CaptainValiant
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- Oct 18, 2005
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Screw you guys and your alternative "relationships". Normal people don't like their partners fooling around. So put down the fedora and get with the program.
You speak of relationships as though they are standard and defined. That's nowhere near accurate. Even with regards to sex, there is a wide range of disparity to be found. Some relationships are open, where both partners encourage the other to have at it, if the opportunity arises. Other relationships frown on even entertaining so much as a fantasy in one's imagination. And of course there are any number of relationships that fall in various places in between those two extremes.
If there has been no synching up between the partners as to where on this spectrum their relationship sits, there's no reference point to determine if a violation has occurred. There's been no opportunity to say, "Honey, I'm trusting you not to do a, b, c, or d. So if the nature of the trust hasn't been defined, how can there be trust issues?
True, as long as there has never been any agreement to refrain from the activity, whatever it is.
Correct. A relationship is based on trust and honesty. But that trust and honesty is predicated on keeping to the terms of the mutual agreement, whatever that agreement happens to be.
Not necessarily. Even if your partner decides to be okay with it, it's still cheating if you've made a prior agreement that sex with somebody else is off the table. You've "committed the crime," so to speak. You just got lucky that the plaintiff decided not to prosecute.
Like playing golf? Like secretly taking the day off work and spending it at a health spa? Is that "cheating?"
The problem with this line of thinking is that it suggests that you are obligated to tell your partner everything that you do. Otherwise you're doing it "sneakily behind your partner's back". Now some people do tell their partners everything they do, and that's fine. But to suggest that's the requirement of any relationship is pretty unreasonable. I know my lady doesn't want to hear about everything I do.
LOL. If only it were that easy. Then you could do anything you want by simply never asking yourself that question. A better rule of thumb is if you've agreed not to do something, and you do it anyway, it's cheating. Otherwise, it's not.
Like some have stated, if the S.O. doesn't know about it and tickling is a turn on to you, then it's cheating. You can place whatever levels you want to it, at the end of the day... it's cheating.
DK
I think if you do anything that you are consciously aware would hurt your 'other's' feelings and trust, is flat out cheating. If the concept of "sneaking' or 'omission of facts' plays a role in you activities... its cheating. However, if your 'other' doesn't give a weasel fuck's shit in hell what you do, or you don't give a weasel fuck about your other nor your relationship... then you are only cheating yourself.
If you're going to do something with someone else sneakily behind your partners back then it's almost always going to be cheating.
Like playing golf? Like secretly taking the day off work and spending it at a health spa? Is that "cheating?"
But that's just it. By what standard has it been decided that tickling is "supposed to have stayed within the boundaries of the relationship?" You say it as though you believe it should have been obvious, but that's really the crux of our disagreement.Really? And I thought *I* was picky, obviously I'm talking about things relevant to the conversation and not about golf and such 😛 Pretty obvious that "something" in the context of the conversation is a blanket for sex, tickling, any other stuff that may well have supposed to have stayed within the boundaries of the relationship.
But that's just it. By what standard has it been decided that tickling is "supposed to have stayed within the boundaries of the relationship?" You say it as though you believe it should have been obvious, but that's really the crux of our disagreement.
I think we can all agree that engaging in sex or romance with someone other than your SO is cheating. Those are the defaults. Those are the things that if no agreement was ever reached or even talked about, most people in the world would agree constitute a relational violation.
So, is tickling outside of a relationship automatically cheating? The answer is an emphatic NO.
Not sure if this as been talked about much here but if you find and arrange tickle sessions with someone
other than your spouse or partner and them not knowing are you cheating?
If you have done this did you have any guilt feelings about it?
I think if you do anything that you are consciously aware would hurt your 'other's' feelings and trust, is flat out cheating. If the concept of "sneaking' or 'omission of facts' plays a role in you activities... its cheating. However, if your 'other' doesn't give a weasel fuck's shit in hell what you do, or you don't give a weasel fuck about your other nor your relationship... then you are only cheating yourself.
If I have lunch with a female friend and don't tell my wife, that's not cheating. If we hug each other even if it is intimate that's not cheating. Intimacy isn't always sexual. It's the strength of a feeling. If there is no sexual contact, it's not cheating, in my opinion. Just because your spouse doesn't know about something or it isn't agreed on doesn't make it cheating. If you don't engage in sexual contact, it's not just cheating. Just my view. Tickling without intercourse is more innocuous than a kiss on the mouth good-bye. Just my opinion.
One other thing, tying the status of my conduct based on my partner's sensitivity is unacceptable to me personally to define cheating.
Well said, brother. And whatever you do, don't let anybody tell you that your opinion doesn't matter.If I have lunch with a female friend and don't tell my wife, that's not cheating. If we hug each other even if it is intimate that's not cheating. Intimacy isn't always sexual. It's the strength of a feeling. If there is no sexual contact, it's not cheating, in my opinion. Just because your spouse doesn't know about something or it isn't agreed on doesn't make it cheating. If you don't engage in sexual contact, it's not just cheating. Just my view. Tickling without intercourse is more innocuous than a kiss on the mouth good-bye. Just my opinion.
One other thing, tying the status of my conduct based on my partner's sensitivity is unacceptable to me personally to define cheating. There are possessive women and men everywhere. Their insecurity doesn't transfer otherwise nonsexual conduct into cheating. Anymore than a cell phone call. If you don't grope or act in a sexual manner, it's not cheating, in my opinion.