justanobserver
Still Wondering...
this reminds of of that song from the 70s by Stephen Stills - "And if you can't be with the one you love, Love the one your with..."
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KudosI am in a Poly relationship right now, with two women that I love.
I myself am in favour of polyamory and i think it is a healthy and decent way to view relationships and their nature in the 21st century
It looks complicated and has way too many definitions. I've met a couple of people who were into it; what's funny is that they try to distinguish themselves from "swingers", like the swingers were some terribly sleazy and sinful subgroup, and the polyamorites were on a higher plane of spirituality. Why marry if you want to have sex with multiple people?
Swingers aren't bad, but there is a difference. Poly is about the relationships, and as far as I know swinging is just about the sex.
'S funny. One of my friends was working in connection with the "adult" industry, and she knew quite a few people who were I guess you would call "swingers" - only they didn't really liked to be called "swingers" because it was too demeaning. They referred themselves as "in the lifestyle".Swingers aren't bad, but there is a difference. Poly is about the relationships, and as far as I know swinging is just about the sex.
'S funny. One of my friends was working in connection with the "adult" industry, and she knew quite a few people who were I guess you would call "swingers" - only they didn't really liked to be called "swingers" because it was too demeaning. They referred themselves as "in the lifestyle".
I just don't see how one could have a real relationship simultaneously with other people. It's like what the OP link described; there is always going to be number one wife or husband who had a longer history. Someone is always to be the favorite or closer to someone else, possibly causing jealousy. Since there are no limits set on the parameters of the relationship (presumably you can add other members to the group), there is always going to be situations in which the newer one is going to monopolize one member more in the beginning.
The allegedly ideal situation for polyamory in which everyone is not jealous, everyone is equal, has no ego, has no hangups has its beginnings in the "hippie" era, with Robert Heinlein and social experimentation. But the reality was far different. People were not treated equally. In fact women were treated even more like sex objects and were exploited, like many of those brainwashed Mormon fundies are currently exploited to believe that their lifestyle is part of some divine plan.
From what I've read about polyamory, (one of?) the most stable and common relationship type(s) involves acknowledgement that there are "primary" and "secondary" partners at the onset of the relationships. My understanding is that if everybody involved tries to be completely equal, then when favoritism and jealousy inevitably erupt, it is much more damaging. The specific people I've been reading about build their relationships like this.
Jack and Jill have been living together for several years, and are primary partners. They have veto power over each other's secondaries and play partners, and they each come first in each other's lives.
Rob and Laura have been married for at least a decade (I want to say 15 or 20 years). Same deal.
Jill and Rob are secondary partners--they've been seeing each other for two or three years. If something in their relationship is causing trouble in either of their marriages (or de facto marriage), the primary relationship trumps this one.
Jack has a long-term, secondary girlfriend I know nothing about, and I know nothing about Laura's extra-marital activities.
Jill occasionally has other secondaries, but none as stable as her relationship with Rob.
Everybody involved "plays" with other people in sexual-type ways, not actually involving sex.
Everybody involved hates drama, has a full understanding of the role they play in everybody else's lives, and is not plotting any type of coup against anybody else. When jealousy does crop up, they have a framework in which to work it out.
So, that's pretty much all I know, but it should answer a few of the "but don't they get jealous?" type questions.