NYT: "How a Polyamorous Mom Had a Big Sexual Adventure and Found Herself"
| Maize windowlicker dingle berry | 01/13/24 | | deep motley theatre | 01/13/24 | | Cruel-hearted juggernaut location | 01/13/24 | | deep motley theatre | 01/13/24 | | submissive hyperactive range tank | 01/13/24 | | tantric hot university | 01/14/24 | | Rebellious Jewess | 01/13/24 | | deep motley theatre | 01/14/24 | | tantric hot university | 01/14/24 | | Cordovan Boyish Theater | 01/13/24 | | Beady-eyed grizzly institution toilet seat | 01/13/24 | | deep motley theatre | 01/13/24 | | Cordovan Boyish Theater | 01/13/24 | | Exciting ratface wrinkle | 01/14/24 | | sick trust fund blood rage | 01/13/24 | | Maize windowlicker dingle berry | 01/13/24 | | massive naked business firm | 01/14/24 | | concupiscible native | 01/14/24 | | Mind-boggling pozpig dopamine | 01/14/24 | | deep motley theatre | 01/13/24 | | Crawly mad cow disease elastic band | 01/13/24 | | Mentally Impaired Codepig | 01/13/24 | | amber appetizing church building | 01/13/24 | | galvanic digit ratio main people | 01/13/24 | | Aphrodisiac saffron liquid oxygen sex offender | 01/13/24 | | stubborn multi-billionaire chad | 01/13/24 | | Cruel-hearted juggernaut location | 01/13/24 | | fishy underhanded deer antler | 01/13/24 | | Turquoise Indian Lodge French Chef | 01/13/24 | | Hyperventilating Stag Film Puppy | 01/14/24 | | Mind-boggling pozpig dopamine | 01/14/24 | | Coral senate | 01/14/24 | | silver regret | 01/14/24 | | sick trust fund blood rage | 01/13/24 | | out-of-control buff hunting ground | 01/13/24 | | 180 metal theater stage | 01/13/24 | | Titillating laser beams cuck | 01/13/24 | | Beady-eyed grizzly institution toilet seat | 01/13/24 | | out-of-control buff hunting ground | 01/13/24 | | deep motley theatre | 01/13/24 | | unholy talented gas station | 01/13/24 | | filthy self-centered patrolman kitty | 01/14/24 | | unholy talented gas station | 01/14/24 | | lilac friendly grandma den | 01/13/24 | | mewling swollen coffee pot | 01/14/24 | | snowy alcoholic national clown | 01/14/24 | | Laughsome mahogany indirect expression | 01/13/24 | | arrogant shitlib personal credit line | 01/13/24 | | contagious abode dragon | 01/13/24 | | Chestnut garrison | 01/13/24 | | Fiercely-loyal Khaki Candlestick Maker Meetinghouse | 01/13/24 | | stubborn multi-billionaire chad | 01/13/24 | | spruce geriatric brethren | 01/13/24 | | medicated comical market coldplay fan | 01/13/24 | | Curious Police Squad Mexican | 01/13/24 | | drunken swashbuckling philosopher-king | 01/14/24 | | aromatic chapel | 01/14/24 | | Primrose Flatulent Black Woman Site | 01/14/24 | | supple judgmental plaza private investor | 01/14/24 | | Exciting ratface wrinkle | 01/14/24 | | mauve alcoholic state athletic conference | 01/14/24 | | Coral senate | 01/14/24 | | bronze mildly autistic degenerate | 01/14/24 | | Vigorous buck-toothed partner lodge | 01/14/24 | | mewling swollen coffee pot | 01/14/24 | | Maize windowlicker dingle berry | 01/14/24 | | Bateful adulterous half-breed love of her life | 01/14/24 | | tantric hot university | 01/14/24 | | deep motley theatre | 01/14/24 | | vibrant corner cuckold | 01/14/24 | | Cheese-eating Ticket Booth | 01/15/24 | | Oh, you travel? | 07/27/25 | | soul-stirring sapphire weed whacker affirmative action | 01/13/24 | | Mentally Impaired Codepig | 01/13/24 | | Titillating laser beams cuck | 01/13/24 | | Beady-eyed grizzly institution toilet seat | 01/13/24 | | filthy self-centered patrolman kitty | 01/13/24 | | deep motley theatre | 01/13/24 | | Shimmering balding stage fortuitous meteor | 01/13/24 | | contagious abode dragon | 01/13/24 | | contagious abode dragon | 01/13/24 | | contagious abode dragon | 01/13/24 | | bright skinny woman | 01/14/24 | | Jet-lagged lascivious water buffalo shrine | 01/15/24 | | contagious abode dragon | 01/20/24 | | deep motley theatre | 01/13/24 | | deep motley theatre | 01/13/24 | | Glittery prole pit | 01/14/24 | | pink corn cake trailer park | 01/14/24 | | mauve alcoholic state athletic conference | 01/14/24 | | sick trust fund blood rage | 01/14/24 | | deep motley theatre | 01/14/24 | | sick trust fund blood rage | 01/14/24 | | Wonderful glassy community account | 01/14/24 | | mauve alcoholic state athletic conference | 01/14/24 | | mauve alcoholic state athletic conference | 01/14/24 | | Crawly mad cow disease elastic band | 01/14/24 | | Curious Police Squad Mexican | 01/14/24 | | Primrose Flatulent Black Woman Site | 01/14/24 | | obsidian magical base faggotry | 01/14/24 | | ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, | 07/27/25 | | Vengeful newt keepsake machete | 01/14/24 | | Wonderful glassy community account | 01/14/24 | | soul-stirring sapphire weed whacker affirmative action | 01/14/24 | | stubborn multi-billionaire chad | 01/14/24 | | sick trust fund blood rage | 01/14/24 | | deep motley theatre | 01/15/24 | | disrespectful nowag spot | 01/15/24 | | contagious abode dragon | 01/15/24 | | sick trust fund blood rage | 01/15/24 | | Aphrodisiac saffron liquid oxygen sex offender | 01/19/24 | | Cheese-eating Ticket Booth | 01/15/24 | | Jet-lagged lascivious water buffalo shrine | 01/15/24 | | Aphrodisiac saffron liquid oxygen sex offender | 01/19/24 | | Maize windowlicker dingle berry | 05/24/24 | | lfo | 07/27/25 | | ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, | 07/27/25 |
Poast new message in this thread
Date: January 13th, 2024 2:57 PM Author: Maize windowlicker dingle berry
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/01/13/books/molly-roden-winter-more-book-open-marriage.html?smid=nytcore-android-share
For anyone prone to experiencing secondhand embarrassment, there’s a scene in Molly Roden Winter’s debut, “More: A Memoir of Open Marriage,” that should come with a warning.
Winter is at her home in Brooklyn. She has just had sex with her boyfriend while her two children sleep upstairs. Her husband, Stewart, consented to her tryst, but feeling guilty, she dashes naked into the kitchen to text him: Don’t worry, she writes, “he has nothing on you as a lover.” But instead of texting her husband, she accidentally sends the message to her boyfriend, who leaves in a huff, and later breaks up with her. Winter, devastated, begs her husband to come home to comfort her.
“I still get a little nauseous thinking about it,” said Winter, 51, who was sipping tea in the living room of her bright and airy townhouse in Park Slope, Brooklyn. “Talk about the cringiest, cringiest, most awful thing that could happen.”
It’s far from the only agonizing and breathtakingly candid scene in “More,” which documents Winter’s often turbulent experience of open marriage — the resentment and jealousy she felt toward her husband’s girlfriends, the flashes of guilt and shame, and the challenges of juggling her obligations as a wife and mother with her pursuit of sexual and romantic fulfillment.
...To be clear: “More” is also about the sex. Winter recounts her experiments with butt plugs, fisting and anal intercourse, and catalogs her extramarital relationships — which range from brief encounters in seedy hotel rooms to romantic partnerships that last for years — in meticulous detail. She changed the names of her and her husband’s respective partners to protect their privacy, but often leaves little else to the imagination.
There’s “Karl,” the generous German lover who seems intent on pleasing her in bed, then pushes her to have a threesome with him and his fiancé, then ghosts her. There’s “Laurent,” the French-Argentine lover who refuses to wear condoms and likes to have sex in public restrooms and co-working spaces — a fetish that gets Winter banned for life from a shared office space.
And there’s “Jay,” a 29-year-old with a shockingly large penis. After they have unsatisfying sex, Jay tells Winter he usually can’t orgasm from intercourse, but that he plans to masturbate to the memory of her. “You’re sweet,” she tells him.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5475355&forum_id=2).#47283842)
|
 |
Date: January 13th, 2024 4:56 PM Author: unholy talented gas station
He founded a music licensing company right after they cracked down on sampling. Genius really
n 1995, he and Stewart Winter co-founded VideoHelper and launched it from a bootlegger's warehouse in New York City. VideoHelper's music is used daily in over 60 countries by major international broadcasters (TV, cable and radio) and in films, movie trailers, websites, and almost anywhere audio-including media is created. The company operates out of a facility near Union Square, Manhattan. Some other notable credits include music for the NFL, the Today Show, the Olympics, and several Super Bowl commercials. Former WWE wrestlers such as King Booker, Vance Archer, Kaval, Trent Beretta, Caylen Croft, Kevin Thorn and Hornswoggle used tracks from Saba and Winter as their entrance music.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Saba_(composer)
https://m.videohelper.com/about
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5475355&forum_id=2).#47284195) |
 |
Date: January 13th, 2024 5:44 PM Author: Fiercely-loyal Khaki Candlestick Maker Meetinghouse
too many poasters have clicked on this record:
********
NOTICE
Further access to ACRIS is denied. This can be due to multiple reasons such as detection of automated scripts/robots that are capturing data from the website or having exceeded the bandwidth limits we have established to ensure that all users of the ACRIS system experience high performance. If you need large amounts of data, please contact the City Register (Ph: 212-487-6300) to learn about our subscription data services.
Additionally, ACRIS index data can be obtained from NYC Open Data. See the following document for more details:
NYC OPENDATA ACRIS DATASETS
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5475355&forum_id=2).#47284313) |
 |
Date: January 15th, 2024 11:47 AM Author: Jet-lagged lascivious water buffalo shrine
you left out the best part right before it:
That plan failed when their oldest son, then 13, saw his dad’s online dating profile on his laptop, and texted his mother in a panic, asking if they were in an open marriage. Her youngest son found out in a similar way a few years ago, when he was 14, she said.
these two paragraphs are the singular mention of any impact on her kids in the entire article, btw
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5475355&forum_id=2).#47289496) |
 |
Date: July 27th, 2025 5:18 PM
Author: ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
that one was mine.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5475355&forum_id=2).#49135439) |
 |
Date: January 14th, 2024 4:56 PM Author: sick trust fund blood rage
How a Polyamorous Mom Had ‘a Big Sexual Adventure’ and Found Herself
In her memoir, “More,” Molly Roden Winter recounts the highs and lows of juggling an open marriage with work and child care.
For anyone prone to experiencing secondhand embarrassment, there’s a scene in Molly Roden Winter’s debut, “More: A Memoir of Open Marriage,” that should come with a warning.
Winter is at her home in Brooklyn. She has just had sex with her boyfriend while her two children sleep upstairs. Her husband, Stewart, consented to her tryst, but feeling guilty, she dashes naked into the kitchen to text him: Don’t worry, she writes, “he has nothing on you as a lover.” But instead of texting her husband, she accidentally sends the message to her boyfriend, who leaves in a huff, and later breaks up with her. Winter, devastated, begs her husband to come home to comfort her.
“I still get a little nauseous thinking about it,” said Winter, 51, who was sipping tea in the living room of her bright and airy townhouse in Park Slope, Brooklyn. “Talk about the cringiest, cringiest, most awful thing that could happen.”
It’s far from the only agonizing and breathtakingly candid scene in “More,” which documents Winter’s often turbulent experience of open marriage — the resentment and jealousy she felt toward her husband’s girlfriends, the flashes of guilt and shame, and the challenges of juggling her obligations as a wife and mother with her pursuit of sexual and romantic fulfillment.
Winter is keenly aware that people may judge her for the behavior she describes in “More.” But she also said she felt compelled to write about her experience, in part because she felt that non-monogamy is so often depicted as something happening on the fringes, not as a lifestyle that married moms pursue.
“I felt like there were no stories from the mainstream about it, and I felt very closeted,” Winter said. “It often feels like mothers are not supposed to be sexual beings.”
“More,” which Doubleday will release on Jan. 16, is landing at a moment when polyamory is drifting from the margins to the mainstream. About a third of Americans surveyed in a YouGov poll in February of 2023 said they preferred some form of non-monogamy in relationships.
Image
The cover of this book is rust orange, with the title, “More” in all-caps dark blue letters. Below it is a stylized lilac flower, with some bees hovering. Below that is the subtitle, “A Memoir of Open Marriage.” in white. The author’s name, Molly Roden Winter, is below that.
Along with novels, TV shows and movies that depict throuples, polycules and other permutations of open relationships, there is a growing body of nonfiction literature that explores the ethics and logistical hurdles of polyamory. Recent titles include memoirs like the journalist Rachel Krantz’s 2022 book “Open: An Uncensored Memoir of Love, Liberation, and Non-Monogamy,” and self-help and inspirational books like “The Anxious Person’s Guide to Non-Monogamy,” “The Polyamory Paradox” and “A Polyamory Devotional,” which has 365 daily reflections for the polyamorous.
Jessica Fern, a psychotherapist who counsels people in open relationships, said Winter’s account adds a new layer to the growing catalog of nonfiction about polyamory.
“Her story, which is about what it means for a mother to be erotically charged, that story I haven’t seen enough yet,” said Fern, author of “Polysecure” and “Polywise.”
Fern noted that there might be a scarcity of books by moms in open marriages because they are simply too busy: “When you’re a parent and you’re polyamorous, who has time to write?”
Winter concedes that polyamory could be exhausting — particularly when she had to balance it with marriage, child care and working as an 8th grade English teacher.
“I did not sleep very much,” she said.
Opening the marriage wasn’t just about doing whatever — and whoever — she wanted, she said. She had to cast off internalized sexism and her tendency to put others’ needs before her own, issues she worked through in therapy. What began as sexual thrill-seeking led unexpectedly to self-discovery.
“I thought non-monogamy was going to be all about the sex,” she said. “I thought I was going on a big sexual adventure, and it was going to be super exciting. And it was, until it wasn’t.”
To be clear: “More” is also about the sex. Winter recounts her experiments with butt plugs, fisting and anal intercourse, and catalogs her extramarital relationships — which range from brief encounters in seedy hotel rooms to romantic partnerships that last for years — in meticulous detail. She changed the names of her and her husband’s respective partners to protect their privacy, but often leaves little else to the imagination.
There’s “Karl,” the generous German lover who seems intent on pleasing her in bed, then pushes her to have a threesome with him and his fiancé, then ghosts her. There’s “Laurent,” the French-Argentine lover who refuses to wear condoms and likes to have sex in public restrooms and co-working spaces — a fetish that gets Winter banned for life from a shared office space.
And there’s “Jay,” a 29-year-old with a shockingly large penis. After they have unsatisfying sex, Jay tells Winter he usually can’t orgasm from intercourse, but that he plans to masturbate to the memory of her. “You’re sweet,” she tells him.
Many of Stewart’s friends are skeptical of his open marriage, he said. “My male friends don’t know how to deal with it,” he said. “They think it’s like swingers, like we’re all sitting around in bathrobes with martinis.”Credit...Michael Tyrone Delaney for The New York Times
Winter grew up in Evanston, Ill., and was in her early 20s when she met Stewart Winter, the man she would marry. He made her laugh and was passionate about his work composing music for TV shows and movies.
In 2008, they had been married for nearly a decade and had two young sons when Winter met someone else. Frustrated after an exhausting day caring for their boys while he worked late, she took a walk one evening. A friend invited her to drinks, and at the bar she fell into a flirtatious conversation with a man.
When she told her husband later, to her surprise, he wasn’t mad. Instead, he urged her to sleep with her new acquaintance, and share the details.
After Winter started dating, it wasn’t long before Stewart also started seeing other women. Though she agreed it was only fair, she was consumed by jealousy and occasionally asked to close the marriage.
Stewart confirmed that open marriage was easier for him at first.
“Molly might have been more discerning than I was at that point,” he said, comparing his dating experience to being “at a salad bar.”
In the early years, many of her sexual exploits proved unsatisfying. At the time, most online dating sites didn’t cater to polyamorous people, so she sometimes resorted to dating men who were cheating on their wives and girlfriends. “Not my finest hour,” she said.
Some of her closest friends worried that she was sabotaging her marriage and that she would get hurt.
“I worried that she was leaning so heavily into the sex part that she was not really thinking about the emotional element,” said Rebecca Morrissey, a friend of more than 25 years, who added that her concerns faded when Winter started forming healthier relationships with her paramours.
Eventually, Winter swore off men who were cheating and began seeing people who were also in open relationships, a demographic that became easier to find when online dating services added non-monogamous to their menus. Even then, options were limited.
“There were so few people that I kept getting paired with Stewart,” she said.
Image
In this portrait, Roden Winter is leaning against the sill of a large window with tall bookcases rising on either side of her.
“The bad sex taught me a lot more about what makes sex good,” Roden Winter said. “I also wanted to tell the truth about how hard it was.”Credit...Michael Tyrone Delaney for The New York Times
Winter and her husband struggled with when and how to tell their sons about their arrangement, and wanted to wait until their children were mature enough to handle it. That plan failed when their oldest son, then 13, saw his dad’s online dating profile on his laptop, and texted his mother in a panic, asking if they were in an open marriage. Her youngest son found out in a similar way a few years ago, when he was 14, she said.
By now, her sons, who are 19 and 21, are blasé about their parents’ sex lives. Her oldest has read her book, and told Winter he skipped some of the “nitty-gritty” sex scenes, while her youngest chose not to read it, she said.
It took a few years before Winter felt comfortable revealing the details of her open marriage to a larger circle of friends and family.
When she told her mother about her adventures in non-monogamy, she learned more about how her parents, who have been married for nearly 60 years, also had an open marriage.
Her parents, Mary and Philip Roden, were a bit uncomfortable with the intimate details their daughter shares in her memoir, but ultimately endorsed the book, they said in a video interview.
“For the most part, I totally approved of what she was saying,” Mary Roden said, though she noted that she was put off by “the raw sexual detailed descriptions.”
For his part, Stewart is enthusiastic about the memoir, but worries that people will think he manipulated his wife into opening their marriage.
“All my reservations, to be perfectly honest, are because I’m being selfish, wondering, how is this going to make me look?” he said.
“More” ends in 2018, when Winter’s boyfriend, whose wife had recently divorced him, broke up with her after she turned down his ultimatum to end her own marriage. Winter was heartbroken, but moved on, and has had other serious romances since.
She’s grown more confident that her marriage of 24 years has benefited from their outside relationships. She’s mulling another book about her open marriage — which will in part explore the surprising connections she’s formed with the “other women” in her life, including Stewart’s girlfriends and the wives of the men she dates.
For now, Winter is bracing herself for the impact the book will inevitably have on her and those around her — but she seemed undaunted.
“I’ve been spending a lot of my time calming everybody else down,” she said. “This doesn’t feel like something I need to be afraid of.”
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5475355&forum_id=2).#47287042)
|
 |
Date: January 15th, 2024 11:25 AM Author: contagious abode dragon
*takes deep bong hit*
whoa that's really insightful, man.
--
and no surprise she's into crossfit
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5475355&forum_id=2).#47289413) |
Date: May 24th, 2024 10:48 AM Author: Maize windowlicker dingle berry
This is your “Eat, Pray, Love.”
I just reread, “Eat, pray, Love.” I love a woman’s memoir and I think women are hungry for stories of, how do I find my way back to myself? Because I was told that I had to please everyone else. And I don’t even know who I am. And if I do anything, I’m criticized for being to this or to that. How do I do this? And so Cheryl Strayed walked the Pacific Crest Trail and Elizabeth Gilbert went off on her journeys and different people do different things. And for me, it was opening my marriage. But that’s not to say that’s the way to do it. It’s just to say that was my way that I learned that there was more to me than being a mother and a wife.
https://www.bkmag.com/2024/05/13/meet-molly-roden-winter-the-best-selling-park-slope-polyamorist/
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5475355&forum_id=2).#47688262) |
 |
Date: July 27th, 2025 5:18 PM
Author: ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
i think they're at: "men, come back!"
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5475355&forum_id=2).#49135440) |
|
|