While you're dropping some very solid principles here, I think the way you're expressing it is probably throwing ammunition to bigots.MHR said:You people, all people need to understand about polyamory is that at its very core is that it's based on selfishness. It's very selfish to want more than one person to love or to fuck or to take the time of one person or choose to discard the time concerns or commitments that would usually come with being with another. The trick to having all these wonderful things is to understand and accept the selfish nature of these desires in each-other and work around them.
All healthy relationships are based on selfishness. Entering a relationship on the principle that you want to do everything for someone else and you don't care about your own happiness as long as they're happy is, frankly, inviting people to abuse you. Doesn't matter if it's monogamous or not, there's a reason why low self esteem is really unattractive because most people don't like being put into the position of being abusers.
We may not like to call relationships "selfish", because selfishness refers to a perceived excess of self-interest. So sure, if you ask people "do I want to be in a relationship that's based on selfishness" they might say no. But, let's phrase it another way. What if we ask "do I want to be in a relationship which makes me happy". That's a self-interested desire, right, but it's an extremely healthy and appropriate one. In fact, it would be quite weird to enter into a relationship without that degree of self-interest.
For that matter, what about all the people saying "the thought of my partner being with someone else makes me upset/hurt/physically ill" and treating that as if it's an reasonable foundation for a relationship. Does that register to you as a selfless response? Is that based on deep and abiding care for a person's happiness, that the thought that the person making them happy might not be you is enough to cause intense feelings of disgust.. is that really evidence that you're motivated by some pure and innocent spirit of compassionate care?
I mean, if you were purely selfish, wouldn't you just pretend to be in a monogamous relationship and then fuck other people anyway? A lot of supposedly monogamous people live like that because it's very easy, it's certainly much easier than having to go through all this bullshit of being really honest and constantly negotiating boundaries, which is hard.
The term "unicorn" arose to describe the trend of formerly monogamous, heterosexual couples who are new or inexperienced to swinging, threesomes or non-monogamy and who are looking for a third partner (almost always a bisexual woman) but have ridiculous or unrealistic requirements for what this fantasy woman has to be able to do or expect from the relationship. Said fantasy woman is a "unicorn", because like a unicorn she isn't real. Even if the couple does succeed in finding a real person, they will still tend to engage with them as a fantasy and assume they're willing or capable of doing whatever their fantasy woman would do, often with unfortunate results.MHR said:When you want to know why it's so hard or as elusive as a unicorn to see a successful polyamorous relationship, it's because when people ask themselves "do I want to be in a relationship that's based on selfishness?
Successful poly relationships aren't that rare, and certainly aren't fantastical. I'm aware of three besides my own, which considering my narrow PhD student social circle is pretty good. Yes, we've all seen the horror stories and, much as we might hate to admit it we've probably been the horror stories at one time or another, but it kind of annoys me when people pretend its harder than it is. The thing that pisses me off most about the poly scene is this whole elitist attitude that you need special skills or Zen like self discipline to be able to cope with it. That's not some special or unique thing, all relationships can be difficult at first, my first monogamous relationship was an absolute disaster. You keep trying and eventually you git gud.
Incidentally, while abuse is always something to look out for, I don't think there's anything inherently wrong with one-sided non-mongamous relationships either provided it is what everyone expects and wants and everyone is having fun. I know at least one very successful relationship in which one partner is monogamous and the other is not. Some people (not many, but a few) genuinely are okay with that or even enjoy it on some level.