This issue came up on another thread, but I wanted to talk about it here (as the other thread was getting derailed).
I've noticed a couple times lately that a newish-to-poly person is struggling with their partner's approach to poly in a new relationship--feeling that the partner is going too fast, too soon, even though the OP wants to be poly too. In these cases, it's a fairly new relationship that started with both partners wanting to be poly or non-monogamous (not a monogamous relationship being opened later).
Those of us offering advice soon stumbled into a sort of debate. Some people suggested that a new relationship needs time to become stable and intimate before anyone should be seeking others to date. Other posters pointed out that you can start off being poly/open right away, and it's not necessarily a problem, it's just a more autonomous and less hierarchical way to do poly.
Of course, there is no one right way to practice polyamory, and every relationship might be different. But I wanted to hear about people's experiences with both/either approach.
For me, the biggest issue is that if you slowly open a relationship (rather than starting out fully open), it creates a hierarchy with a "main couple" who get to be alone together, but then no future partners get that same privilege. No one who slowly builds up intimacy together will then break up temporarily in order allow a future partner to also build up that same one-on-one intimacy for a period, right?
I mean, no poly person who starts seeing someone who already has another relationship gets to slowly open up with them, so it doesn't quite make sense to me.
Personally, when I first started out doing ethical non-monogamy, I struggled for a long time, because there was so much advice out there about "opening up" relationships, and none describing how to just be poly right away.
I've noticed a couple times lately that a newish-to-poly person is struggling with their partner's approach to poly in a new relationship--feeling that the partner is going too fast, too soon, even though the OP wants to be poly too. In these cases, it's a fairly new relationship that started with both partners wanting to be poly or non-monogamous (not a monogamous relationship being opened later).
Those of us offering advice soon stumbled into a sort of debate. Some people suggested that a new relationship needs time to become stable and intimate before anyone should be seeking others to date. Other posters pointed out that you can start off being poly/open right away, and it's not necessarily a problem, it's just a more autonomous and less hierarchical way to do poly.
Of course, there is no one right way to practice polyamory, and every relationship might be different. But I wanted to hear about people's experiences with both/either approach.
For me, the biggest issue is that if you slowly open a relationship (rather than starting out fully open), it creates a hierarchy with a "main couple" who get to be alone together, but then no future partners get that same privilege. No one who slowly builds up intimacy together will then break up temporarily in order allow a future partner to also build up that same one-on-one intimacy for a period, right?
I mean, no poly person who starts seeing someone who already has another relationship gets to slowly open up with them, so it doesn't quite make sense to me.
Personally, when I first started out doing ethical non-monogamy, I struggled for a long time, because there was so much advice out there about "opening up" relationships, and none describing how to just be poly right away.