I don't know how many of them could describe the sex habits of a chimpanzee or a sea horse but they still loved one another and were not into threesome or spouse loaning to any Polly. None of them have ever been on the Jerry Springer show.
Would you want your grand kids to be raised in a polyamorous context, especially a polyamorous context where new partners were added and old subtracted as your daughter and her partners decided? Can you say that is what is in their best interest?
I asked before if you could offer some details about what you are imagining poly is like (also, curious why you spell it like the parrot name, but that's somewhat beside the point). Is this that little bit of insight?
Do you realize that there are a million and a half ways to do poly, and that, when you get into long-standing relationships, they usually look
nothing like what you've described above?
(Another aside--the word "loaning," what's up with that? People aren't property. That's the whole point of this.)
I do know one poly family that is raising a child. They're the one I described earlier, with two women who are married to each other and both their boyfriends, all living together. The baby is now 6 months old, and they mentioned once that nobody's had sex since he was born. Aside from baby stuff, the most exciting thing that's happened among them lately was one of the mothers being diagnosed with Lyme disease, (there's no indication it was contracted from an outdoor orgy.)
The bit about new partners being added and subtracted as "your daughter and her partners decided" confuses me a bit. Who else would decide?
My take--raising kids in a poly family is just like raising kids in
any family. Keep a critical mass worth of their life consistent. Not
everything has to be, but enough that any changes will be experienced as variety in a stable universe, rather than yet integral change in a constantly shifting universe.
In practice--anybody involved in raising the kids needs to be committed for the long-haul. If there's anybody else involved with them, they shouldn't have much to do with the kids. You know...the same way you might have a couple, and their grandparents, and some aunts and uncles and maybe some family friends all playing some kind of role in raising a child; but the kid probably never even meets coworkers or less dear friends and acquaintances, and if she does, they briefly come and go without much relationship. Children being raised by more than two caretakers isn't a
new thing, after all. It was the norm for most of human history. People do have a sense for how to do it.
Also--new parents are new parents. It's unlikely they're going to be doing much random hooking-up when they're not getting any sleep and are up to their ears in diapers.
Would the kid be confused if his parents occasionally have friends over who they're a little affectionate with, (assuming that the parents are having other relationships openly in front of them, which not all poly parents would)? Probably not. Kids aren't born knowing social norms. They know when they're being
hurt or
neglected, but the don't intrinsically know what monogamy is or that it's common. If they're certain about the stability of the people they consider family, and of their role in the family, and that there is enough love going around for them to get their fair share of it, then what would bother them about this?
When I was little, I sometimes found it odd that other kids were biologically related to all of their siblings, and had kept the same birth-order place for their entire life. "You're the oldest? That's cool. I was the oldest until I was nine, but now I have an older sister. How long have
you been the oldest? Oh, two sisters at the moment--my parents are chatting about maybe adopting a boy named Josh, but nothing official yet." (That never happened, which made me sad.)
Kids know when they're being taken care of--they don't know that the pastor down the street disapproves that they have more people taking care of them then he thinks there should be. Unless, of course, he decides to butt in and start telling the kids how much he disapproves of their parents.