LittleMissAdventure(sub female)
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3 years ago •
Jan 21, 2021
3 years ago •
Jan 21, 2021
As someone who has my reservations about poly, let me try my best to explain.
First, I want to be clear, I think that whatever people want to do between themselves is completely up to them and is fine and I support that. Though I've tried my best to try and understand what appeals to others about this lifestyle, I just don't personally get it. That said, I'm always open to hearing something I hadn't considered before.
With that said, here are the angles that my reservations are drawn from:
1. Logistical
On a very basic level, time is a finite resource. Depending on how you choose to practice your arrangement, that may create constraints on the amount of time with any which partner. While this can be manageable enough with fewer numbers, at a certain number, the ability any person has to connect and be fully present for any other person starts to break down. This is even true to an extent with non-romantic relationships. The older I get, the harder it is to maintain disparate friendships not because I stopped caring but just because there are only so many hour-long phone conversations and happy hours I can physically do in a week. For me personally, there's no way I could develop meaningful relationships with more than one person and still do my job, be an active participant in my family, maintain my long-standing friendships, and keep space for my personal health and growth.
From a legal aspect, while I think it makes sense to recognize polyamorous marriage through law, it - once again - starts to break down the more people you add to it. A child might be able to have 3 or 4 legal parents who share care of them, but 20? Definitely not. The original poster points out that communication and consent are a huge part of healthy poly relationships and sure! That's true. But that's true of every relationship and the law has to contemplate the total and complete breakdown of relationships in building the law as well as the most extreme of situations. Basically, what I'm saying, is that we can't hold up the ideal model of anything as the reasoning for it's existence and we have to consider how any situation can be used for the absolute worst possible ends and attempt to address them in structural ways.
2. Consent
So I read earlier that once again obviously communication is extremely important and consent can be withdrawn by any one party which is great! But even outside of kink and poly and just in everyday life, I've come to realize that consent is more complicated than we sometimes like to think. It's not that I think that poly people are running around actively pressuring people into relationship dynamics they don't want, it's that numbers are, again, a bit of an issue. If you tell one person that there's something they want to do that you don't in your relationship it feels like a simple enough exchange. Now if you're the one person who feels uncomfortable but 3 other people want to do something, it can feel a lot more difficult to say so even if your feelings remain the same. It can feel as though your discomfort and you by extension are the problem or the barrier to your partner(s)' fulfillment. You might say that that's a sign of a relationship that needs to have better communication or of self-esteem issues or something else, and that all may very well be true! The problem is that real people aren't perfect. They come with baggage and if the predicate for a successful healthy relationship is that they not have issues, then... I'm not sure that the relationship paradigm is itself a successful one. While compromise is important in any relationship, not everything can or should be compromised. The nature of having more partners is that one has to make more compromises then they might otherwise
Now, once again I want to re-iterate for anyone reading this, NONE OF THIS IS REASON TO JUDGE OTHER PEOPLE OR TO BE AN ASSHOLE. I'm sorry that people around you seem to spout hate, that's extremely uncool and those people suck.These are more the considerations that I have when thinking about my life, as well as what I might worry about if a friend were to ask me what I thought about them trying out a poly dynamic for themselves. And even with all of this, there are people that I know for whom it genuinely makes to me that poly is the only way their life will work. For others, it's the exact opposite. Heck, I'm not even 100% that absolute monogamy is a thing that makes sense for myself either. I suppose it's helpful to think of monogamy and poly like a spectrum and I think that either extreme is probably pretty unhealthy.
I hope that might be helpful in your understanding, and I hope it wasn't too disrespectful. I wanted to be honest so as to actually be useful, but I also don't mean to be inconsiderate. I also look forward to following this post and reading what others have to say. Hopefully, this will be a chance for me to learn too!
(Footnote/joke: I'm probably just salty because I can't even find one partner and there are people out there with like eight. WHAT?! No fair!)
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