I don't think anyone in this thread has said that triads don't work.
No, I don't believe they have. But what I do see is overly emotional responses to anything that has to do with a situation that might look like a 'triad.' It seems like a lot of people have issues with that particular configuration.
I was starting to think it was just a few people on this particular forum that have had bad experiences that they are generalising. I'm the author of a book on non-traditional relationships. I have worked with (and the book is co-authored by) poly-friendly counsellors, and I have a
lot of information on different poly configurations and experiences.
I'd never run across the level of hostility to triads that I encountered here during the research for the book, however. Odd. Maybe it's a cultural thing, as I've most info about the Netherlands and Germany.
Recently I did ran across
this, though. The article seems to confirm that there is a certain prejudice in some poly circles against 'triad' configurations.
It does seem that the unicorn-hunter situation is common and leads to difficulty. But from my vantage, it appears that the biggest problem is simply when people are not acting as adults, but instead playing out roles (and all three can do this!), instead of committing to the hard work it takes to make
any poly configuration work.
As an aside, I did notice in my research that there were (very broadly speaking) two groups of people interested in poly. The first were ones that just wanted to carry on with dating/falling in love/having sex with more than one person, with no interest in changing their underlying behaviour patterns.
The second group embrace poly as a part of a fundamental re-examination of who they are in a quest to have more conscious relationships.
I may be wrong, but it seems like the first group often get really angry with the second group when discussions about triads happen. The second group find the first haven't a clue what they are talking about. Talk about miscommunication.
