Polyamorous and a Social Scientist

Melody

New member
Hello poly friends,

I came to the realization that I couldn't promise anyone monogamy about 5 years ago. I shared that realization with my partner, and we just discussed it from there. My partner and I started to identify as polyamorous about 3 years ago. A lot of discussion went into the decision of opening up/what that would look like, and discussion continues as we learn and grow in the relationship. While we do refer to each other as a "primary", we acknowledge that people change, and in the future it might make more sense to switch "primary-ness" to another partner. As I've learned more about the variations of polyamory lifestyles, I have considered whether a non-hierarchical primary arrangement might be a better fit for us down the road.

A second aspect about me that's emerged from my polyamorous identity is that I'm a social science researcher, with a long-term goal of destigmatizing the polyamorous lifestyle. There is a lot of reactionary judgment and negative assumptions made over the choice to be in a consensually non-monogamous relationship. People assume there's something fundamentally unhealthy and abnormal about it, and that people in open/polyamorous relationships must lack the "healthy" characteristics and qualities necessary for a "normal" monogamous relationship. My goal is to increase the general public and psychological community's understanding of polyamorous motivations and behaviours, showing that polyamory can indeed be a healthy lifestyle choice for some individuals.
 
Greetings Melody,
Welcome to our forum. Please feel free to lurk, browse, etc.

I think it's awesome that you're devoting some research into poly and into how it can do good work in people's lives. I see that you have a study I can maybe participate in, and I intend/hope to do so.

Whatever poly was in past eras, in modern times it is emerging as a seemingly new phenomenon and we are only beginning to understand it and build a support system for it. We're all poly beginners, I like to say.

Anyway it is good to have you with us.
Sincerely,
Kevin T., "official greeter" :)

Notes:

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Welcome aboard!
 
Thank you for such a warm greeting, Kevin!

I am very excited to both be a part of this community, as well as endeavour to increase the public's understanding of polyamorous relationships so that this lifestyle choice gains legitimacy and respect. I plan to continue researching polyamory throughout my career, so if you have any comments/feedback/suggestions for future research considerations (as there is always more to look at and each study can only analyze a limited number of variables), please feel free to share them!

Thank you again,
Melody
 
Not a problem.

Well one thing I might suggest, is since there's a lot of poly people whose longest current relationship is less than five years old, you might want to do a study similar to your existing one, but with more leeway on how long the person's been with their current partner/s.

Many polyamorists do not regard longevity when deciding if a relationship was successful. Longevity usually gets valued more highly when thinking of relationships in monogamous terms.

That's all I can think of for now ...
 
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