I wish I had paragraphs of suggestions, tips, and sage words of wisdom. I don't think it works like that. I'm almost a year and a half past my divorce, and I've learned a couple things that perhaps I should have known from the beginning. First is not to minimize or ignore that rate that people grow closer together or closer apart. I was married for over twenty years to someone that I was incredibly close to at the outset. Yet, over the years, we changed as people, and other life events happened. In looking back now, it's still hard to pinpoint exactly where each moment of change was, but they added up, leading to the divorce. I remember hearing that 'people don't change'. Yet I'm different now in my 40s than I was in my 20s. I'd like to think I've changed for the better, or 'evolved' as some might say. But with such changes, it is possible to grow apart from your spouse. I believe we both could have worked more to stay connected and that we each bear some responsibility for that, but that view is not shared by her.
Second, while I can't speak to all kinks, I have now learned that one must be honest about their sexual interests. Repression is not a permanent solution. I made twenty years of marriage, but in truth, there were lots of bumps along the way, stemming from different sexual interests and for lack of a better phrase, vanilla vs. kink. I have strong interests in medical play and the other side was largely turned off by it. It became a friction point, and almost a point of control in the marriage (and I don't mean control in a desirable way). Compounding the issue was that the woman I date prior to the woman I married was very much into kink and I made the mistake of thinking my career pursuits and publicly known passions were the most important items to consider regarding compatibility. I was wrong. For those reading, it's likely easy to think, 'wow, he's stupid', and history proves I wasn't great with choices made. But sharing intimate sexual desires has so many levels to it, levels to which I guess I was truly ready to explore with my ex-wife, or perhaps I should say, levels that she wasn't willing to explore with me.
As for looking forward, I won't make the same mistakes twice. I have to be more open with a future partner, which means taking more risk upfront. I don't know exactly what point in the relationship that needs to happen, but I know that it must be sooner than it happened last time. In my mid-40s, I have love in my heart and commitment to be directed towards the right next partner. I'd like to think I'd find them via zity, although from what I've read, the chances of that are very low. That part of the journey is yet to be undertaken, but I know that I have to be true to my feelings and interests and not only hope that they will be tolerated by the other person, but actually enjoyed with the other person. On a certain level, career paths are more superficial than love and intimacy, and I learned that my outlook prioritized things that today I probably wouldn't prioritize. Some will likely say this is on me, that I should have known, etc. But life is a learning experience and I'm finally at the point where I can honestly assess and go forward. That would be my third point.
Anything coming out of divorce, needs to be reflected upon and studied. You don't want to make the same mistakes twice. Which is not to say that everything is your fault. That's definitely not the truth. But no one is perfect, so there are things that be reflected on before diving into the next relationship. I think that self-reflection has helped a lot, and in the case of medfet, confirmed to me that it is very important and not something I see as optional. I think I feel into the trap of societal norms before, where I didn't think I could make such an assertion on the world as I knew it, so I tried to temper my interests or shield them from the world altogether. That didn't work then, and it won't work now, so I will handle it more honestly going forward.
I hope something written here is of value. I don't mean to preach, or to get verbose, but it's a topic I've thought a lot about lately, so when I saw this topic come up on zity, I thought I'd go out on a limb and share.