| Let's approach this hypothetically. Let's say you live alone, and you go to college [see: social circles / closed system]. You invite your s/o over for breakfast, and she stays at your place while you go to class. When you come back from class, to your surprise she has one of her friends over - someone that is only an acquaintance to you.
Should this make you uncomfortable, or is it pretty normal? Personally, I have some trust issues from past relationships, so I wonder if that is clouding my judgement and assuming the worst. The first incident, I was seeing an older woman and I had moved much of my belongings into her house. While away for a weekend, one of her "friends" stole around $1000 worth of my belongings while she was at a neighbors and left the house unlocked. The second incident, while I was overseas my ex asked me if her "best friend" (a guy) could stay with her for two weeks in our apartment. Come to find out, she was cheating on me with him during this time, even on my bed.
Now I'd like to be able to trust people at my apartment when I'm not there - but I don't feel it should be their "hangout" during this time. Also, should there be some distinctions? What if it's a completely mutual friend? Same or opposite gender? Should she be required to ask, or at least inform you before having someone else over? In one case or two, it was a guy she had previously slept with and swears they're "just friends now" but those two alone at my place makes me REALLY uncomfortable. I want to trust her, and in many ways I do (otherwise I wouldn't let her be at my place when I'm not) but I don't trust her friends. I have valuables, money, medication, all readily accessible.... and I've tried to convince her why these situations make me uncomfortable to little avail. To clarify, this particular girl is my exgirlfriend that I am sleeping with, but we are not in a closed, traditional relationship. The only rule is we inform each other if we fuck anyone else. So I wonder if this is just a personal problem and I'm being irrational, or a legitimate cause for concern?
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