There's a good YouTube video about coming out: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MJ-8ocmtb_8
Their fear of major relationship change isn't just about fear of abandonment and loss, it's fear for maintaining a basic standard of living.
What does the friend get from the heated conversation? Why do they need to keep harping on it? What's there to "debate" anyway? Like if they come up with good enough talking points, they will finally sway you to give it up and go monogamous?
Oh she will tell you being gay and being a poly person who is "afraid" of commitment is obviously "different." My thought would be no shit poly and being gay are exclusively different. Sexual liberals are stating that heterosexuality supremacy and mono supremacy are two forms of ethical viewpoints based on delusions of moral supremacy.But then she wanted to examine WHY she's so jealous and what caused that and prevented her from accepting other people wanted to live differently. Cuz she's not gay but she's ok with her cousin being gay. He lives different. Why was she having a hard time with this?
Sadly yes. We had good long term close friends (a couple) who were mono and we used to operate on a need to know basis with our friends as we had become poly after several years together. However, my wife started dating a guy they also knew and it was becoming a bit awkward and lots of other people knew so we opened up and told them. They seemed ok at first but over the next few weeks became distant and that unfortunately turned quickly into nastiness from one of them. Who told me bluntly when I invited them around, that they wanted nothing more to do with us as we were "weird" . These are people who we had shared close family happy and sad time with and "been there" for and vice versa.
However, it didn't stop there: nasty and untrue rumours were spread about us by them amongst a shared social group, and this led to us being ostracized from that group and certain " friends" refused to attend events if we were attending. We even had a wedding invite cancelled.
No actually 5 years later I don't give a flying fig , it was hurtful at the time, but we've made new friends and joined new social groups. And actually it has weirdly proven beneficial as it has allowed us to break out of certain insular behaviour and social groups.
We're open and honest these days and if people don't like our lifestyle that's their problem.
Are any of you in a friendship where your friend morally disagrees with poly and regularly have heated debates concerning monogamy and polyamory. I would love to read your experiences. Personally, I think it is extremely difficult to have a platonic relationship with someone who strongly disagrees with your lifestyle?
Hi edpsy77,
I am mostly not out to my friends and family, so I don't know who would or would not object to my being poly. The few who do know, seem to accept it just fine. I suppose I can think of a few who wouldn't approve, but honestly, why do they even need to know? It's not their business.
I have learned to not even share parts of myself with certain friends. I rather not leave the option for judgements as I don’t have the energy for moral police.
"Kevin. I was thinking. If you have two primary partners that you love very much, you do want your close friends and close family members to know? Right. Perhaps you don't. But I would find it humiliating that I would have to hide one of my lovers because my good friends and family members would strongly disapprove."
Re (from edpsy77):
If it was just up to me, I would be out to my family and friends. However, I have two poly companions who do not want to be out. I respect their wishes. Most people think I am just a close friend to them, that's how I play it. I didn't like playing it like that in the early years, but I got used to it. Now it's just a minor annoyance at worst.
They KNOW the One True Way [....] My theory is it makes them angry because it causes them to doubt the validity of their beliefs.
I think of Christianity as a spectrum, not an absolute. A very devout Christian would say an open-minded Christian is not a true Christian.
I have been with Christian women in the past who were pretty lax. We didn't have problems for the most part. Of course I've had some tell me they were fine with me being an Atheist, but in the back of their mind they felt they might convert me eventually. But if someone tells me they are devoted to Christ I am walking away. That's fine for them, but I know (now especially) they won't let up. It would be the same for any religion or philosophy I didn't believe in. For instance, I could never date a Trump fan either.
I had a friend who was against poly, but it wasn't for moral reasons. He couldn't grasp letting his woman sleep with other guys. Ironic because he cheated on his gf constantly, and on his wife before that.
It seems like she may have had security issues. She probably wondered if the women you were poly with, were better than her in (intelligence, looks, sex etc). Many monogamist cite this a a justification to MORALLY oppose poly. I find it immature and ridiculous.As for the morals thing, I took it one step farther. I dated a Christian woman who was opposed to poly. I was fine with being monogamous. However, apparently my being poly in the past ate away at her.
Yeah, society as a whole is not yet ready to accept polyamory. It's getting better, but there's a long way to go.