I assumed it was a universal truth that it was at best annoying when a meta's feelings motivated a partner to cancel a date.
I saw on this board another view.
Are people okay with this kind of cancellation who don't have intrinsic reward (like, your longstanding partner is jealous and it allows you to cancel on your partner if they cancel on you.)
Especially if you are solo poly, rather than nesting partnered yourself?
Assume no health or mental health or childcare challenges to mitigate the request.
And if yoi are okay. , how do you view that?
It is possible that, depending on how my statements were read, I may have been the person whose "other view" you're citing. It's possible that I've got nothing to do with it and you're talking about somebody else entirely, of course! But, in case I was communicating unclearly, I want to try again and see if I can explain better.
I, personally, would not be okay with being cancelled on for any reason having to do with a partner that I wouldn't equally well be okay with being cancelled on for a platonic friend. That is, if either one were suicidal, or had just found out their dad had cancer, or something like that, then of course I'm okay with cancelling plans. If it's simply a matter of having a bad day, though, I'm not only not going to be comfortable with it, I won't accept it. I don't get into relationships in which I am put second to somebody else's relationship with my partner; and if I find myself in one by accident, I get out of it again as soon as I notice the situation.
The thing is, I consider it
my own boundary that I won't date people who prioritize their other partner over me. I do not consider it my right to demand that my partner put my needs, or their plans with me, on an equal level with those of their other partner... it's completely their right to make that choice, and I won't argue or complain about it. But it's also my right to decide whom to date, and I don't choose to date people who do that.
So I do think there's something kind of wrong with complaining or objecting to a partner's choosing to prioritize their other partner's feelings over your plans with them, but that doesn't mean that I would feel okay with a partner who made that choice. In fact, I wouldn't even
keep a partner who made that choice.
It's rather like partners who expect monogamy from their romantic relationships. There's nothing wrong with their doing that. I don't have the right to try and pressure them into
not doing that. I do, however, have the right to choose not to date anybody who expects monogamy from their partners, and I exercise that right consistently.
Same with prioritizing another partner's bad day over my plans with them. It's not something I'd complain about, or demand different treatment. It
is something I'd walk away over, at least if it were consistent.