opalescent
Active member
Ooh, my kind of person!
Giggled so hard! You're my kind of person, Mags!
Ooh, my kind of person!
You can try and justify it how you wish, try and abuse and belittle me in whatever way you think you'll be able to force me to agree with you, or try and downplay it so as to make believe that a date isn't commonly a way that people assess romantic compatibility. I still strongly believe that it's wholly unethical to have a date with someone without disclosing that you are fucking and/or dating other people. I don't think it constitutes ethical non-monogamy. If my opinion really means that little to you, you'll have no cause to comment on it.
It's a forum. That's what it's here for, to debate and discuss. I wouldn't come to them if that weren't my intention. I don't care if the people on forums do the things in ways that I agree with, as long as they know my opinion of their actions.London, there a lot of energy coming through your posts. Obviously, some of NYCindie's choices have triggered some intense reactions, and you've expressed that, and become more determined that you will choose to behave differently yourself. Often that's all we can do. If you're going to confront everyone with whose choices you disagree, you are going to find yourself very busy, not to mention frustrated by your inability to make other people do what you want. Agree to disagree?
Being poly/ethically non-monogamous isn’t the only issue involved in assessing the romantic potential of a date. These immediately come to mind:
Religious affiliation/faith/spiritually or lack thereof
Political affiliation
Desire to marry or never to marry
Having/not having children
So, my question to London (or anyone who wants to reply) is this: do you tell a date all of these things before you ever meet them for a date?
Yup, this, basically.I don't consider it a "date" if it isn't intended to be a romantic or sexual pursuit. So meeting a friend or acquaintance that I already know I have no intent of having a sexual or romantic future with doesn't make a date to me, regardless of whether its coffee, dinner, hiking, camping.
I tell my current partners "not a potential" or "is a potential" before going out with someone new. And once I decide "not a potential," that is permanent, even if sexual chemistry arises later.
"No marriage, no kids ever," does come up very fast for me. But I guess that's a special case for me, as it tends to run off a natural tangent of "no sex ever," which does qualify as a tell immediately. *shrug*Being poly/ethically non-monogamous isn’t the only issue involved in assessing the romantic potential of a date. These immediately come to mind:
Religious affiliation/faith/spiritually or lack thereof
Political affiliation
Desire to marry or never to marry
Having/not having children
All in my profile. If I meet someone through other means I tell that I am poly, a Christian, a stoner, a mum, and more left than right, before we meet for 1v1 time. So yes, before coffee, even.Being poly/ethically non-monogamous isn’t the only issue involved in assessing the romantic potential of a date. These immediately come to mind:
Religious affiliation/faith/spiritually or lack thereof
Political affiliation
Desire to marry or never to marry
Having/not having children
So, my question to London (or anyone who wants to reply) is this: do you tell a date all of these things before you ever meet them for a date? Even coffee?
Giggled so hard! You're my kind of person, Mags!
If I met someone, and they asked me if I wanted to go out for coffee, I would immediately tell them that I was poly with children, because I don't want to waste time I could be spending with people I know enjoy my time, attention and presence, on someone who can't handle it anyway.If we met for coffee and really hit if off and had a great conversation, some of our views would naturally come out and we could begin to assess our compatibility. To me, learning about the other person is part of the fun of dating.
When it specifically comes to when one should reveal that they are poly, I believe it depends on the situation. I, personally, would want to know if a potential date was married, or had a serious relationship, before even going out with him, but not necessarily if he had casual relationships, though I would want to know if he was having sex with other people before we were sexual. When I was dating, unless and until it was specifically stated that we were exclusive, I didn't assume I was the only person my date was dating.
For the record, I'm mono, my partner is polyamorous, and he has two other partners. He did tell me he was seeing them before we started seeing each other, partly because he had been burned by not revealing this type of info in the past, but mostly because it was clear that we were going to be sexual. We'd known each other for almost two years, and had been heavily flirting for about a month, so we both knew what was going to happen when we finally went out.
I was thinking about meeting someone that's never perused your online profile, at the grocery store, for example. If I were looking to date, and I ran into a cute guy while looking at the fresh peaches, I wouldn't tell him my views on religion, politics, marriage/kids or poly and I wouldn't expect him to immediately tell me his, right there in the Produce department.
If I met someone and they asked me if I wanted to go out to coffee, I would immediately tell them that I was poly with children, because I don't want to waste time I could spend with people I know enjoy my time, attention and presence, on someone who can't handle it anyway.
That's pretty much an unimaginably alien situation for me, personally. Dating strangers I've known for all of two minutes? Does that ever really happen in real life? Weirdness!I was thinking about meeting someone that's never perused your on-line profile, at the grocery store, for example. If I were looking to date, and I ran into a cute guy while looking at the fresh peaches, I wouldn't tell him my views on religion, politics, marriage/kids or poly and I wouldn't expect him to immediately tell me his right there in the produce department.
In fact, if a complete stranger that I had just met and lightly flirted with starting telling me all this information about himself before we even established mutual interest, I would likely back away and not want to engage any further with him.
That's pretty much an unimaginably alien situation for me, personally. Dating strangers I've known for all of two minutes? Does that ever really happen in real life? Weirdness!
So yeah, I *might* not tell them I'm asexual and poly, in that sitch. But that's okay because they're pretty much 100% guaranteed not to get my phone number or email addy, either... there simply is no date coming, because of "WTF? I don't even know you!"![]()
So will I. Just because you have random, sexual encounters that are the most casual of affairs, it doesn't mean you can't be ethically sound. I'd still tell said cute guy that I am fucking other people and/or plan to fuck other people, regardless of whether I end up marrying him. Why am I obligated to tell someone if I am married and poly, cheating and on the prowl, but not if I am poly? See, I think even if the guy is just going to stick his dick in me for a little while, I still owe him the decency of giving him information that could affect his decision about fucking me and/or his decision to call me after we fuck. He might decide someone poly is fine for a shag but nothing more. He might be decent and tell me that beforehand so I can decide whether I want to fuck him under those conditions. I don't know, I'm just a real fan of informed consent.I'd say NYCindie is speaking from a different perspective than London. NYCindie might pick up a cute guy in a bar and take him home just because she's dying for a shag...
Or, she might want someone to go to a groovy NYC art installation or whatever the hell those NYers do. She might not want a LTR.
I can't imagine even considering dating someone I hadn't had at least a decent conversation with. I don't randomly walk up to strangers and ask them out because they look hot. I don't accept other people doing that to me, either.
So if we didn't have at least one thing in common-- in school together, mutual friend, mutual activity we participate in, they perused my profile already and are in a group I am in, I wouldn't be sharing my contact info with them, or meeting them for coffee, much less anything more.