DEAR DR. NERDLOVE: My partner (30M) and I (29F) have been together for over a year. We’re deeply in love, and from the beginning, it felt like everything just clicked. He feels like home to me.
A few months into our relationship, he asked me how many people I had been with before him. I was honest and told him — 14. Ever since, he’s struggled with obsessive, intrusive thoughts about my past. Despite being a confident man in many areas of life, this topic seems to torment him regularly.
He tells me it breaks his heart knowing I’ve “given myself to other men” and says it makes him feel like there’s “no excitement left” for him. Ironically, he was quite sexually active before we met, though he also spent several years focused solely on raising his son.
I can’t help but feel this is hypocritical. He often refers to societal double standards, saying it’s easier for women to have sex, and that it hurts him I “let so many men inside” me. He frames it as biological or evolutionary — suggesting that men are naturally wired to prefer women with fewer sexual partners.
I don’t believe he’s intentionally being sexist, but this has become a serious concern. These thoughts consume him — it’s been constant, nearly every day, for the past six months.
I’ve done my best to be patient and understanding, but it’s starting to wear on me. His words make me feel devalued, ashamed, and at times, unlovable. When I express how this affects me, he says, “I wouldn’t still be here if I didn’t love you.”
And I do believe he loves me. His time is precious — split between his son and his passion for rock climbing — so the fact that he chooses to share it with me means something.
But I’m at a loss. He doesn’t see this as retroactive jealousy, and I don’t know how to move forward when this continues to be such a painful and persistent issue.
How Many Is Too Many?
DEAR HOW MANY IS TOO MANY: Alright HMTM, I am going to say up front that I think your boyfriend is being ridiculous. Leaving aside my personal opinion that your number of past partners isn’t even that unusual or high, I think the question of “how many people have you slept with” doesn’t tell anyone anything outside of a bit of data. Numbers are just that: numbers. They don’t say anything about the relationship, about the importance of that person in your life (or lack thereof), how you feel about any individual partner, none of it.
The amount of importance that people put on the number of partners – and I mean across the gender and sexuality spectrums – is entirely outsized in relationship in relationship to its actual impact on anything other than statistical likelihood of exposure to certain STIs. Lots of partners doesn’t make you a better or worse person than very few or no partners. If anything, it’s how people respond to the number that’s more important. And that’s where your boyfriend is falling down.
How he sees it isn’t really the issue here. Maybe he’s right and it’s not jealousy; maybe it’s about sexism and misogyny instead. None of that makes it better. It certainly doesn’t make it less hurtful. And it doesn’t make it your fault, regardless.
And quite frankly, the falling back on “it’s just biology” is lazy at best. Leaving aside that this is just the naturalistic fallacy, or that it’s something that not only is demonstrably not true on a biological level, nor is it how evolution works, it’s also not even true for him. Or is he going to seriously claim that he’s never jerked it to porn?
I mean, I’m not even going to bring up things like the role of copulatory vocalization, the average number of sex acts necessary for procreation in humans, the Coolidge Effect or concealed ovulation. If we’re going to go with “because evolution says so” as his baseline, then he better be able to explain why he eats anything with corn in it.
It also betrays a lack of understanding of the dynamics that surround sex, both biologically and culturally. It’s not easier for women to have sex, it’s easier for people who have sex with men to find sex. That’s not about women, and that sure as f--k isn’t about evolution or biology, that’s about men. The difference is rather crucial, because not recognizing and acknowledging that is putting a hell of a lot of blame on women for a dynamic that is entirely about men and how men move through the world.
It sure as hell ain’t about “fairness”.
Now, I will be generous and say that there’s still a lot of folks who push purity culture bulls--t about women’s sexuality and What It All Means on folks, especially young men. It’s entirely possible that your boyfriend’s response is more about what he’s been taught. If he’s grown up swimming in a sea of purity bulls--t, then it’s not a surprise that he wouldn’t recognize it for what it is off the bat; it’s like trying to explain the concept of “wet” to a fish. It’s even possible that this isn’t about culture and instead it’s hitting him in the feels because it trips an emotional landmine that you would have no way of knowing is there. He may, like a lot of men, have some sort of anxiety or self-image issue about being “deserving” or feeling “special” tied into his sexual relationships that need to be unpacked, preferably with a therapist.
It’s important to note, though, that while that can make some of this understandable, that doesn’t mean it’s ok.
Right now, it seems like he’s focused entirely on his feelings and how this affects him. The way he responds to your telling him that his behavior hurts you with “well, I wouldn’t still be here if I didn’t love you” is missing the point. That’s not an acknowledgement of what you’re telling him, that’s him answering a question you haven’t asked. You aren’t asking “does this mean you’ve stopped loving me”, you’re saying “the way you’re going on about this hurts because of how you’re behaving.”
It’s great that he says he still loves you, but that doesn’t make his behavior less hurtful. Especially if he doesn’t stop it.
And that, I think, brings up an important question: is he actually wrestling with his feelings on this? Is he willing to recognize – if not accept (yet) – that maybe he’s wrong about this? Is he willing to recognize that maybe this is a him problem? Or is he using this as a club to beat you over the head whenever something bothers him? Has he thrown this back in your face or used it as some sort of counter-argument? If it’s become something he pulls out whenever he needs to position himself as having the moral high ground, then I think the problem has shifted to “how do we get past this” and into “how much are you willing to take before you leave?”
He hasn’t exactly covered himself in glory with comments about “you gave yourself to so many men” and “there’s no excitement left for me”, but there’s at least a chance that he can pull out of this spiral. There’s recognizing that he may feel this way and that’s not cool and he needs to sort this s--t out for himself, and then there’s throwing this around like it’s a misogynist red shell in Mario Kart.
The former, while uncomfortable, means he recognizes that this is a problem for him and he’s trying to deal with it. The latter is the countdown to the first time he decides not to hold back on saying “…WELL MAYBE IF YOU WEREN’T SUCH A F--KING WHORE!” during an argument.
(And while I’m here, what, precisely, the cinnamon toast f--k does “There’s no excitement left for me” mean?)
I think you’re at a point where you should be blunt with him. Tell him that you’re not worried that he doesn’t love you, it’s the way he keeps going on about it and bringing it up and moping over it that hurts you and you want him to stop. He doesn’t necessarily have to snap his fingers and get over it, but not moaning about it at you and bringing it up as though you’ll eventually say “…psyche! Just kidding!” Even if it’s unintentional, it’s still hurtful, and if he cares for you, then he should be bothered by that fact.
That, to my mind, is the point you need to drive home: the way he’s behaving hurts you, and you want it to stop. And because I can already hear the response to this: your sexual history has nothing to do with him and comparing the pain he is experiencing is neither equal nor fair. You weren’t f--king other people at him and it all happened before the two of you even met. He, on the other hand, is doing this at you, specifically. This is his issue to get over; it’s not your responsibility to sherpa him through this. It sucks that this knowledge hurts him, but that doesn’t mean that you did anything wrong or that needs to be apologized for. You can help if you so choose… but this is ultimately something that he has to do for himself if he wants this relationship to work. And the first step is to recognize that if he loves you, then he needs to stop waving his fee-fees around in such a way that hurts you in the process… intentionally or otherwise.
This doesn’t mean that the topic is off limits, but the way it’s brought up and the way it’s talked about does need consideration. It may be fine if, for example, he wants to try to talk through what’s going on in his head and you can explain to him why what he’s thinking is incorrect – assuming, of course, you’re ready and able to do this. If he needs occasional reassurance or help walking back from the edge his jealousy and apparent Madonna/whore complex has drawn him to, that can be fine, too. But if he’s just going to keep doing the “woe is me” dance about this, if he can’t or won’t understand that this behavior is hurtful, then that suggests to me that hurting you is part of why he keeps doing it. You hurt him and now you need to see how much he suffers.��And honestly, in that case, it would be a lot quicker if he would just build himself a cross in the back yard and nail himself to it.
And one last thing: the fact that he chooses to spend time with you doesn’t automatically mean he loves you, nor does loving you excuse hurtful behavior. Loving someone doesn’t mean you can’t hurt them or that you don’t choose to hurt them. He can say he loves you all he wants and still think it’s ok to act like this.
The important thing is: if you tell him that his behavior and attitude are hurting you, does he change it? Or does he make excuses for why it’s ok for him to act like this?
That’s going to tell you everything you need to know about whether you should stay with him or eject like your F-16’s about to go down over the open ocean.
Good luck.
Please send your questions to Dr. NerdLove at his website (www.doctornerdlove.com/contact); or to his email, doc@doctornerdlove.com