TheExplorer
Member
Hey All,
It seems one of the greatest challenges to polyamory is not managing the relationship internally, but dealing with all of the labels which establishment society puts on what we do:
For example, having sex with someone other than your partner is labeled "cheating", "affair", "adultery", etc. even if it done with full knowledge and consent of your partner.
Then a woman who has sex with a committed man is labeled as a "mistress", even if the committed man's SO fully acknowledges and consents to what is going on.
One thing that frustrates me is if I hear such labels all the time, I start to internalize them. I know the labels are just labels, but it's hard to just push them aside.
So how do you deal with all of this? Are we just supposed to keep closeted about what we do because others think we are just evil people? It bugs me out because I often hear some harsh "you should suffer in hell for what you are doing" statement from someone with this kind of thinking. Or even if it's not to such an extreme, people who know what's going on give you funny looks.
It seems one of the greatest challenges to polyamory is not managing the relationship internally, but dealing with all of the labels which establishment society puts on what we do:
For example, having sex with someone other than your partner is labeled "cheating", "affair", "adultery", etc. even if it done with full knowledge and consent of your partner.
Then a woman who has sex with a committed man is labeled as a "mistress", even if the committed man's SO fully acknowledges and consents to what is going on.
One thing that frustrates me is if I hear such labels all the time, I start to internalize them. I know the labels are just labels, but it's hard to just push them aside.
So how do you deal with all of this? Are we just supposed to keep closeted about what we do because others think we are just evil people? It bugs me out because I often hear some harsh "you should suffer in hell for what you are doing" statement from someone with this kind of thinking. Or even if it's not to such an extreme, people who know what's going on give you funny looks.