GirlFromTexlahoma
New member
And now back to our regularly scheduled poly musings ...
This, right here, is where everything gets wonky for me. Especially because hierarchical poly has somehow become an evil thing, so telling someone up front that you're looking for a secondary relationship is just as bad as *not* telling them.
It's funny that I agonize about this so much, since nothing remotely close has ever happened to me or any poly people I know in real life. We all just go into dating new people being very upfront - married, not looking for a nesting relationship, if you want that, we're not a good match!
I guess I just devote a lot of brain space to worrying about anything that could so completely derail my life. If either Andy or I ever wanted the same shape of relationship with another partner... Heartbreak. For me, him, the other person, or all three.
All I can really do is continue to be honest, I guess. I can love other partners wholeheartedly, but that "person I come home to every night" role is not open.
I think these exact thoughts All. The. Time. It does seem like staying in unsatisfying or just plain shitty relationships happens more in poly than in monogamy.
I'm sure part of it is the idea that we don't need to get all our needs met from one person... Sometimes that turns into keeping relationships that aren't meeting ANY needs. And let's face it, poly partners are hard to find. Maybe the scarcity makes us settle for less than we deserve?
But there's something more, I think, something I can't quite put my finger on. That "love is enough!!!" mentality, maybe
It's okay to want to have something special with your partner - a family, a home, retirement etc. But if your husband falls in love with another who greatly wants that, is he going to be able to just dump her because you want that only for yourself? Once you start opening up, other people's emotions are involved, and it isn't fair to treat them as less than, if they didn't know that they were supposed to stay in a primary-secondary model.
This, right here, is where everything gets wonky for me. Especially because hierarchical poly has somehow become an evil thing, so telling someone up front that you're looking for a secondary relationship is just as bad as *not* telling them.
It's funny that I agonize about this so much, since nothing remotely close has ever happened to me or any poly people I know in real life. We all just go into dating new people being very upfront - married, not looking for a nesting relationship, if you want that, we're not a good match!
I guess I just devote a lot of brain space to worrying about anything that could so completely derail my life. If either Andy or I ever wanted the same shape of relationship with another partner... Heartbreak. For me, him, the other person, or all three.
All I can really do is continue to be honest, I guess. I can love other partners wholeheartedly, but that "person I come home to every night" role is not open.
It's also amazing to me how often we see people come here looking for help because they are in extremely unhealthy, toxic, and even abusive relationships but they stay because they think poly means they have to put up with shit they would never endure if they were in a monogamous relationship, but mostly because it's "But I love him/her so much!"
I wish someone would give me a dollar for every time I wrote here that love is not enough to make a relationship work, and be healthy and satisfying.
I think these exact thoughts All. The. Time. It does seem like staying in unsatisfying or just plain shitty relationships happens more in poly than in monogamy.
I'm sure part of it is the idea that we don't need to get all our needs met from one person... Sometimes that turns into keeping relationships that aren't meeting ANY needs. And let's face it, poly partners are hard to find. Maybe the scarcity makes us settle for less than we deserve?
But there's something more, I think, something I can't quite put my finger on. That "love is enough!!!" mentality, maybe