Thanks for starting a thread on this. Love philosophizing the hell out of everything
A relationship itself is not a need it’s a want. I think of needs as non-negotiable items and this varies from individual to individual. And changes over time too.
Most people in relationships need monogamy, not all do. I need honesty to stay in a relationship. It’s not negotiable.
I need physical intimacy in a relationship. It probably my top thing for connection. And that changes, when I was in child rearing years, I needed more acts of service. I realize there may come a time where actual sex may fade out. We are getting older. But I probably will always enjoy being held, preferably skin to skin, kissed, hugged, my hand held. I don’t imagine that need is going to go away, so I chose someone in my second marriage that was compatible with that. My first just wasn’t and we were too young for me to face a lifetime of that struggle. Too lonely, I chose to be alone in the end than face that constant rejection.
So, if this relationship was no longer I am not going to seek to be in a relationship with an asexual. But an asexual person may find it better to look for someone who has physical connection low on their list or not at all on their relationship need list.
Some needs you can get from other relationships. My husband isn’t a big analyzer unless it involves his hobbies or business, so this is where I rely on girlfriends more. But he knows that sometimes I need to sit down and look at myself or our relationship and he abides, but that is not a need for him.
So to me marriage is about balancing needs so that I can be a happy well adjusted human and so can he.
Our needs are our responsibility to identify and seek out. To negotiate them is sometimes possible. As I pointed out I think sex is a difficult one to balance for most relationships. You are always going to have a higher need person, and if not you found something pretty rare. In our marriage that person has admittedly been mostly him, but we have had periods where it was me. We are in such a period now. So we work at it a little. Sometimes we have physical intimacy without sex and that is new for us. But it helps us stay connected and I find ways to um, supplement. But regardless of drive we can have regular intimacy.
I think entitlement is probably more of a toxic word. I am not entitled to his body. I am not entitled for certain acts to be performed that are outside his comfort zone. I am not entitled to cheat if he does not want to share his body. But without working together to balance this in some way likely resentment or loneliness can ensue because we are human. Certainly he has expressed needing more from me in that department over the years and we work on it.
I think when you have two people with a similar vision of how they want the relationship to look it really is much easier to balance. And marriage is long so none of this is going to be perfect, and things will change, but I think marriage is continuing to pursue a a relationship that works for both people and however you want to name it- needs, requirements, etc, these are the benchmarks of compatibility.
If compatibility wanes and you don’t work through it, then of course resentments come up. And eventually it could lead to ending a relationship. But having needs is not a bad thing, it’s a normal human thing. It’s only bad when it’s treated in a toxic nature.
[This message edited by hikingout at 11:23 PM, Wednesday, October 30th]