Struggle to be Stronger

@Magdlyn

I think solo poly, parallel poly, or overall dating separately is more of a safe bet for me and my wife when it comes to dealing with individual needs. My wife and I came to the conclusion that it's unfair and unrealistic to expect everything out of a partner. That's why developing relationships with other people is a good way to fufill the needs that the other partner can't.

I have nothing against other poly set-ups, but the ones that advocate a sort of tribe-like set-up I notice tend to run into those issues regarding individual needs, outlooks, and self-expression.
 
==Entry 11==

Jealousy gets all the attention, but resentment is what actually breaks poly relationships.

For years, polyamory spaces have obsessed over jealousy. There are discussions on how to manage it, soothe it, transcend it, and meditate through it. Jealousy has become the “acceptable” negative emotion... the one you’re allowed to admit you feel, as long as you do the emotional homework afterward. But there’s a quieter, sharper emotion that rarely gets talked about, and it does far more damage than jealousy ever could:

Resentment

Here’s the uncomfortable truth. Criticism toward people who express resentment isn’t “growth-oriented feedback.” It’s a form of emotional censorship that keeps polyamory looking prettier than it actually is. Here's another reminder...

Jealousy vs. Resentment... they’re not the same emotion

Jealousy says: “I’m afraid of losing something.”

Resentment says: “I’m getting the short end of the deal.”

Jealousy is about fear and insecurity. Resentment is about imbalance and unfairness.

You can be the most secure, self-aware, emotionally literate person in the room and still feel resentment if the structure of your relationship is unequal. This is evident especially in dynamics where one partner gets new partners easily, the other struggles due to gendered or racial dating imbalances, emotional labor falls unevenly, and one person’s pace sets the tone for everyone else. None of this has anything to do with jealousy.

I noticed that resentment is harder to talk about. I see jealousy gets center stage and that's indicated by a plethora of books, podcasts, workshops, worksheets, and whole subcultures dedicated to “processing jealousy.” Resentment, on the other hand gets shamed, dismissed, psychoanalyzed, or moralized out of existence.

If you bring it up, people jump straight to:

“Have you done the work?”

“Are you projecting?”

“That’s a scarcity mindset.”

“Real poly people don’t feel that way.”

“Probably poly isn't for you.” 💔


Translation:
“Don’t say that out loud. It threatens the brand.”


This is why calling out resentment feels like breaking a taboo and that’s exactly why it needs to be talked about. Resentment comes from structural imbalance, not emotional failure.

Jealousy is personal.
Resentment is relational.


Resentment arises when you’re doing more emotional labor than you’re receiving, your needs get deprioritized in the name of “freedom”, the poly arrangement benefits one partner more than the other, you’re expected to be endlessly supportive without reciprocity, and the dating ecosystem itself is uneven (and let’s be honest, it usually is). This isn’t about insecurity. It's about fairness. Resentment is the emotional signal that says, “This dynamic is costing me more than it’s giving back.” Ignoring that signal doesn’t make you enlightened. It makes you complicit in your own burnout.

So this is why criticizing resentment is a form of censorship. Silencing resentment keeps polyamory ideologically pure, but emotionally dishonest. When people are told that resentment is toxic, a red flag, immature, unprocessed jealousy, or not the real problem... they’re being told, “Don’t talk about the power imbalance.” Resentment exposes the parts of polyamory that are harder to romanticize:

• unequal dating markets

• unequal emotional workloads

• unequal time, attention, validation, and support

• unequal risks and benefits

Critiquing resentment isn't helping anyone evolve. It’s a way of keeping marginalized or disadvantaged partners quiet so the relationship structure doesn’t get questioned.

That’s censorship, plain and simple.

Resentment is not the enemy... silence is. It's a diagnostic tool. See it as the emotional equivalent of a smoke alarm. You don’t fix it by shaming the alarm for being loud. You fix it by finding the fire. So instead of treating resentment as a moral failure, we should treat it as:

• a boundary indicator

• a fairness indicator

• a reciprocity indicator

• a structural imbalance indicator

Polyamory survives honesty, not repression. If polyamory is going to be sustainable, we need to normalize this conversation. Healthy poly isn’t about being endlessly unbothered. It’s about being able to say:

“Something here doesn’t feel equal, and it’s impacting me.”

This insight should be shared without being told you’re insecure, being accused of monogamous conditioning, and being pressured to hide discomfort for the sake of how the community presents it. Talking about resentment isn’t anti-poly. It’s pro-authenticity, pro-honesty, and pro-relationship. If we can’t talk about resentment, then we can’t talk about the real impacts of polyamory. If we can’t talk about the real impacts, why is polyamory even a thing?
 
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I don't think resentment has been overlooked on this board. I'm not sure where you've been hanging out to think that only jealousy gets addressed and resentment is shoved under the carpet. The third article recommended in our resources thread covers "resentment" quite thoroughly.



We talk all the time about how "equality" isn't even the goal; "fairness" is.

This is evident especially in dynamics where one partner gets new partners easily, the other struggles due to gendered or racial dating imbalances,

Women get hit on more, yes. 99.99% of the men that hit on her say "Hi," or "Sup?" or "I'd like to do X to your Y. Interested?"

Race is part of many social issues. I won't go into that here.

emotional labor falls unevenly,

I dunno how much emotional labor you do, but I am a woman (who IDs as non-binary) and I've been on this board since 2009 and I'm still learning. Are you saying one gender has to do more than another gender, or that sometimes one partner has to do more, and another time another partner has to do more? I think both partners in any given dyad each need to do 100% of the labor. That is their responsibility, in polyamory or monoamory.

and one person’s pace sets the tone for everyone else.

One of the most repeated phrases you will see in threads here is "go at the pace of the slowest person," and examples are given of how to do that. :)
 
PolyParrot- I appreciate your thoughts and that you share them here. I generally read them even if I don't reply. #11 serendipitously ties into a conversation I just had with another regarding the difference between jealousy and envy. We were talking about this distinction in our own minds, but also, how, perhaps, one gets confused with the other and can cause confusion in communication.

I also appreciate hearing your ideas about resentment which are tangential to my thoughts regarding love and caring.
 
==Entry 11==

Jealousy gets all the attention, but resentment is what actually breaks poly relationships.

For years, polyamory spaces have obsessed over jealousy. There are discussions on how to manage it, soothe it, transcend it, and meditate through it. Jealousy has become the “acceptable” negative emotion... the one you’re allowed to admit you feel, as long as you do the emotional homework afterward. But there’s a quieter, sharper emotion that rarely gets talked about, and it does far more damage than jealousy ever could:

Resentment

Here’s the uncomfortable truth. Criticism toward people who express resentment isn’t “growth-oriented feedback.” It’s a form of emotional censorship that keeps polyamory looking prettier than it actually is. Here's another reminder...

Jealousy vs. Resentment... they’re not the same emotion

Jealousy says: “I’m afraid of losing something.”

Resentment says: “I’m getting the short end of the deal.”

Jealousy is about fear and insecurity. Resentment is about imbalance and unfairness.

You can be the most secure, self-aware, emotionally literate person in the room and still feel resentment if the structure of your relationship is unequal. This is evident especially in dynamics where one partner gets new partners easily, the other struggles due to gendered or racial dating imbalances, emotional labor falls unevenly, and one person’s pace sets the tone for everyone else. None of this has anything to do with jealousy.

I noticed that resentment is harder to talk about. I see jealousy gets center stage and that's indicated by a plethora of books, podcasts, workshops, worksheets, and whole subcultures dedicated to “processing jealousy.” Resentment, on the other hand gets shamed, dismissed, psychoanalyzed, or moralized out of existence.

If you bring it up, people jump straight to:

“Have you done the work?”

“Are you projecting?”

“That’s a scarcity mindset.”

“Real poly people don’t feel that way.”

“Probably poly isn't for you.” 💔


Translation:
“Don’t say that out loud. It threatens the brand.”


This is why calling out resentment feels like breaking a taboo and that’s exactly why it needs to be talked about. Resentment comes from structural imbalance, not emotional failure.

Jealousy is personal.
Resentment is relational.


Resentment arises when you’re doing more emotional labor than you’re receiving, your needs get deprioritized in the name of “freedom”, the poly arrangement benefits one partner more than the other, you’re expected to be endlessly supportive without reciprocity, and the dating ecosystem itself is uneven (and let’s be honest, it usually is). This isn’t about insecurity. It's about fairness. Resentment is the emotional signal that says, “This dynamic is costing me more than it’s giving back.” Ignoring that signal doesn’t make you enlightened. It makes you complicit in your own burnout.

So this is why criticizing resentment is a form of censorship. Silencing resentment keeps polyamory ideologically pure, but emotionally dishonest. When people are told that resentment is toxic, a red flag, immature, unprocessed jealousy, or not the real problem... they’re being told, “Don’t talk about the power imbalance.” Resentment exposes the parts of polyamory that are harder to romanticize:

• unequal dating markets

• unequal emotional workloads

• unequal time, attention, validation, and support

• unequal risks and benefits

Critiquing resentment isn't helping anyone evolve. It’s a way of keeping marginalized or disadvantaged partners quiet so the relationship structure doesn’t get questioned.

That’s censorship, plain and simple.

Resentment is not the enemy... silence is. It's a diagnostic tool. See it as the emotional equivalent of a smoke alarm. You don’t fix it by shaming the alarm for being loud. You fix it by finding the fire. So instead of treating resentment as a moral failure, we should treat it as:

• a boundary indicator

• a fairness indicator

• a reciprocity indicator

• a structural imbalance indicator

Polyamory survives honesty, not repression. If polyamory is going to be sustainable, we need to normalize this conversation. Healthy poly isn’t about being endlessly unbothered. It’s about being able to say:

“Something here doesn’t feel equal, and it’s impacting me.”

This insight should be shared without being told you’re insecure, being accused of monogamous conditioning, and being pressured to hide discomfort for the sake of how the community presents it. Talking about resentment isn’t anti-poly. It’s pro-authenticity, pro-honesty, and pro-relationship. If we can’t talk about resentment, then we can’t talk about the real impacts of polyamory. If we can’t talk about the real impacts, why is polyamory even a thing?
I really like your posts. I like your thoughts on intersectionality, and how the identities we carry can really impact our experiences in our relationships.

I've definitely had my fair share of handling resentment. I've found it's intertwined with silence, as a culmination of perceived injustices that go unaddressed until they simmer into an addictingly bitter emotional state. It can be scary to resent people you deeply love, in my experience. I try really hard to listen to those times when I feel anger, and it's definitely made me a more vocal person as I've aged. Balancing that with being respectful is always quite a challenge, but a necessary one to me.

I've yet to truly dip my toe into the polyamory pool, though I could see how it could be painful to see a close partner going on dates/building relationships while you find little success with your own endeavors. It's especially hard since it doesn't come with an easy solution. The two I can think of being to move or to consider longer-distance relationships.

I wish you the best with your endeavors. You have an engaging writing style that's concise, and I like your use of colors :)
 
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Are you saying one gender has to do more than another gender, or that sometimes one partner has to do more, and another time another partner has to do more? I think both partners in any given dyad each need to do 100% of the labor.
@Magdlyn

For the most part yes, I observe that men have to put more effort than women. It's socially expected and often times men face the rejections ranging from easy to brutal. It's the current state of things and it seems like this expectation is still holding on.

But you're right, both sides need to put in effort. Regardless a man or woman or any partner made the first move, the first move won't matter if feelings and communication aren't reciprocated...

Also thanks for the links. All I'm saying is that jealousy has been taking the spotlight in terms of relationship complications. Resentment is the main factor and sadly people mistaken it for jealousy or dismiss it (both in poly and mono relationships).

@KND
Thanks for checking my posts even if you don't respond often. It's good to know you are having conversations about how different terms are alike yet totally different from each other.

@YesThisIsDog242
Thanks for your feedback. I like to share my observations and keep an open mind. I feel like that there's something new to learn in poly relationships and I'll continue to learn.

Haha also I try to make my post insightful and colorful for a better reading experience. 😊
 
Also thanks for the links. All I'm saying is that jealousy has been taking the spotlight in terms of relationship complications. Resentment is the main factor and sadly people mistaken it for jealousy or dismiss it (both in poly and mono relationships).
From what I know, the most, say advanced (ugh) theory in jealousy was that it was compound emotion. Basically bunch of various reasons that are gathered under big tent name (and in practice most have to do with fear, but sometimes fear of losing and sometimes more of a fear based in self esteem. The second seems similar to resentment as you described).

I'm think the first was more common. Perhaps if the second is combined with a sense of fairness (or lack of it) it might be commoner, I don't know. But from what I can see, resentment as you described is also a big tent compound, might be sometimes based on unfulfilled needs, sometimes rooted in fear of abandonment (if it's comparison to another partner), and probably more.

These seem similar in a way, but... See, if I had to draw a Venn diagram it'd have to be multidimensional because say fear of abandonment can have various triggers, multiple factors influencing both roots and expression, so even "fear of abandonment", which can manifest as jealousy or resentment, is a complex phenomenon.

In practice I think because of that, general guidelines are just that, and any practical problem needs knowledge first and foremost - which means questioning, yourself, your partner etc.

Or just YOLO it, you can't talk forever, and count on luck or positive attitude 😂


Btw, thisisdog, i read your reply in duress thread and I need to ponder on it, as it calls for quite thoughtful response. But it's already past midnight in Europe.
 
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