M
Mister_Chris
Guest
I suspect that there could be as many different labels as there are relationships; effectively, an infinite number. Human sexuality is a hugely multifaceted spectrum, and any attempt to describe a specific relationship with a pre-defined name is probably doomed to failure. Or so I am coming to believe.
In researching polyamory, I found myself speculating that any daily relationship with multiple partners would almost inevitably lead to feelings of jealousy. And apparently this is the case, and is a real problem. I suppose one form of polyamory would be the classic Mormon approach - one husband, multiple wives. Somehow I don't get the gut feeling that this would lead to feelings of jealousy amongst the women, but I truly don't know. I certainly stand to be corrected. But I could certainly understand jealousy surfacing in a relationship with two males and a female - particularly if children are desired. Whose DNA gets replicated? It's a pretty fundamental drive.
I have seen video interviews with self-identified swingers who claim to be very much in love with their also-swinging partner. So, clearly, at least some swinging couples do make a distinction between love and sex - in love with one person, but receptive to sex with many.
I dunno. Maybe it's sorta like Jazz. "If you don't get it, you never will." Sigh. My stumbling through the unmapped, unlit, labyrinth-like catacombs of human relationships continues.
>MC
In researching polyamory, I found myself speculating that any daily relationship with multiple partners would almost inevitably lead to feelings of jealousy. And apparently this is the case, and is a real problem. I suppose one form of polyamory would be the classic Mormon approach - one husband, multiple wives. Somehow I don't get the gut feeling that this would lead to feelings of jealousy amongst the women, but I truly don't know. I certainly stand to be corrected. But I could certainly understand jealousy surfacing in a relationship with two males and a female - particularly if children are desired. Whose DNA gets replicated? It's a pretty fundamental drive.
I have seen video interviews with self-identified swingers who claim to be very much in love with their also-swinging partner. So, clearly, at least some swinging couples do make a distinction between love and sex - in love with one person, but receptive to sex with many.
I dunno. Maybe it's sorta like Jazz. "If you don't get it, you never will." Sigh. My stumbling through the unmapped, unlit, labyrinth-like catacombs of human relationships continues.
>MC