Questions poly people get asked
Jun. 6th, 2002 12:02 pmQuestions Trish asked in preparation for a workshop about polyamory.
- Don't you get jealous?
Actually, no. I'm not 100% convinced that there's such a thing as jealousy; a whole lot of other emotions (insecurity, time envy etc) get called that.
- How do you find the time?
This one needs a longer answer, but the jist is this: not all relationships are very time consuming. Promising your partner that you won't sleep with anyone else would be a weird way to solve time constraints if that was the only reason it was done. Healthy relationships usually involve scheduling time for partners to pursue their own activities, whether that's other relationships or Jiu Jitsu or whatever.
Having said all that, I'll concede that the way I live, scheduling time is a bastard.
- Don't you want to settle down?
Absolutely not. As far as I'm concerned, that's another word for spiritual death.
However, I do want stable, reliable things in my life, which is why I have a steady job, mortgage, lasting relationships and so on.
- I'd be up for that, let me know what sort of girls (or boys) you fancy and I'll sort something out for us!
You are not even in the queue, baby.
- It's not what God wants.
*shrug* I'm an atheist; go tell someone who cares.
- What about children?
I don't want children, but I'd give
lizw and
ergotia as examples here. - I'd hate it if my boyfriend/girlfriend was unfaithful to me.
I'd hate it if one of my partners broke an important agreement in our relationship too.
- You're being greedy.
If wanting the best life for myself I can have is greed, then I'm guilty. But as
lizw says, greed is the opposite of sharing, and you can hardly say I'm not doing that. - I'm annoyed (with you - implied) now because my life seems really boring compared to yours.
You know how I sometimes give devastatingly rude advice? If I was going to do that, I'd say...
It's not too late to change it. Resolve to have a more interesting life right now. You don't have to become poly, but you do have to chuck out your vague notion of "settling down" in favour of specific goals of what forms of stability you need in your life, and what sort of interest you think it should contain.
Note that of course I'm not giving that advice to all monogamous people, but to people who complain their lives are boring.
- So, you sleep around then?
Yes, and it's a lot of fun, but I also have several long-term partners.
Re: Sorry for jumping in here...
Date: 2002-06-06 06:54 am (UTC)I'm fascinated by my knee-jerk reaction - I can happily intellectually the pros of poly, but I have a gut feeling it's not for me. And I don't know why. And I'm hoping the more I write about it, the more likely that one day I'll understand why it is.
Re: Sorry for jumping in here...
Date: 2002-06-06 10:50 am (UTC)Re: Sorry for jumping in here...
Date: 2002-06-06 05:26 pm (UTC)You can't decide to fancy someone, either you do or you don't and there's no logic or conscious decision there at all. You can decide what to do about it if you do fancy someone, but there isn't really a choice in who you find attractive in the first place.
What exactly makes someone appear attractive to you is a mysterious process, but I guess that if all (or maybe almost all) the people you've ever fancied are of one particular gender (or you perceive them to be of that particular gender at the time) then you can assume that you're either purely heterosexual or purely homosexual (depending on which gender it is), whereas if gender seems not to affect who you find sexually attractive then you're bisexual.