These are not necessarily mutually exclusive things. For a while I had a masseuse who had her own premises. While she did share them with other staff, I tended to be her last client of the day and I don't believe I ever saw anyone else on site. Completely alone, but still in a professional setting.
That still doesn't make sense....because it's a "sometimes" thing you're describing and it seems to be an "everytime" thing with only guys, not women, or more likely....the same guy.
Is she picking this guy deliberately?
Isn't it? Isn't the fact that this woman gets a massage for pain relief
Relaxation isn't "pain relief". Lots of things can be done for relaxation (and pain relief for that matter).
Well, we have some clues, due to the stated reasons for the massage, and that nothing improper is going on.
Ok.
Mmhmm. And what was the purpose of the stripping, if not some erotic intent?
Sorry...I thought that was clear. I wanted to go celebrate with my friends, they wanted to go to the strip club. I wasn't there for the strippers.
For some odd reason you seem to have jumped to that conclusion in my hypothetical. Perhaps the husband just wants to drink with his friends and they want to drink there. Perhaps they have cheap drinks. It's not inherently sexual.
See how that works now?
You were asking why was getting a massage different than going to a strip club. I am saying that stripping is inherently sexual, and massage is not.
I just pointed out it's a matter of perspective. Do you understand now?
My following comment was intended to explain further.
No.
Then I'd suggest you consider this a little bit harder. Let's imagine a husband who follows your advice, never trying to influence his wife's behavior when it bothers him or makes him uncomfortable. I'd suggest one problem is that while he might be able to pretend for awhile, he will eventually allow these behaviors to pile up, growing resentful, bitter, and ultimately destroying the relationship. He's not simply going to be able to change how her behavior makes him feel so easily....in fact, it seems like confronting the issue is far more likely to succeed in even that outcome.
Here's another likely possibility that I've personally experienced. If you don't act as if you care what your spouse does...or genuinely don't care to influence her behaviour....she will love it for awhile, growing increasingly insecure, and eventually spiral into anxiety and a near constant reassurance of affection. Why? Because if she cannot do anything that truly bothers you, it will inevitably seem as if you don't truly care about her. We don't just perceive care/love positively. Imagine if you started smoking crack at home (purely hypothetical) and your husband didn't react....he just kept giving you the same affection and affirmations of his devotion as usual. How long before you no longer genuinely believe in those things he says? I'd suggest that even if you weren't able to put your finger on it....you would rather quickly conclude that you have no real effect on your husband at all....regardless of anything he says. That's how it would feel.
So when I say boundaries are a good thing...I mean it. I have very few, and very low expectations, and it's been a personal struggle for me eventually walking out on multiple women I've damaged because they never quite felt necessary to my life in any way.
I'm not trying to sound egotistical. Clearly it wasn't all me. But I've learned women generally prefer to feel needed than free to do whatever they wish whenever without any significant reservations. Sorry if you disagree.
The OP states that these massages were "as needed, working out a stiff back or sore neck." That's pain relief.
Do I really need to quote him?
"He is a licensed "massage therapist" and I have been assured it is completely non-sexual, just for relaxation and, as needed, working out a stiff back or sore neck, that sort of thing."
Primary reason= just relaxation.
Secondary reason= stiff back/sore neck.
She's not some crippled arthritic unable to move whenever the barometer is high. He should certainly wonder why her neck is constantly sore despite these 50 minute massages if you want to get realistic.
He acknowledges that she is not doing anything improper or being unfaithful.
That's not the problem. That's him masking his obvious insecurities.
But he can't stop reacting as if this is somehow a sexual thing. That is what makes me think he is sexualising something that just isn't sexul to the people concerned.
But we agree the problem is that he is uncomfortable with the massages because of some potential sexual element....right?
Otherwise I don't know why you keep insisting this is a sexual problem of some kind.
He can't be both 100% confident nothing sexual is happening....and upset about the possibility of something sexual happening.
That doesn't make any sense.
No....he's masking his insecurities and seeking reassurance that what he suspects is happening isn't happening.
He's not 100% confident in anything. He's on a message board seeking advice from strangers.
If you can't understand that....explain what it is you think is the problem in different words. He's sexualising a situation that he's 100% confident is in no way sexual doesn't make sense to even a teenager. He's either sexualising it because he's not really that confident....or there's some other problem that he left no clues for.
Those are really the only options here.
I disagree. Largely because one is about "I am not willing to be yelled at," and the other is about, "I am not willing to let you do this thing that doesn't impact me."
Ok...let's examine these sorts of dynamics outside of a spousal relationship so you don't have any Christian hangups about it....
Imagine a parent putting their child on "time out" and demanding they sit quietly in a corner because of their bad behavior. Let's also imagine this parent threatening to kick this child out of their house at 18 because of something they did.
We can agree that while one of those reactions is more severe than the other....they're both attempts to influence or change the child's behavior, right?
Refusing to be yelled at isn't controlling the other person. Refusing to let someone do (insert benign activity here) is.
You're attempting to keep them from yelling at you by temporarily withdrawing from the relationship.
If you really want to get philosophical...all language communicated to another is an attempt at manipulation. All of it. Even if the only reason why I'm explaining this to you, right now, as you read these words.... is to get you to change from not understanding what I'm saying to a point of understanding what I'm saying....which, however tiny and insignificant, is still manipulation of you and your perspective.
It doesn't really matter if you disagree. That's what it is.
I have no problem with option two. By all means he can talk to her and explain why it bothers him, and they can talk through the various ways they might choose to go forward.
Right. Which seemed like a reasonable position until I described this as a boundary (which it is...once she knows it makes him uncomfortable, she's choosing to make him uncomfortable from then on...even that is manipulation)....at which point you seemed to object to the whole idea.
What I had a problem with was people saying she should stop having massages, or he should supervise them, or that it's somehow sinful for her to do so; basically saying either that she was doing something inherently wrong, or that he had the right to control her decision about it.
She doesn't have to. She gets to choose what she values more....the massages or the comfort of her husband. That's a valid option for him to give her... and even if there's no ultimatum. No spoken consequences....don't imagine it's not an attempt to influence her behavior.