I was thinking about this last week at work, & I have a better grasp of the root miscommunication.
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I do believe that it's necessary to clearly & consistently define the
word "polyamory." That'd be a dictionary entry.
I do also believe that it's necessary to clearly & consistently define the
concept "polyamory." That'd be an encyclopedia entry.
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This thread has persisted for 17 pages, gaining 5,600+ views thus far. Here & elsewhere, discussion of "what do you mean by that?" is repeatedly derailed by flip-flopping between those two levels.
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Here's an example. Literally hundreds of times (maybe more) since 1984, I have heard/read self-congratulatory quacking about "communication is key!!" & "communicate, communicate, communicate!!" as though choosing to "try poly" instantly confers this & other vital skills.
Indeed, a near-obsessive level of communication is central to polyamory, particularly as cohabitation enters the scene or the intimate network grows more densely interconnected.
One person with two unconnected sex partners? Not so much need to talk at all. In fact, no need to call it polyamory; more like "multiple monogamy."
Anything beyond that low degree of complexity needs to have access to these skills, with communication -- clear, immediate, honest -- being near the top of the list.
But to actually SAY that means that soon enough some boob (probably incensed about how "you're trying to tell others how THEY should live their lives!!!") will pop up, whip out one of the
dictionary definitions, & bloviate about how the word "communication" never appears.
Ironically, that tends to derail discussion of communication, & we drag each other away from the CONCEPT in order to wrangle over WORDS.
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Just as easily, attempts to discuss the words that are used -- sometimes terms so uselessly vague or even ambiguous that intelligent discourse is impossible -- are readily derailed by appealing to grand concepts rather than using relatively simple words to clarify relatively simple words.
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And matters can become more complicated. There's a third level after the two which which I began this post: I believe that it's necessary to clearly & consistently define the
practice of "polyamory."
Speaking of levels. I believe it's a great notion that there should be a sort of "poly best practices" guidebook. There's a few of us who've gained our share of emotional scars from error, & have seen many outright disasters; while first-hand experience is a GREAT teacher, everyone should have every ability to avoid pain.
However, there are things that really NEED to be learned in order to have any real chance at happiness (sometimes called "success"). These are not mere "best practices." The Wikipedia article has an interesting list buried about 1/3 the way in, the "Values" subsection of "As a practice":
- Fidelity and loyalty
- Communication and negotiation
- Trust, honesty, dignity, and respect
- Boundaries and agreements
- Gender equality
- Non-possessiveness
Most of these aren't mentioned in the dictionary definitions, & therefore often shrugged off as somehow trivial, even unnecessary. Minimizing them is counterproductive to having multiple intimate relationships, & thus undermines polyamory.