Huh. Very interesting thread. And very intersting to see all the takes on the notion of "romance".
A few thoughts: I think that love is a choice. Of course, there is a certain "something" which provides the foundation for that choice to be made, and this changes from person to person, but as far as I see it, there is no inevitability to feeling love or how we love, it's always a choice, something we can build. Lust, infatuation, on the other hand, they do seem inevitable, and it's usually those characteristics which are projected onto "romantic love" and "love" in general, as something which happens to you (i.e. you "fall" in love), and regarding which you have no decision over. You would similarly have no decision on how you love, according to this perspective, but this is very suspicious, and I believe most people here would object to it, seeing as poly seems to entail a reflection on how we love and an active stance on how we approach love.
In any case, I used to think, maybe equivocating the term, of romantic love as something to describe the kind of feelings that you have for a partner or partners of intimate relationships that make them different to friends. Usually feelings that involve the desire to build a life together, of imagining that person as your safety net, of thinking about that person as someone who will give you a kind of whole intimacy, which involves emotional, intellectual, physical intimacy, etc.
Of course, now I am reconsidering these terms. I've never been in a poly situation, and whenever I've thought about it I've always thought about it happening with a "Primary" partner, and us having relationships that while not altogether casual, there is either an explicit intention to set boundaries to those "secondary" relationships or a lack of desire of having those relationships progress into a deeper kind of connection. I feel comfortable with that idea, but I'm no longer sure of whether that can work.
And in any case, the view I just espoused doesn't reflect what people in poly relationships that don't work through "Primary/secondary" distinctions feel or think about it.
My question is the following: Do you think that there is a distinction to be made regarding feelings? Is it unnecessary? Like, would you be comfortable in thinking about your relationships and your partner's relationships as just involving feelings, in the most general sense? I seem to be unable to throw it out of the window, both because mt mind works making distinctions, so as to better understand things, and because I guess it anchors the setting of limits and boundaries (i.e. we both agree that we want to have X kind of feelings for each other and not for other people).
A few thoughts: I think that love is a choice. Of course, there is a certain "something" which provides the foundation for that choice to be made, and this changes from person to person, but as far as I see it, there is no inevitability to feeling love or how we love, it's always a choice, something we can build. Lust, infatuation, on the other hand, they do seem inevitable, and it's usually those characteristics which are projected onto "romantic love" and "love" in general, as something which happens to you (i.e. you "fall" in love), and regarding which you have no decision over. You would similarly have no decision on how you love, according to this perspective, but this is very suspicious, and I believe most people here would object to it, seeing as poly seems to entail a reflection on how we love and an active stance on how we approach love.
In any case, I used to think, maybe equivocating the term, of romantic love as something to describe the kind of feelings that you have for a partner or partners of intimate relationships that make them different to friends. Usually feelings that involve the desire to build a life together, of imagining that person as your safety net, of thinking about that person as someone who will give you a kind of whole intimacy, which involves emotional, intellectual, physical intimacy, etc.
Of course, now I am reconsidering these terms. I've never been in a poly situation, and whenever I've thought about it I've always thought about it happening with a "Primary" partner, and us having relationships that while not altogether casual, there is either an explicit intention to set boundaries to those "secondary" relationships or a lack of desire of having those relationships progress into a deeper kind of connection. I feel comfortable with that idea, but I'm no longer sure of whether that can work.
And in any case, the view I just espoused doesn't reflect what people in poly relationships that don't work through "Primary/secondary" distinctions feel or think about it.
My question is the following: Do you think that there is a distinction to be made regarding feelings? Is it unnecessary? Like, would you be comfortable in thinking about your relationships and your partner's relationships as just involving feelings, in the most general sense? I seem to be unable to throw it out of the window, both because mt mind works making distinctions, so as to better understand things, and because I guess it anchors the setting of limits and boundaries (i.e. we both agree that we want to have X kind of feelings for each other and not for other people).