll be ruminating on this for quite a while. I appreciate your thoughts.