Spork
Active member
Isn't it something how most folks find honest poly so mind bending? Like just having "meaningless sex" in dishonest ways, that they can understand, but everybody being cool and happily non-mono, with feelings involved, and honesty involved...whoa...weird...
lol
I've run into that so many times.
In talking about endings... I have gone into relationships since the end of my marriage with some contemplation of how an end of it may look like. Mostly, that was in terms of some of the young people I've known and how I thought well, they would take it too hard. One guy was seriously pining (writing poems on FL even) about his last ex, and I'm like...let's just not. You are too heart-hungry for me right now. But mostly in the majority of my relationships, I don't want them to ever actually END. I want them to EVOLVE. When the time comes that one or both or all of us feels things are not fitting our lives or our needs, then shift the parameters, and try to evolve it into something like friendship, or chosen family even. If someone moves away, and you drift apart, but still connect occasionally, then that is fine. Mainly I feel like doing something like that is more organic, rather than the typical mainstream explosion of breakup drama that people do. I hear from folks ("muggles" lol) who are like, "Why would I ever speak to someone again after we break up? It hurts too much. I can't move on if they're in my life." I am the opposite of that. And being the way I am also makes it more viable for me to comfortably be part of a community which often includes people who are in shifting love and sex dynamics with each other...I have former lovers in my kink scene, and I'm not going to skip events because they're there. No awkwardness is required.
So I think maybe you and Dustin should encourage each other (especially you encouraging him, the way it sounds) to adopt that "in the moment" approach. Where instead of demanding some kind of specific end outcome or culturally programmed THING just because loving feelings are there...you continue to relish the wonderful thing so long as it is wonderful, and if one day it must end, try to see it as not ending, not failing, no drama, no heartbreak...but rather an organic evolution.
Life and love as a journey, not a destination, as it were. Stuff like that.
EDIT: Sometimes I feel like such a hippie.

lol
I've run into that so many times.
In talking about endings... I have gone into relationships since the end of my marriage with some contemplation of how an end of it may look like. Mostly, that was in terms of some of the young people I've known and how I thought well, they would take it too hard. One guy was seriously pining (writing poems on FL even) about his last ex, and I'm like...let's just not. You are too heart-hungry for me right now. But mostly in the majority of my relationships, I don't want them to ever actually END. I want them to EVOLVE. When the time comes that one or both or all of us feels things are not fitting our lives or our needs, then shift the parameters, and try to evolve it into something like friendship, or chosen family even. If someone moves away, and you drift apart, but still connect occasionally, then that is fine. Mainly I feel like doing something like that is more organic, rather than the typical mainstream explosion of breakup drama that people do. I hear from folks ("muggles" lol) who are like, "Why would I ever speak to someone again after we break up? It hurts too much. I can't move on if they're in my life." I am the opposite of that. And being the way I am also makes it more viable for me to comfortably be part of a community which often includes people who are in shifting love and sex dynamics with each other...I have former lovers in my kink scene, and I'm not going to skip events because they're there. No awkwardness is required.
So I think maybe you and Dustin should encourage each other (especially you encouraging him, the way it sounds) to adopt that "in the moment" approach. Where instead of demanding some kind of specific end outcome or culturally programmed THING just because loving feelings are there...you continue to relish the wonderful thing so long as it is wonderful, and if one day it must end, try to see it as not ending, not failing, no drama, no heartbreak...but rather an organic evolution.
Life and love as a journey, not a destination, as it were. Stuff like that.
EDIT: Sometimes I feel like such a hippie.
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