Daniel and I had lived together for three years. In the beginning, everything between us was intense — late-night talks, passion, big plans for the future. Over time, things became more routine: quiet dinners in front of the TV, conversations about bills, family visits on weekends. I saw it as natural growth — trading chaos for stability. To him, it felt like a trap.
That evening, he paced the apartment like he was rehearsing something.
“We need to talk,” he finally said, sitting across from me.
I knew that sentence rarely brings good news.
For fifteen minutes, he laid out his philosophy: monogamy is outdated, humans aren’t meant to commit to just one person, love shouldn’t feel limiting.
“I think we should open the relationship,” he concluded. “We stay together, but without restrictions. We can both see other people. It’ll make us stronger.”

As I watched him, the truth became obvious. He was bored — but comfortable. He didn’t want to lose the cozy home, the cooked meals, the dependable partner. He wanted thrill without sacrifice.
“So you want to date other women,” I said calmly.
“I want equal freedom,” he corrected. But the confidence in his expression told a different story. He was certain I wouldn’t leave. Certain no one else would choose me.
“Okay,” I replied.
He blinked. “You mean that?”
“Completely.”
That same night, he went out “with friends.” He returned at sunrise smelling of unfamiliar perfume, trying to hide his satisfaction. The next day, he acted overly attentive — washing dishes, offering compliments. Guilt disguised as generosity.
Soon, he stopped pretending altogether. He texted openly in front of me. After all, it was “allowed.”
That’s when I made my move.
I thought of Alex — someone Daniel knew from the gym. Kind, respectful, nothing like the image Daniel probably had in mind. I messaged him casually and mentioned that Daniel and I now had an open arrangement.
“So this was his idea?” Alex asked.







