JMohegan
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- Joined
- Jul 13, 2006
- Posts
- 8,226
Monogamy is no guarantee of success, that's obvious. But I do know monogamous couples whose healthy, satisfying relationships have lasted many years - in some cases decades - and are still going strong. I don't know a single M/f/f poly arrangement about which I could say the same thing.I keep hearing this, and, by and large, I agree. The problem I have is that *most* relationships of *any* flavour have tall odds against them. Monogamy is not some guarantee of success, and serial monogamy is the more common model. So it might fail, and? If someone poly is involved, poly may stand more of a chance of success than monogamy, especially so if the poly person is a D-type.
I do agree though. All parties need to be on board for a relationship to work long-term. That is the white elephant in the room in my own life. Is everyone present and accounted for, and are we all heading in the same direction?
For the record, though, I don't see anything intrinsically wrong with serial monogamy, or serial polygamy for that matter.
The point of my comments was to raise the question of what it means to be poly in the doing-the-sharing sense. A lot of the focus seems to be on the orientation of the D-type, and I'm not sure why. My observation is that the wiring of the s-type is the most critical factor in determining both the longevity and smooth sailing of the relationship.
I didn't read Homburg as attempting to justify poly this way.intothewoods said:Most relationships don't succeed. And monogamy is certainly no guarantee. However, I often hear this as a justification for poly, and I don't think it should be. If most monogamous relationships fail, but say, even more poly relationships fail (which I am not saying, btw), don't make a choice that is going to stack the odds even higher against you. Or, to put it another way, it seems like sometimes the subtext is, hey, all relationships fail anyway, why not have some fun. That's obviously a guarantee for failure!
A lot of stuff that people write about M/f/f poly must sound like "That will never work! Why are you even trying!" That's not the point or purpose of my comments here, but I can understand why my comments would prompt the response he gave.
