Agnostic.com

7 3

I sometimes think about polyamorous relationships and just can't imagine myself in that type of a relationship especially if I am in love with someone. I am a one woman man and extremely loyal. I guess the question is how do people cope knowing the one they love is in the arms of another? I just don't understand. Makes me cringe extremely hard.

Nardi 7 Aug 2
Share

Enjoy being online again!

Welcome to the community of good people who base their values on evidence and appreciate civil discourse - the social network you will enjoy.

Create your free account

7 comments

Feel free to reply to any comment by clicking the "Reply" button.

1

I am with you. It's not love to me,

0

There are folks who are hard wired monogamous, some of us are hard wired poly. That said, I will try to explain jealousy, or the lack thereof, in my case.

Poly is not (again, in my opinion) swinging or 1 night stands. Some argue for or against this, Not debating that here. But I need to put out that, for me, poly is having an emotional investment in the people I'm with. Sex is not the primary expectation. Its more. Again, the structures of poly relationships is a thread in & of itself.

For me, the emotion that I think others label as jealousy is, in fact a combination of things. Everyone has expectations of their relationship & they negotiate those expectations with their partner. When those expectations are not met, feelings of sadness, disappointment & resentment all come to the fore, naturally.

Because of distance, work schedules & weekends with kids, etc, I get to see current S/O of almost 6 years every other weekend. On those days where our schedules merge & we have the same day off, we make plans weeks in advance, for that infrequent, precious day together w/nothing else going on. My S/O though, tends to forget to communicate this to his other relationship.

So we had planned a day & his gf & her husband come over, I thought unexpected, for a visit (he & her husband are very old friend). My S/O had forgot about our plans because he was talking RPGs & dice campaigns.

Pissed does not begin to describe what I felt. Resentment of our time being intruded upon, then anger & hurt that S/O had forgotten our plans (forget that he had been filling in 12 hour overnight shifts for a coworker who had been out on emergency medical leave) & disrespect that he took for granted I chose to spend a day off with him when I could have been doing other things.

I reminded him of why I was there, the fact that we had repeatedly had issues with scheduling & we needed to talk right then. Communication is key in poly relationships as is honesty. If we are not open & honest, with everyone involved, miscommunication causes additional hurt & upheaval. We worked it out & had a good day.

Yes, he got it. Yes, we have, in partnership with his girlfriend, have a shared calendar so everyone is in the know & we can avoid issues in the future.

I'm friends with his girlfriend & her husband. There is a guy I have started dating in the last few months. Yes, he is aware I'm poly. Yes, he has met my S/O. Nothing is hidden.sure he gas lots of questions & I answer them without hestitation. We'll see where that goes.

Keep in mind, I understand I can't be any partner's end all, be all. There will be things they need or want that I can't provide. If they can get these things with other partners, I won't begrudge that & I expect the same consideration from my partners.

I am not a jealous person and never have been and I love several people but not in a way that you describe. I know several people who are involved in polyamory,almost all the females are unhappy and some of the males too. It really seems to be detrimental to them.

@Jolanta i know folks like that as well, both in poly & mono relationships. Then again, I think people who think a relationship is going to "complete" them or "fill the void" or other such drivel are setting everyone involved up for disappointment. After the failure of a 17 yr relationship, I did a lot of soul searching & decided unless I could be happy as an individual, I wouldn't make a very good partner so didn't start a new relationship til I was ready. Best decision ever.

0

Words of a Cheater.... There is nothing my ex wife could had done to stop my behavior.... I liked Women.

And now you're single all alone

@Jolanta No... thanks to the divorce I had been single 18 years while she is working on husband nr 3. I met a champion Ballroom dancer that we been on and off for 16 years and are best friends, german gf 3 inches taller than me, a russian that gave me best phone sex in history,.. an Ukranian that.... well... divorce is best thing that happened to me .. and an open playing field for my apetite in front of me... like I said... she could not do anything that would had stop me from cheating... is what we do, without concience or hesitation... Not all divorced regret the divorce some regret the marriage.... read between the lines. All alone is my Natural State.... The Heart is a Lonely Hunter... we don't look back but to cover our tracks. We enjoy being along.

0

Same here..

Varn Level 8 Aug 2, 2018
0

That's how I feel too. Maybe someone can explain how they do it.

Carin Level 8 Aug 2, 2018
0

Then chances are good that it's not for you. Do what works !

4

My take on it has always been that natural selection has fitted us with jealousy, the better to keep family units together and with good boundaries. And sure enough, jealousy is the main problem reported by parties to polyamorous relationships. I imagine that a lot of psychic energy goes into sublimating those natural impulses. It would be interesting to know how many older people maintain truly polyamorous relationships. It strikes me as something few sane people would have the energy for past about 50 or so at the outside.

Anyway, Nardi ... I'd describe myself the same as you, a one-woman man, extremely loyal, no wandering eye at all, much less wandering ... well, you know. So ... I don't feel deprived in any way, shape or form.

I believe that jealousy has nothing to do with natural selection, and everything to do with personal insecurities ...

@evergreen I'm not talking so much about the emotion of jealousy as the special case of finding it difficult to share a romantic interest. I think that comes from how mating works. Some species, like humans, mate for life because young need to be protected and nurtured for long periods of times by parents with whom they are bonded. The natural tendency we've been selected for promotes the healthy development of offspring to maturity by a stable set of parents.

Sure it's still insecurity, but we're insecure also about losing our job, or falling from great heights ... all perfectly real threats that are rational to protect ourselves against.

I think the jealous spouse who imagines threats ... who fears losing control ... is rather a different situation. That is dysfunctional because those are situations that should not engender insecurity in a healthy person.

I will give you this, though ... I preach resisting some other things natural selection has "gifted" us with ... such as confirmation bias. So if I could be convinced that having multiple significant others and elaborate multiple-parent family organization with which we have precious little experience could be a good thing ... then I might think more favorably about resisting the natural tendency to jealousy, at least for those who for some reason want to go to the extra trouble. I'd also have to see such unusual configurations as being at least as likely to have good parenting outcomes as traditional "two-parents and children". The latter strikes me as pretty dicey, as it is ...

Write Comment
You can include a link to this post in your posts and comments by including the text q:146492
Agnostic does not evaluate or guarantee the accuracy of any content. Read full disclaimer.