interesting questions, lauren.
to me, an oath--like a contract, actually--sets the threshold for minimum expected behaviors in a relationship. we take it for granted that a marriage is going to be entered into in good faith and that the participants are going to act in the best interests of both. so to me these are the guiding principles that wedding vows are attempting to support.
sexuality is for the vast majority of people a fairly significant component in a romantic relationship. therefore, i think that it's important that the couple address factors interfering with the amount and character of intimacy in their marriage.
when personality or medical factors do interfere and the two cannot, in good faith, reach some kind of accord re: frequency/type of sex, the dissatisfied party has some soul searching to do. how important is this?
if it's sufficiently important and the couple is at an impasse, the dissatisfied party will very likely seek what is missing outside of the marriage. i'm a big believer in transparency so actually stating that this will occur is to me a pretty important step.
i don't as a rule dig on cheating. i think a lot of people don't want to do the hard work of trying to find a way to make things work. but i also don't (generally) believe in absolutes.
ed
Silverwhisper-
Nicely put, and I think what I was driving at was the idea that an oath or contract like that is absolute is part of the problem, it is the ambiguity that you bring up. Part of the problem is the marriage contract/vows themselves are old, from another time, based in religious ideas and theology that don't necessarily apply as well today. First of all, because people live so much longer then they did when those were written, people rarely were married 20,30 or more years, simple fact of existence, so if a marriage was bad, it wouldn't last long....
I think the other half is something you touched on, when people enter a marriage they are saying the vows, but this isn't like a legal contract where people have poured over the details, have really thought this through, most couples don't go through the kind of thing where they think of scenarios, like sexual incompatiblity, that might come up, they fall in love and want to get married and so forth, but a lot of the time it is without that kind of thought, they are in effect saying vows they really haven't pondered. They know when married their are rights with it they know if they get divorced there are legal consequences, but have they really done that kind of work? I doubt it.
It is funny, in the BD/SM world contracts are often used to express the nature of the relationship, there are spelled out rules that both parties must agree to, and it often covers the kind of things that married couples for the most part don't do. You sit there in the vows, and say you swear to cherish the other person, forsaking all others, through sickness and in health, etc, but you are also doing that without understanding what that means. When you are young and in love, as many people marrying generally are, you just don't think you wife could get MS or get raped or your husband lose his libido and sexual desire, and while that has waned little else has, you still love the other person, cherish them in so many ways, yet are faced with a struggle about sexual intimacy..
I am not asking this as a disinterested person, I faced this in my own story, and I know how hard it is, the dilemma's ....I ended up not cheating (did it mostly up in fantasy, in my head) during the rough times, and it is funny,...as our sex life finally started returning,t he hard part was shifting from the fantasy world I had created to the real one, so even that was a compromise that 'hurt' our relationship.....My point is while I think cheating has real consequences and is not an ideal or great way to get needs met, there is enough ambiguity in some situations where I cannot judge the people involved, I might have chosen a more 'honorable' path, but I also know what that hell is like. It is very easy when not facing to say "if he/she wasn't geting the sex they need, they should leave" it is another to be in love with someone who is literally in pain or suffering, whether emotionally or physically, who cannot give you what you want, and then face either throwing everything else away as in getting divorced to be with someone else, or de facto cheating to try and keep it together that is otherwise an incredible love story, and I cannot find a 'right' answer that works in all cases, and if I can't, I can't judge in those cases, either. This isn't someone not happy because their spouse has put on weight, or gotten bald, or works too hard, this isn't the spouse who married a better off husband and cheats because he otherwise is unappealing, or for the 'thrill' of it, I am talking serious issues.