@dingedheart :
Thanks, but I am not a feminist. I am a humanist. I seek to SEE the perspectives of all people and recognize when anyone is being cast unfairly, overlooked, treated badly, etc.
Which is why I find the "men are pigs" stereotypes offputting. What, for wanting sex? When I was a teenager, I wanted sex, and I chased it with a gusto that surpassed most of my male friends. Does my experience count for naught? Opalescent has it right. When women feel safe and cast aside concepts of shame, we are at least as sexual as our male counterparts. If anything, had I been a parent of a teenage girl, and a teenage boy, I'd be more comfortable with the girl getting laid. Because her available contraceptive methods are more effective, statistically, than what is available to the boy to take charge of avoiding irresponsible babymaking. One day if Vasalgel ever gets out into the wild, it'll be a game changer, if ya ask me. I've watched news of it for years. Point being though, all humans have our various struggles, and I am just as interested in the struggles of men as women, but I will certainly push back when women are commodified in a conversation to the point where their minds and motivations are seen as irrelevant. Always flip the coin, and have a look at the other side, especially if you're going to engage in generalizations...which can be problematic anyhow.
I do not think that anyone who is happy in their relationship, is "settling." It's a tall order under good circumstances, to have a happy love life that lasts a long time with the same participants involved. Nevermind how many or what genders are doing it. Happiness doesn't look like, "settling" to me.
I frankly often feel sorry for partners who get the "poly bomb" right in the face. I've never tried to open a mono relationship. I did poly, starting as poly, and then dialed it back to something more like mono. I did the opposite. As we've seen here many times...opening a mono relationship when one person is initiating and one isn't really on board, is as often as not the end of the original relationship.
@ Shaya: Regarding "supply and demand"... I know more poly folks than most people do. I have been on this forum for a while, if not as long as many, over a year. And I have a community locally that is chock full of polyamorists. And yet anything I can observe even with greater than average exposure first hand, still feels more anecdotal, than statistical.
I think that polyfolk are still a minority to the point that it's hard to paint accurate statistical pictures. And I also think that trying to see humanity in terms of reproductive strategy and evolutionary rules and stuff is oversimplification, and it's kind of silly. Humans are damned complicated. You can say that "well generally, this is true." Yeah, except for the billion times it isn't.
"Women are more emotional." Oh, good luck with that. Not in my lifetime.
"Women want committed relationships more than men." Not in my experience. My ex pushed for marriage, when I balked and kept it at bay for 10 years.
There's just too many variables in this equation. When every person is a layered stew of various motivations, it's absurd to speak of them/us in simple animal terms. You can long for a unified theory that makes human behavior easy to predict all day, but people will still surprise you.
My position is... Try to enjoy that, embrace the chaos...don't fight it.
