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catholic1seeks
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Now connect that to marriage and the issue at hand.
What a great question! It is absolutely critical.I must ask in hopes you will answer: Is this relationship supposed to end your longing for a man?
I do not think that marrying a woman would get rid of my SSA.I must ask in hopes you will answer: Is this relationship supposed to end your longing for a man?
I just want clarification. You do not need to answer
Yes I like this idea better. My preferred way is having a celibate, but committed, partnership with another guy.Would it not be better for you to take the marriage equation out of it totally and just find a great house mate that you could have around and share things with and be like family?
True, hence the thread’s question.There in lies your dilemma.
A committed partnership with a guy? As in a good friend?Yes I like this idea better. My preferred way is having a celibate, but committed, partnership with another guy.
It’s just a lot of other gay guys don’t see things like that.
Yes, but there would have to be some sense of commitment. I assume you are familiar with Wesley Hill and Eve Tushnet (the latter is a Catholic). They write about ways the Church needs to bring back ways of forming relationships that aren’t marriages, precisely for people who are LGBT (like communal living, blessed committed friendships, and so on).A committed partnership with a guy? As in a good friend?
I think this is the other issue with your situation. You have stated ZERO sexual attraction. Not a “1% attraction,” not a “tiny attraction,” but rather a “zero sexual attraction.”I have ZIP/ZERO sexual attraction to women.
I hear you. But that’s because our society makes it seem like that. Also who says the person has to be SSA?It’s just a lot of other gay guys don’t see things like that.
Exactly! You need intimacy but not sexual intimacy. You need a loving bond (as a friend) with a man. The Church should promote brotherly, friendly relationships more between peopleThey write about ways the Church needs to bring back ways of forming relationships that aren’t marriages, precisely for people who are LGBT (like communal living, blessed committed friendships, and so on).
Don’t get me wrong… I’m with you 100%. What you said about value was really my point. You expressed it much better than I.phil19034:![]()
I don’t think you’ve met enough women. There are PLENTY who would sign up for that deal, especially those who are relatively asexual. But … you would want to make sure that they would feel VALUED in it. A lot of women lack the ability to value themselves, so that’s what you need to be careful of.I THINK the others are very skeptical of whether you could actually find a woman would be honestly OK with this arrangement to the degree that you would have a real sacramental marriage.
Also, you want to make sure you won’t get 10 years in and say, “Enough of that, I’m gonna marry Leonardo DiCaprio. He’s dreamy!”![]()
Yes, and this is the general principle, and it’s what has led me to consider various options, including (recently) even marriage — as my PRIEST recommended.Exactly! You need intimacy but not sexual intimacy. You need a loving bond (as a friend) with a man. The Church should promote brotherly, friendly relationships more between people