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Brother Daniel
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Polyamory: Curse or Cure
Diana Adams runs a Brooklyn-based legal firm
oriented toward providing traditional marriage rights to non-traditional
families. She is presently in a sexual relationship with “several men and
women.” In an interview in The Atlantic,
she tried to justify her lifestyle:
·
We put so much emphasis on a partner being everything—that this
person completes you—and when that doesn’t happen it creates a lot of pressure.
I don't think that open relationships are for everyone but it's something that
you should no longer feel ashamed to talk about at a time when so many
marriages are failing. http://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2014/02/up-for-polyamory-creating-alternatives-to-marriage/283920/
Evidently, Adams feels that she has what it
takes to make polyamory work. Nevertheless, Adams is right! So many marriages
are failing, but this failure seems to be a modern phenomenon. Perhaps it’s the
result of having inflated expectations/desires similar to those of
polyamorists. While Adams correctly reflects that one person can’t fulfill all of our needs and desires, she then
assumes that many can:
·
Well, for example, with my female partners, I feel a different
kind of power dynamic. I feel a protective impulse toward women I’m involved
with. It's a different kind of love feeling. My partner Ed is a wonderful
feminist man, though sometimes I’d really like to be out on a date with the
kind of man who wants to open car doors for me and treat me like a princess. I
don't want that all the time, but I might want that once a month.
“I feel…I feel…I want…I want!” I’m left
wondering – How long with this infatuation last, even with many partners? When
does it begin to feel old, superficial and even oppressive? Does polyamory
represent progress or a descent into a juvenile, “I want this now” mentality?
This raises the question, “What are mature relationships about – commitment or
maximizing the ‘I want’?” It would seem that a commitment to a troupe of men
and women would translate into a commitment to none.
Polyamorists seem to have a hidden assumption
– that monogamous couples become sexually bored because of a problem inherent
to monogamy. However, that problem might be inherent in us instead. After all,
why would we pursue other partners? The body-parts are basically the same. What
then produces the excitement in a new relationship and boredom with the old
humdrum? Perhaps we have a pathological need to be adored. If this is so,
perhaps we should learn how to find excitement in the one to whom we have
committed ourselves!
Polyamory seems to provide a green light to
jump ship and find a few new partners when things get a bit sticky and the “I
want” is no longer being satisfied. Isn’t marriage supposed to be a workshop
where we discover one another and work through the issues that are caused by
this encounter?
And what about those hard-feeling-buttons
that polyamory is certain to push? Adams explains:
·
We talk a lot. We check in with each other, “Is this okay with
you?” and the answer can be, “I don't know.” For instance maybe Ed and I are
going to a party together and this guy that I've been dating is at the party
too. “Will it feel okay with you if I go over and kiss him?” Polyamory will
find your buttons and it will push them. If you don't want to have that kind of
challenge, it's not the right lifestyle for you. But, if you're up for it, polyamory
can be the catalyst for powerful personal growth.
“Powerful personal growth?” What would this
growth look like? Coping with jealous, murderous lovers? Knowing when to say
“goodbye” or just flee? If polyamory is really a viable lifestyle, why doesn’t
Adams simply “date” all of her lovers at one time – one big happy family, or is
it?
One therapy group leader had confessed that
he used his group to line-up new sexual partners. However, he and his wife had
to keep their conquests secret. He had once seen his wife escorting her latest
into their home, and he flew into a mad rage that sent him to the psych ward
for two weeks. For them, the ““powerful personal growth” was a matter of
learning to practice total avoidance.
Of course, Adams expresses a high concern for
the (un-aborted) children resulting from such unions. After all, it takes a
village to raise a child, doesn’t it? While I think that there is truth in this
adage, these polyamorous relationships seem to more closely approximate a
roving series of predator babysitters than a village. If a steady stream of men
and women are fair game for our sexual appetites, why not also the children?
Ultimately, it is time that will tell, but
time has already passed its verdict. If these forms of sexual groupings had
been viable, we would find long-standing polyamorous communities throughout the
world. However, we don’t. Evidently, they have either been decimated by STDs or
consumed by jealous, angry impulses from within.
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