I would have to decide, for myself, that I wanted to be polyamorous before meeting some polyamorous male that I desired. That is the only way that I can reasonably trust myself to make a decision in my own best interest.
That sucks. A compatible partner that is successfully poly is some evidence that poly could also work for you, as well as being something that brings the possibility to your attention. Yet by meeting them you have instead cut off the whole possibility. You’d be better if you never laid eyes on them! :P
This is just the way I like to relate to myself but I’d decide I was allowed to switch to poly if it was a good idea but that I’m not allowed to date poly-inspiration-X. For at least as long as a limerance period could be expected to interfere with judgement and also long enough that I could see if poly worked for me without the interference. That way my infatuation biases don’t get to subvert my decision making either by temptation or by defensive reaction.
I would have to be convinced that there was no asymmetry. I believe this is my primary repulsion to polyamory. I envision myself in a situation where I want primary access to a partner who does not similarly wish primary access to me. I also envision lots of emotions and stress involved in deciding what “primary” even means.
That’s a massive deal to me too. I am far more careful with shielding myself from asymmetry when playing poly. My primary partner also has to be able to accept that us having other relationships means that she will get less of my attention. Bizarrely enough not everyone gets this. Seriously… being poly doesn’t add extra hours to the day!
For myself I am also reluctant to get into situations where I’m seeing multiple people within the same social circle. Or, more to the point, where my partners are seeing other people within my social circle. Simply because it changes the nature of my interactions with my friends. Sex begets competition. It makes people more like humans (status hungry monkeys) and less like ‘people’. It’s hard enough balancing egos and rapport with potential rivals when you aren’t fucking the same girl (or guy). That just isn’t the kind of game I like to be playing with my own friends. I prefer Settlers of Catan.
Fortunately most of my core circle is made up of (awesome, open minded but sincere) Christians so there is no chance that we’ll end up with love pentagons. Just lots of couples and me doing WTF I want. :)
Seriously… being poly doesn’t add extra hours to the day!
You know, I had assumed that Time-Turners were invented by a Hogwarts Headmaster who despaired of getting the school schedules straight and one day before deadline stayed up until 6AM inventing the Time-Turner, and that he (gender coinflip-generated) succeeded because he was the first person to try for time travel just to get extra time and not to change the past, and that the invention within Hogwarts is why they get a traditional free pass on using them. But some polyamorous past wizard would be just as reasonable an inventor.
I like love pentagons and poly chains within the community. It creates a familial feeling. Of course nothing’s actually gone wrong in my immediate poly family yet. You can easily see how this could go wrong.
I like love pentagons and poly chains within the community. It creates a familial feeling. Of course nothing’s actually gone wrong in my immediate poly family yet. You can easily see how this could go wrong.
And from my side I can see how it could go right. I visited Berkeley recently (bootcamp) and it was adorable.
I like love pentagons and poly chains within the community. It creates a familial feeling.
There aren’t many places where people would be comfortable making that comparison! But I suppose if it wasn’t for the inbreeding risk, Westermarck effect and massive potential for abuse incest would be the perfect family bonding activity. You’re living with each other already!
I lived in a co-op for several years & found myself in the midst of a poly community (quite separately) at the same time. I would almost be surprised if people didn’t treat their closest friends & lovers like their family in such interconnected communities. To say so comes naturally when you feel that way, which we did/do. It’s just the family you chose, not the family you were born into.
It’s just the family you chose, not the family you were born into.
More to the point of the grandparent, they are the family members that you have sex with. (I usually prefer not be thought of as a brother by my romantic interests, nor do I find myself with the urge to grope my sisters.)
Mono vanilla uptight people also have family members they have sex with. They’re called “spouses”. When someone mentions their spouse as part of their family, listeners rarely recoil in accusations of incest.
The relevant characteristic of marriage here is the long-term, committed relationship with frequent contact (not necessarily cohabitation). Close-knit poly communities have several of these per person.
If people who are indirectly related by such relationships (e.g. siblings-in-law) get along well and see enough of each other, they usually have familial feelings toward each other (unless the families I know are weird). The relationship being sexual on both sides rather than sexual on one side and blood on the other has no reason to change this.
Mono vanilla uptight people also have family members they have sex with. They’re called “spouses”. When someone mentions their spouse as part of their family, listeners rarely recoil in accusations of incest.
That is literally true, and saying that you have sex with your family members doesn’t technically mean you admit to incest. That’s why what I said was “There aren’t many places where people would be comfortable making that comparison!”
This is just the way I like to relate to myself but I’d decide I was allowed to switch to poly if it was a good idea but that I’m not allowed to date poly-inspiration-X. For at least as long as a limerance period could be expected to interfere with judgement and also long enough that I could see if poly worked for me without the interference. That way my infatuation biases don’t get to subvert my decision making either by temptation or by defensive reaction.
That’s completely reasonable, I’ll agree with that.
That sucks. A compatible partner that is successfully poly is some evidence that poly could also work for you, as well as being something that brings the possibility to your attention. Yet by meeting them you have instead cut off the whole possibility. You’d be better if you never laid eyes on them! :P
This is just the way I like to relate to myself but I’d decide I was allowed to switch to poly if it was a good idea but that I’m not allowed to date poly-inspiration-X. For at least as long as a limerance period could be expected to interfere with judgement and also long enough that I could see if poly worked for me without the interference. That way my infatuation biases don’t get to subvert my decision making either by temptation or by defensive reaction.
That’s a massive deal to me too. I am far more careful with shielding myself from asymmetry when playing poly. My primary partner also has to be able to accept that us having other relationships means that she will get less of my attention. Bizarrely enough not everyone gets this. Seriously… being poly doesn’t add extra hours to the day!
For myself I am also reluctant to get into situations where I’m seeing multiple people within the same social circle. Or, more to the point, where my partners are seeing other people within my social circle. Simply because it changes the nature of my interactions with my friends. Sex begets competition. It makes people more like humans (status hungry monkeys) and less like ‘people’. It’s hard enough balancing egos and rapport with potential rivals when you aren’t fucking the same girl (or guy). That just isn’t the kind of game I like to be playing with my own friends. I prefer Settlers of Catan.
Fortunately most of my core circle is made up of (awesome, open minded but sincere) Christians so there is no chance that we’ll end up with love pentagons. Just lots of couples and me doing WTF I want. :)
You know, I had assumed that Time-Turners were invented by a Hogwarts Headmaster who despaired of getting the school schedules straight and one day before deadline stayed up until 6AM inventing the Time-Turner, and that he (gender coinflip-generated) succeeded because he was the first person to try for time travel just to get extra time and not to change the past, and that the invention within Hogwarts is why they get a traditional free pass on using them. But some polyamorous past wizard would be just as reasonable an inventor.
I like love pentagons and poly chains within the community. It creates a familial feeling. Of course nothing’s actually gone wrong in my immediate poly family yet. You can easily see how this could go wrong.
And from my side I can see how it could go right. I visited Berkeley recently (bootcamp) and it was adorable.
There aren’t many places where people would be comfortable making that comparison! But I suppose if it wasn’t for the inbreeding risk, Westermarck effect and massive potential for abuse incest would be the perfect family bonding activity. You’re living with each other already!
I lived in a co-op for several years & found myself in the midst of a poly community (quite separately) at the same time. I would almost be surprised if people didn’t treat their closest friends & lovers like their family in such interconnected communities. To say so comes naturally when you feel that way, which we did/do. It’s just the family you chose, not the family you were born into.
More to the point of the grandparent, they are the family members that you have sex with. (I usually prefer not be thought of as a brother by my romantic interests, nor do I find myself with the urge to grope my sisters.)
Mono vanilla uptight people also have family members they have sex with. They’re called “spouses”. When someone mentions their spouse as part of their family, listeners rarely recoil in accusations of incest.
The relevant characteristic of marriage here is the long-term, committed relationship with frequent contact (not necessarily cohabitation). Close-knit poly communities have several of these per person.
If people who are indirectly related by such relationships (e.g. siblings-in-law) get along well and see enough of each other, they usually have familial feelings toward each other (unless the families I know are weird). The relationship being sexual on both sides rather than sexual on one side and blood on the other has no reason to change this.
That is literally true, and saying that you have sex with your family members doesn’t technically mean you admit to incest. That’s why what I said was “There aren’t many places where people would be comfortable making that comparison!”
That’s completely reasonable, I’ll agree with that.