More than you think.Probably some truth there.
Imagine husband doing something without wife's approval. What a catastrophe. Especially if man is just a degraded woman his wife must keep him in line. Sad that some people think like that.
More than you think.Probably some truth there.
By which they mean they'd no longer have power and control over him and that is unacceptable.
Bingo. Interestingly, the women who have that kind of power or control over their man usually end up resenting the man for it.
BingoAnd that right there is the punishment of Eve.
Something I don't often see in the discussions on polygyny and 2nd wives, is the idea that for a woman, being a 2nd wife is far more of a pragmatic, logical, and sensible choice to make, with the right mindset. Most folks (women mainly) describe it as "settling" by not being a "1st wife"... The problem with that presupposition is that you assume being a 1st wife is even on the table as a certainty. The numbers are stacked against women, not in their favor.
It is a massive risk to be a 1st wife to an unproven man. The odds are not good as far as how that marriage will turn out.
A woman who:
1) can see how the man treats his 1st wife (and how she respects/reveres him)
2) can see how the man treats his children (If they have children, and how they respect him/behave)
3) can see how he runs his "ship" (house/business/etc)
4) can see he has zero interest in abandoning his covenant with his first to replace her with anyone
...can clearly asses the value of that man as a husband/cover/provider/covenant keeper. That is an exponentially less risky proposition than a man that she can see none of that with in choosing to be a first wife. I would argue the benefits far outweigh any perceived "downsides" to not being the 1st wife.
The issue currently is that most women, while that assessment seems simply makes sense from an instinctual perspective, they believe that the only option replace the first wife, rather than join the family. It is far more common for a woman to be enamored with a married man (I think mostly for the reasons above) than to find one actively seeking to join a family, but I think the instincts driving both of them are roughly the same.
Also, if that man is willing to break his covenant to replace the 1st wife, the 2nd woman probably should re-assess the situation entirely... but that doesn't seem to register in all the cases where he does.
And that right there is the punishment of Eve.