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I've hooked up with poly women but wouldn't ever date one.
Why not?
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I've hooked up with poly women but wouldn't ever date one.
Why not?
I derive my moral outlook from online fetish comics, and this makes me morally superior to those stupid xtians and their outdated bronze age literature
I recieved my moral outlook from poorly drawn fetish comics which makes me morally superior to those stupid redneck xtians!
It's bad enough to have to put on a performance and compete to get the attention of single women
I don't want to have to fight a continual battle for the attention of a woman who is trying to balance multiple relationships at once. If we're just going for a ride every now and again I don't mind being just another horse in the stable, but I'm not going to tolerate that arrangement for a serious relationship where I'm going to be placing that person as a major priority in my life, making sacrifices and expending lots of time and energy for them.
Why do you need to perform and compete? Why not date somebody who likes the person you are?
You're totally entitled to whatever kind of relationship you want, but you seem to have a skewed idea of what poly entails-- it's not generally a struggle or competition to see who can snatch the most of somebody else's time, and if it gets as unbalanced as you're talking about (you're making sacrifices and treating them as a priority, while they see you as another horse in the stable) that's a serious relationship problem and not what poly is really about. I mean, it happens, I'm sure, but it's as much a flaw as it would be if a monogamous relationship was that unbalanced.
Men are valuable not mainly for what they are, but for what they do. It's a luxury of women to be able to sit around and let people come to them...
Huh. I must live in a different universe than you do. Women are constantly doing more and more to try to stay attractive and interesting enough to get a man. Why else would they go to the trouble of plastic surgery, wearing of brutally high heels, makeup, etc.? I've always thought the "dating game" was a fakey environment, so I never played in it. I've always TRIED to simply be myself and if a relationship happens, great. If it doesn't, great. If it feels like a competition and like you can't be genuine, why be in that arena? There are women out there who are honest and who can take care of themselves. I've certainly never expected a man to take care of me. I'm a grownup and can take care of myself.
Men are valuable not mainly for what they are, but for what they do. It's a luxury of women to be able to sit around and let people come to them. For all but the most magnificent men it is necessary to justify your existence constantly. Even just 'being yourself' requires getting someone's attention long enough to see whether or not they like you. If you don't perform you may as well be invisible. Gender roles make life very different for each gender, it's perhaps a bad thing that they exist in such a way, but that's the reality of life, men gotta sing for their dinner.
If I have a bad day and need some time with my girlfriend I don't want a host of other men to compete with for that same time slot if one or many of them also happen to have had a bad day. I want to occupy a special place on someone's life, not just be another member of a special team and have to be continually reminded that I'm getting only a fraction of what I'm putting in. I feel kinda bad for anyone who thinks they have to settle for table scraps like that, honestly.
I shared something floating through my mind, and she thought it was funny and sexy--she became attracted.
Even the most extroverted guy I know isn't "performing." He just is genuinely extroverted and enjoys connecting people to community resources they'd benefit from, which makes him a bit of a hub in local community.
I can't deny your experience, but...I think it might be more of a reflection of your subculture--or even a broader culture-- then of anything inherent to sex or gender.
Time is a limited resource, like it or not, and if it comes down to a conflict the more valued person is going to win. If I'm going to commit to the kind of effort and sacrifice needed for a serious relationship I'm not going to settle for being on B Squad. It's varsity or nothing, and I'm not going to tolerate the anxiety of having junior varsity players vying for my slot. You're cool with a hierarchy of lovers, that's super, but I'm not. I have no problem messing around with people who do, but I'm not going to put much effort into them besides that.You seem to be picturing a situation where everybody is scrabbling chaotically for time and attention with everybody else.
But how long does chaotic scrabbling ever last with humans? Coming up with systems of organization is one of the defining features of humanity--we can't stand chaos for long.
A lot of people actually use "primary partner," "secondary partner," "tertiary partner" as titles (we do), but some don't like it, even if they do have their relationships structured that way.
In a sense you do live in a different universe than I, since the gender roles and expectations are very different for women than for men....So for you, just letting it happen naturally means rewarding those men who play the game...
If that is how poorly you can read its no wonder there are over 30.000 different interpretations of the bible.
If you want to be serious...
The interpretations are really not that different.
Catholic, Protestant, Orthodox... These summarize 95% of the views, and much of their views are very overlapping.
There probably is more radical diversity of interpretation of Karl Marx than there is of the Bible.
In a sense you do live in a different universe than I, since the gender roles and expectations are very different for women than for men. I live in the deep south of the US, so gender roles are very sharply defined. Men are expected to initiate, always, and if you don't put on that little show and dance, nothing will happen. Not a single woman is going to approach you and ask you out, they're going to sit and wait for you to come to them and prove you're worth their time. This is true for all the men I know in this area. Just being yourself and hoping is all fine and good, but it isn't going to result in anything if you're less than a perfect male specimen. Even if you don't want to admit it, those guys who DO choose to put their best foot forward and make a move are going to get your attention. The ones that don't play the game aren't even noticed, let alone considered. So for you, just letting it happen naturally means rewarding those men who play the game. Gotta play to win, but that doesn't mean it doesn't irritate me, and I'm not about to compound my frustration by continuing to compete against other men within the relationship as well.
It is interesting to see how the concept of polyamory is reinterpreted by the OP to pretend that it is about anything other than sex. If a non-Christian chooses to reject monogamy, then they are free to make that choice. As a Christian, it is not my place to expect non-believers to embrace my Christian worldview. However, I think it is fair to ask that people be intellectually honest. What differentiates polyamory from monogamy is sex, nothing more and nothing less.
I hate the dating game. I don't play it. I get to know people as friends. If a man isn't willing to be friends, forget it. Friends first. After awhile, if we seem to find an attraction, one or the other or both will make a move toward something more.
That appears to be how it works in Sweden. There is no "dating culture" as there is in America.
eudaimonia,
Mark