Hi,
I posted here before about my relationship with Tony, with whom I am in a relationship with. He lives with Jane, and although I would have preferred a kitchen-table polyamory, she prefers all relationships to be separate. In any case, Tony and I still see each other regularly and he has finally been able to embrace his bisexuality and gone on a few dates with men.
My question with polyamory is: why bother? If Jane does not meet his needs, why does he continue a relationship with her? Why not simply end things and remain friends? They can love each other without being a couple. She pays his rent, and he agrees to keep relationships separate from each other. This sounds great, but it leads me to wonder if he is just avoiding having to do the hard work of being in a more traditional relationship?
In other words, Are we (poly-minded folks) prioritizing our sexual needs and simply avoiding heartbreak/ the hard work that comes with being by ourselves or with someone new by moving into open and poly relationships? I sort of mean this in a philosophical way; in many posts I read, people seem like they remain friends or roommates with one person and then seek the sex or attention they need (nothing wrong with that) outside the relationship, and instead of giving up one partner to find a more suited partner, they cling to the old one. When this concept works, it seems to be beautiful. But many posts I read, it sounds like people give up on their ideal relationship to settle for one in which they can continue to live with their spouse or lover and also have outside relationships. My question is why not admit that the old relationship no longer meets those needs and allow each to grow and move on?
I think polyamory can be a beautiful thing (and I’ve read many good examples here), but sometime it seems as if it is sometimes people simply wanting to find an easier path: continue one relationship that meets some needs and then start a new one that fulfills others, rather than embracing the struggles that relationships bring or being willing to say, hey, this isn’t working, I love you, but my desire lie elsewhere. In other words, I wonder if we are really seeking a new form of relationship or simply carrying on in ways that are allow us to eliminate struggles that come with love.
Just to reiterate, I think some poly relationships really work and people can have them, but I wonder also if poly is sometime used as a way to get around “rocking the boat” when really the boat needs rocking.
(And also I speak relating to my own experience where divorce was a hard decision but needed to allow us each to grow as individuals.)
PS I also understand that one partner can meet all needs, but it seems that most of poly is about sexual needs. Feel free to correct me if I am wrong.
I posted here before about my relationship with Tony, with whom I am in a relationship with. He lives with Jane, and although I would have preferred a kitchen-table polyamory, she prefers all relationships to be separate. In any case, Tony and I still see each other regularly and he has finally been able to embrace his bisexuality and gone on a few dates with men.
My question with polyamory is: why bother? If Jane does not meet his needs, why does he continue a relationship with her? Why not simply end things and remain friends? They can love each other without being a couple. She pays his rent, and he agrees to keep relationships separate from each other. This sounds great, but it leads me to wonder if he is just avoiding having to do the hard work of being in a more traditional relationship?
In other words, Are we (poly-minded folks) prioritizing our sexual needs and simply avoiding heartbreak/ the hard work that comes with being by ourselves or with someone new by moving into open and poly relationships? I sort of mean this in a philosophical way; in many posts I read, people seem like they remain friends or roommates with one person and then seek the sex or attention they need (nothing wrong with that) outside the relationship, and instead of giving up one partner to find a more suited partner, they cling to the old one. When this concept works, it seems to be beautiful. But many posts I read, it sounds like people give up on their ideal relationship to settle for one in which they can continue to live with their spouse or lover and also have outside relationships. My question is why not admit that the old relationship no longer meets those needs and allow each to grow and move on?
I think polyamory can be a beautiful thing (and I’ve read many good examples here), but sometime it seems as if it is sometimes people simply wanting to find an easier path: continue one relationship that meets some needs and then start a new one that fulfills others, rather than embracing the struggles that relationships bring or being willing to say, hey, this isn’t working, I love you, but my desire lie elsewhere. In other words, I wonder if we are really seeking a new form of relationship or simply carrying on in ways that are allow us to eliminate struggles that come with love.
Just to reiterate, I think some poly relationships really work and people can have them, but I wonder also if poly is sometime used as a way to get around “rocking the boat” when really the boat needs rocking.
(And also I speak relating to my own experience where divorce was a hard decision but needed to allow us each to grow as individuals.)
PS I also understand that one partner can meet all needs, but it seems that most of poly is about sexual needs. Feel free to correct me if I am wrong.