In the recovery world, we call this concept loving detachment. It's something that every recovering addict and co-dependent thinker needs to learn, but it's something that just about everyone could use a brush-up on.
I agree with FallenAngelina. It was nice to read the article in a poly context, but I think it is basic skills everyone could understand and work to have under their belts.
A couple that is "joined at the hip?" That isn't healthy or "true love." Books and movies might encourage that, but those are works of fiction, not reality. The people in the couple need to be able to go out and do stuff on their own, or with other friends. Not always be with the partner.
They need to know that when you become part of a couple, you are still
you, the individual. You do not subsume yourself to the relationship and become "all couple."
- There is the 1st person. "Me." I do things on my own. There are things I am responsible for -- just me. There is "me time." (This person is an individual)
- There is the 2nd person. "You." You do things on your own. There are things you are responsible for -- just you. There is "you time." (This person is an individual)
- There is a "we" part where the couple does some things together, is responsible for some stuff together. "Our time" or "our shared responsibilities." (These people are a couple or dyad)
They are all those things at the same time.
It's like the letter "H" -- the couple is holding hands, but also stands on their own two feet. Healthy interdependence. If they have to stop holding hands or break up? There they are. Still standing on their own two feet. Emotionally resilient. They can do healthy independence
or healthy interdependence. They want to be together because they want to. Not because they NEED to.
Not all enmeshed like the letter "A" couple where they are holding hands and propping each other up in various ways instead of learning how to stand on their own two feet or learning how to do healthy interdependence. More like... I'm doing your jobs for you and you are doing mine for me. Instead of each one developing their own skills and doing their own jobs and co-owning the shared jobs. Messy personal boundaries.
If for some reason we have to stop holding hands or break up? Everyone and everything has all been one big soup. I don't know where I end and you begin. It was codependence / enmeshment mess. So it ALL comes crashing down when it falls apart.
Like "regular" break ups are bad enough, but if you are a letter "H" type, you know how to stand on your own two feet you can weather it out. Single load bummer.
But for letter "A" people, break ups are
more than a break up. There's the break up load to process. (Bummer 1). Plus realizing that actually, they don't even know HOW to process it because all their jobs used to be done by the other person -- the one that left. NOW what do they do? (Bummer 2).
So I'm not sure they were ready to be in a healthy couple, much less in a healthy poly network. "Doing poly" shines a light on all the weak spots that were already there.
If people can sort some of that stuff out before they try poly it might help make the transition time a bit easier to take.
Galagirl