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Sexual past, regret and a new relationship

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  • #458142
    Mimia
    Participant

    Hello everyone,

    first and foremost Id like to thank everyone who invests their precious time and energy into reading this post, even more so if they find time to respond. Second, I apologise for the length. I am so glad I can pour my heart out somewhere, since this is something I am extremely ashamed about and regret it very much. I think about it constantly, it makes me feel so worthless and extremely sad. I am hoping to find a new perspective and see it through someones else’s eyes, because I am spiraling.

    TLDR: I regret my past sexual behaviour I did in my late teens/early 20s, now questioning what and if to tell my new boyfriend, if I deserve him and also how to deal with it myself.

    I am currently 29 years old and have been seeing (and in a relationship with) an amazing man for about three months. It’s been amazing, I love him, he treats me like a princess.

    When I was 19 years old, I left my home country to come to a better one, by myself, without speaking the language, without having any plans pretty much and any money. I hated everything about my starting situation (job, the shared flat etc) and because of that, I was just trying to enjoy life. I was “young, wild and free”, I went to a lot of parties, did a lot of drugs, slept with a lot of people (around 50). The worst part is, approximately 6 of them, I slept with for money. I was very immature, I didnt have any boundaries. I was hoping to save enough money to go to a private college to prove everyone how good I am (academically, and just having worth I guess). Somewhere between I also fell in love with one guy I thought I was in a relationship with but he was just playing with me. This contributed to me feeling like I was not a “relationship material”. This was more than 8 years ago.

    My childhood: my father never cared about me. He would send the money court ordered him to, but he never really cared about me. My mom and her side of the family tried to compensate for everything and they are awesome. My mom later remarried but my step-father also had issues so it wasn’t ideal and I pretty much didnt have a male role model growing up. My fathers side of the family didnt care as much either, all they care about were academic achievements. When I told them I was leaving to another country instead of going to college right after high school, they were flabbergasted. I also ddidnt fullfill the beauty ideal in my country so I was always the third wheel, nobody wanted to kiss me etc. Never got the attention my girlfriends did.

    At the age of 21, after the “wild” period, I turned my life around, got my life together, mastered the language, started studying at the age of 24 at a normal, good university and now I am almost done with my masters. I haven’t been to a party since, haven’t took any drugs, haven’t really been druknk and I don’t want to anyway. My life changed 180 degrees.

    I then met my first real bf when I was 24 and he showed me what real love and a real healthy relationship was, he gently told me I was lacking self-love and suggested therapy which I did. It helped, now I do love myself more but apparently wasn’t enough. We broke up 2 years later due to completely different reasons, stayed friends, he’s an amazing person.

    Fast forward to now, in February I met this amazing guy I mentioned earlier. He is a very normal person (not conservative, misogynist, super religious, etc), he’s very liberal etc. Yet I feel like I am not honest with him because I didnt share all this with him. We talked briefly about past relationships etc, I mentioned my ex, I mentioned I had a “wild phase” etc. He never questioned me, he never asked me about the number of people I slept with etc. During a completely unrelated conversation he mentioned he would not date a sex worker. Yet, I feel like he slept with less people, was less wild etc, just because of how gentle and nice he is.

    I am so conflicted because the version of me that existed when I was 19-21 years old is a completely different person than now. It doesn’t have any bearing on our relationship per se. The stuff that you should normally let your partner know like crimes, kids, STDs, debts etc, none of that is my case. Yet, I am conflicted because a partner should know you, right? Especially if it gets serious, like engagement.

    I am currently in therapy again for this (I just started). However, I did not mention the part where I had sex for money to my therapist. This is so heavy to me, regardless of the relationship I am currently in, but its definitely amplified by it. The worst part is, I know I am a good person (I donate money, I feed homeless, I volunteer for human rights, I treat everybody with compassion), yet I only think about this terrible thing when it comes to my past, my worth and judge myself by it. I also got Tara Brachs Radical Acceptance, hopefully that will help.

    Concluding, I guess my questions are: 1. Do I have to tell him, or can I keep this part of my story to myself without it being unfair to him? 2. How do I deal with this for myself?

    Thank you again for anyone reading this and anyone helping me. I appreciate you so so much.

    M.

    #458153
    anita
    Participant

    Hello 🙂 Mimia:

    How kind and gracious you are 🙏- I can tell by the way you opened and closed your original post on this thread.

    Coming to think about it, I don’t care to know how you started and ended past original posts in other websites, other platforms.

    And I want my reply to you to be attuned and kind and gracious,and not be judged for how I responded ( not so well 😔) to previous members in these forums, (beginning in May 2015.. 11 years ago).

    We can own our past and yet start a new page, a new chapter, with the old closed and put away.

    If you “confess” to your boyfriend about things in your past, will he feel that he owes you his own confessions?

    It may be better for him to not have to open his old chapters that he may be ashamed of.

    It can be an act of grace on your part to let go of your shame so that the two of you continue to connect where the two of you are N.O.W.

    I had to forgive myself for things I did that I was very ashamed of. I switched from Shame to Empathy- for myself.

    I regret things, but I can’t go back in time and undo them (I would if I could).

    Life is difficult and so very complex, so much trouble in our world- within families, and communities. Is it a wonder that we didn’t turn out 😇?

    Are there angels in real life?

    Please let me know what you think of this reply. I really want to talk to you further.

    ✨️🌿✨️ Anita

    #458167
    anita
    Participant

    Dear Mimia:

    When I reread your story this Tuesday morning, I don’t see a “bad” past or a “shameful” girl. I see a young woman who was alone, unprotected, and trying to survive in the only ways she knew at the time. A girl who had no father’s love, no male guidance, no sense of being wanted or valued. A girl who left home at 19 with no money, no support, no safety net — and still tried to build a life. That girl didn’t need judgment then, and she doesn’t need it now. She needed protection, tenderness, and someone to tell her she mattered.

    Right now, the part of you that is hurting is that younger self — the one who still believes she must be punished before she can be loved. Shame freezes us in old identities like that. It makes us believe, “I am still the girl who did those things,” instead of, “I was a girl who did those things because she had no one.”

    Shame tells you that if you don’t confess everything, you’re being dishonest. But that’s not honesty — that’s fear. Fear of being abandoned. Fear of being unworthy. Fear that if someone sees the old you, they will leave.

    Your past self is not a threat. She is not dangerous. She is not someone who will ruin your life. She is someone who needs your empathy.

    You unfreeze that old identity by looking at her with understanding instead of fear. By saying, “You were overwhelmed, not bad. You were trying to survive. You didn’t have what you needed.” When you speak to her like that, she softens. She stops being something you must hide or confess. She becomes a chapter — not a definition.

    And this is where your adult self comes in. Your adult self is the one who can respond from values, not fear. Fear says, “I must confess everything or I’ll lose him.” Values say, “I want a relationship built on kindness, honesty, and presence — not on punishing myself for who I used to be.”

    When you stop treating your younger self like a criminal and starts treating her like a girl who needed protection, the old identity unfreezes. Because the “punishment” was never needed. You deserve love, honesty, and compassion — including from yourself.

    You don’t owe him a confession in order to be worthy of love. You don’t owe him your old pain in order to be honest. You don’t owe him the girl you were — only the woman you are now.

    If you ever choose to tell him anything, let it be because you feel safe and whole, not because you feel guilty. But you are not being unfair by keeping your past private. You are allowed to protect the younger you. You are allowed to let her rest. You are allowed to move forward without dragging her behind you.

    I’m here, and I’d be glad to talk with you more.

    ✨️🌿✨️ Anita

    #458168
    Alessa
    Participant

    Hi Mimia

    It sounds like you were in a very difficult position when you moved country, but you did the best you could to get out of that situation as fast as you could.

    Sleeping with 6 people for money is not many. Ignoring stigma and other people’s judgments. How does it make you feel that you went through that?

    Anyone with a good heart would give you grace.

    It sounds like your boyfriend’s comment about not dating sex workers struck a bit of a nerve. But maybe he was thinking about someone who currently does that. Or someone who did it for much longer, more seriously. It sounds like it was a very temporary emergency situation for you.

    I’m so glad to hear you’ve been going to therapy and you choose people who treat you well. You deserve it! Very well done on creating a wonderful life for yourself. 🩵

    It’s up to you if you tell him. Do you worry that if you told him he wouldn’t accept you? 🩵

    Please feel free to share your thoughts! 🙏

    #458178
    Thomas168
    Participant

    Mimia,

    My advice is to not say anything more about your past. It will color his profile of you and could wreck the relationship. Being honest? You can be honest by being present and showing your love (feelings). Be this present person that you are. There is no need to dreg up the past. The past may have helped mold who you are today but it doesn’t define who you are. Let the past go and live in the present.

    Your boyfriend saying he would not date a sex worker means that he is setting boundaries. If you love him and can stay inside those boundaries then live a good life. Don’t upset it with your need to let everything out. It won’t help the relationship. If you need to give a number then no more than three. First love. Rebound guy and this guy you have now. If you had STDs then blame on rebound guy.

    Am I telling you to lie? Yes. Why? Cause the only thing that is important is shedding off the past and living in the present. Don’t think of the past. Don’t bring it up. Strive for a better future. We all have regrets. But don’t let the regrets define who you are now.

    Sorry if you think that your guy deserves better or that you feel you need to expose your past to him. I don’t think it is healthy to let your guy think you have a sordid past. If you truly have changed then take this chance to live a good life.

    Tommy

    #458234
    anita
    Participant

    How are you, Mimia? I hope to read back from you 🙏 Anita

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