Mling
Knight of the Woeful Countenance (in training)
- Jun 19, 2006
- 5,815
- 688
- Faith
- Agnostic
- Marital Status
- Single
- Politics
- US-Democrat
Thank you for toning down your end of the conversation, and being more neutral in how you word your questions. I'll try to reciprocate. I would like to keep talking this, at least to the degree of untangling our misunderstandings so we get what the other's points are. Whether it's worth discussing past that point, we shall see.
For the sake of making important points first, I'm going to gut and rearrange your post a little bit. Hope you don't mind.
We're discussing a gray-area topic. I can't discuss true polygamy, per se, because marriage is an inherently legal relationship, and multiple marriage isn't legal. In effect, it doesn't exist here. But we're talking about what those relationships would look like, if they existed. So, I've been describing the types of relationships that do exist currently (polyamory) which would be likely to become polygamous if it were legalized ie: the people are already living in a poly sort of way, and would likely get married if they could.Considering what I think polgamy is...you're not talking about polygamy.
At the moment, people who live that way don't usually use the word "polygamy" because of its religious overtones, but if polygamy was legalized and they took advantage of it, they'd at least meet the definition, and may well start using the word.
Ahh, there's the problem. It should have been general. I don't ask to have any more privileges than I'd want everybody else to have.The "you" meant you specifically, Mling. It was not a general "you."
It would probably be best as: "I believe that all people have the right to live their life as they want, assuming that everybody involved consents, unless there is a specific reason to decide that that freedom should be restricted."1) You want the freedom to do what you want with a consenting adult.
You mention drugs later, but it's a good example of what a reasonable restriction might be, so I'll address it now. Addiction can violate a person's own consent, even to themself. Addiction alters a person's mental state, so that they are very likely to continue doing something that they've decided they don't want to do. Unfortunately, some addictive things can't be legally controlled--like self-harm-- but other things can be, and because they have that power to hijack a person's brain and override their desires and ability to consent, I think they should be.
This is part of the point that we volleyed back and forth without resolving for so long.It seems that you always express the intervention of others in this way - that they can't do anything unless they "assault" you. Do you really see it that way? Is there someone to whom you are not "married" that has influence over you?...Someone who, if they said, "I disapprove of that," you would think twice just because you respect them, not because you feel put upon?
There are plenty of people who could influence me. Strangers could influence me. If somebody came up to me, say on a bus or the street, and said, "excuse me, could you please stop that infernal whistling?" I would apologize for annoying them, stop, and try to get away from them. Cuz darn it, my whistling is a tic, and I can only stop for so long--but then, I don't know if they have any disorders of their own, say, a sensory integration problem that makes the whistling particularly brain-paralyzing, and I wouldn't want to inflict that on somebody else if I could avoid it.
When people close to me tell me, "I think what you're doing is harmful," or "I think this would be really good for you," or some other such thing, I listen, and take it under advisement. When somebody says, "what you're doing right now is a deal-breaker for me. If you don't stop and do this instead, I'm going to have to leave you," I take into consideration how much I value what I'm dong, what they're proposing instead, and how much I value the relationship, then decide how to proceed from there. I've received this kind of "choose now: this, or me" ultimatum twice. The first time, I gave up the friendship because what she was demanding was something utterly unreasonable, and a friend who would ask that is not a friend worth serving that way; the second time, I took the advice, which was, generally, that I take health-care measures that I'd been trying to avoid, because what I had been doing just wasn't working, and my not being a very functional person was placing more stress on a partner than they could handle. I am inordinately grateful that they found the guts to say that, because admitting my current strategy wasn't working and doing the new thing has improved both my life, and our relationship.
But none of those things are people "placing limitations" on me, or interfering with my life. Those are examples of people expressing opinions or asserting their own boundaries, which they have every right to do. Ultimately, I am free to take or leave the advice. I'm even free to take or leave the relationship, and so are they. The final decision about what I want in my life is still mine, and what they want, is still theirs.
The only way somebody could actually limit me, is by taking away my ability to make that decision. To use the drug example again--that wouldn't mean saying, "I don't want you to use drugs," or "I will cut off contact with you if you use drugs," (which are perfectly reasonable opinions and personal boundaries that I would consider when making the decision), it would mean putting their hand on mine and physically preventing me; beating me up before I can get to them; locking me someplace so I can't get to them, etc.
Or, if physical assault isn't their style and they were willing to take a round-about route to limiting me, the other tactic they could use would be to propose a law that bans the behavior they find offensive, and then the police and a jail cell would do their dirty work for them.
So, my references to assaults etc. aren't because I think nobody has a right to influence me--it's because I think anybody who has any kind of relationship with me (romantic, familial, platonic, whatever) is well within their rights to express their own boundaries and preferences, and I don't interpret that as a "limitation." Abiding by those boundaries and preferences isn't an imposition--it's an opportunity to improve the relationship.
When we're talking about people interfering/limiting my life, we're talking about people who've overstepped those bounds and aren't acting within their rights anymore--or are commissioning the government to do so for them.
"Marriage" is whatever the law says it is, because it's a legal relationship. That's why it's difficult to pin down a definition--it varies by culture and time, and amounts to "it is whatever it is." I've added in shades of my own opinions--like if people don't identify as "married," but use some other term, I'd respect that-- but for the most part, I just don't see the definition of marriage as a subjective, personal thing that I could have my own opinion on. It's defined by whatever the law says.OK, so you won't set other people's idea of "marriage." What is your idea?
My boundaries for polyamory are something different. I'm not sure, though, whether you mean, "my definition for types of relationships which I'd consider polyamorous" or "my personal boundaries in the types of relationships I would have."
If the former, the only restriction I can think of is that everybody involved freely agrees--without coersion-- that they are not monogamous.
That, admittedly, can be fuzzy, especially for people who are more free with sex than I am (meaning--they might be having sex with people who they don't consider to be romantic partners).what is the difference between a guy who is your friend and one whom you consider part of your poly relationship?
I can't think of any rule of thumb that would be applicable to everybody. Many people wouldn't want to make such divisions at all, and would be content with defining relationships by their individual quirks, and not splitting people into "romantic" and "not."
For me, it's always been self-evident by the obvious, gaping chasm of commitment levels between "the person I live with and am likely going to marry," and "the friends I occasionally play sexy games with."
For others, it would be a closer call. It's a case-by-case thing.
Because most cultures assume that marriage will either be life-long or at least long-term, and it locks the child into such a relationship before they're old enough to consent to it. I suppose if, for example, a culture used sexless adult/child marriage as an equivalent of adoption--child's parents dies, so somebody else marries the child, cares for them, and then they "divorce" when the child grows up-- I'd be fine with that, but I've never heard of such a thing.Are there relationships that make you uncomfortable? I think you said you were against adult/child, but if it's not about sex, why would an adult/child marriage be wrong?
Skeeves me out. Don't think it should be illegal if it's initiated in adulthood, though I wouldn't trust the consent of one that began during childhood and continued into adulthood. Childhood intimidation and coercion can last into adulthood.What about incestuous ones (for adults)?
Actively support, so long as it's consensual and done with awareness of risks and reasonable care for physical and emotional safety.Sadistic/masochistic?
Skeeves me out. Uncertain about my position, legally. It's hard to make an argument from consent when I think that killing them for food is ok.Beastiality?
Hitting the character limit and sick of editing. Splitting the post up.
Upvote
0