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from www.polyamorousmisanthrope.com/20...ps/
This is my top ten things you can do for great multiple relationships.
1. Don’t try to be a “good” poly person.
If you’ve been reading online material a lot, you may have developed an idea of what a good polyamorous person should be doing, and you may be trying to tie yourself into knots trying to do that.
Stoppit. You’re allowed to work out between yourself and your loves what you all want your unique relationships to look like. They don’t even have to be Polyamorous Misanthrope Approved [1] as long as all of you are happy in it.
2. Get over yourself.
Sure you want the world to be about you. It ain’t. Being ego-centric is a lousy way to have good relationships. A little humility goes a long way.
3. Believe your partners.
One of the biggest relationship monkey wrenches I ever encounter is the terrible habit of trying to interpret what a partner is thinking instead of paying attention to the actual words used. If you act on what your partner actually says, you’re doing two things. You’re not trying to mind-read (always a bad move, because you can get it badly wrong), and you’re training your partner to speak up and say what they genuinely mean.
4. Say what you mean as best you can.
Of course the flip side to #3 is that you need to say what you mean, too. Yes, that means sometimes you’ll have to think before you speak and act.
5. Have fun.
Many people have this idea that relationships are deadly serious. They’re not. Important? Sure. But enjoy your partners. Laugh. Play. Be silly.
6. Be willing to be vulnerable.
This can be really hard, ’specially if you’ve been hurt a lot. Just be careful not to use that vulnerability as a club to beat someone with. That’s not being genuinely vulnerable, anyway. There’s another name for it and it’s Not Nice.
7. Be willing to be flexible.
Sure, there are some rigid dealbreakers in anyone’s life. If you have more than three or four, I invite you to examine the joys of serendipity. Relationships grow, change and evolve all the time — even monogamous ones. Don’t be too tied into the One Right Way to Be in Love.
8. Roll with it, baby.
There are times when emotions or events can blindside you. It happens and that’s okay. Accepting that you will get zinged by things sometimes is a good way to be prepared not to react in an unloving way when you are. If something smacks you in the expectation, getting indignant isn’t as helpful as calming down and thinking.
9. Remember your loves are separate from you.
Your loves are separate people with different thoughts, feelings and expectations than you have. Get to know them. Get to understand them down into their bones.
10. Is it about love?
It’s a good idea to ask yourself from time to time, “Am I behaving in a loving manner?” Love’s important. I know I’m a cranky old bat and all, but when you get down to it, love is probably the most important force in the world. Love your partners, for pity’s sake. It’s what makes the whole thing worthwhile.
[1] And stop pretending to have a heart attack. That joke’s ancient.
This is my top ten things you can do for great multiple relationships.
1. Don’t try to be a “good” poly person.
If you’ve been reading online material a lot, you may have developed an idea of what a good polyamorous person should be doing, and you may be trying to tie yourself into knots trying to do that.
Stoppit. You’re allowed to work out between yourself and your loves what you all want your unique relationships to look like. They don’t even have to be Polyamorous Misanthrope Approved [1] as long as all of you are happy in it.
2. Get over yourself.
Sure you want the world to be about you. It ain’t. Being ego-centric is a lousy way to have good relationships. A little humility goes a long way.
3. Believe your partners.
One of the biggest relationship monkey wrenches I ever encounter is the terrible habit of trying to interpret what a partner is thinking instead of paying attention to the actual words used. If you act on what your partner actually says, you’re doing two things. You’re not trying to mind-read (always a bad move, because you can get it badly wrong), and you’re training your partner to speak up and say what they genuinely mean.
4. Say what you mean as best you can.
Of course the flip side to #3 is that you need to say what you mean, too. Yes, that means sometimes you’ll have to think before you speak and act.
5. Have fun.
Many people have this idea that relationships are deadly serious. They’re not. Important? Sure. But enjoy your partners. Laugh. Play. Be silly.
6. Be willing to be vulnerable.
This can be really hard, ’specially if you’ve been hurt a lot. Just be careful not to use that vulnerability as a club to beat someone with. That’s not being genuinely vulnerable, anyway. There’s another name for it and it’s Not Nice.
7. Be willing to be flexible.
Sure, there are some rigid dealbreakers in anyone’s life. If you have more than three or four, I invite you to examine the joys of serendipity. Relationships grow, change and evolve all the time — even monogamous ones. Don’t be too tied into the One Right Way to Be in Love.
8. Roll with it, baby.
There are times when emotions or events can blindside you. It happens and that’s okay. Accepting that you will get zinged by things sometimes is a good way to be prepared not to react in an unloving way when you are. If something smacks you in the expectation, getting indignant isn’t as helpful as calming down and thinking.
9. Remember your loves are separate from you.
Your loves are separate people with different thoughts, feelings and expectations than you have. Get to know them. Get to understand them down into their bones.
10. Is it about love?
It’s a good idea to ask yourself from time to time, “Am I behaving in a loving manner?” Love’s important. I know I’m a cranky old bat and all, but when you get down to it, love is probably the most important force in the world. Love your partners, for pity’s sake. It’s what makes the whole thing worthwhile.
[1] And stop pretending to have a heart attack. That joke’s ancient.
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Re: 10 Tips for Great Poly Relationships
Mon, October 12, 2009 - 9:09 AMThanks Noel! These tips are good for relationships of any kind, poly or no! -
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Re: 10 Tips for Great Poly Relationships
Mon, October 12, 2009 - 9:30 AMFive bucks says you can't find any advice in the Misanthrope columns that is truly unique to polyamory.
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A few questions about this
Sun, October 18, 2009 - 1:14 AMWhat if #3 is almost impossible because the person you spend most of your relationship time with is convinced that it is always your "job" to "figure it out" instead of spelling out his difficulties--how do you deal with this? It often feels very unfair, but it is very important to me to work out these issues with him.
What if every time you take on step #6 your partner reacts to it so strongly that it makes you never want to be vulnerable or open again? I have been open about many things, but lately I have been more open and he is not dealing with it well at all. It makes it so hard because I want to be close to him but there are these large gaps in our relationship where I can't really open up--and then he is upset with me for not being open or taking risks. *sigh* -
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Re: A few questions about this
Sun, October 18, 2009 - 1:35 AM#3 has nothing at all to do with your other partners -- only with you. If you think it has anything to do with your other partners, you're not understanding it.
If you find that believing a partner results in mischief, you may wish to consider lowering your expectations to match your standards, or raising your quality control systems.
If being vulnerable causes mischief with a partner, then finding another partner or trying out some new acceptable level of "vulnerability" might be in order. Either could be flawed. Or both. -
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Re: A few questions about this
Sun, October 18, 2009 - 2:13 AMI like the way you categorize this as "mischief"--a nice spin on what doesn't necessarily feel like a minor contrivance. Maybe by re-framing my outlook on this I can take it less seriously and deal with it more effectively.
I think that I agree with your position on vulnerability--I just really wanted to find a way to be more vulnerable--and therefore closer, but clearly the resulting "mischief" may not allow for us to move into that space. Sometimes it isn't always easy to trust myself when my perspective is so katywonkas to the cultural status quo. -
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Re: A few questions about this
Fri, October 23, 2009 - 2:56 PM"Maybe by re-framing my outlook on this I can take it less seriously and deal with it more effectively. "
Such has helped me tremendously.
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Re: A few questions about this
Sun, October 18, 2009 - 4:57 AMAt that point, possibly the relationship isn't working out for you. Seriously, you're at the point where considering whether or not to continue in it would probably be a useful thing to do! -
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Re: A few questions about this
Sun, October 18, 2009 - 9:18 AMLOL--I am absolutely going to continue in it, knowing he is a very good man and we will eventually make sense of these things. We have been together for a very long time. Some days are just harder than others and I can be rather sensitive about it.
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Re: A few questions about this
Sun, October 18, 2009 - 5:05 AMMay I have your permission, Arwen, to use theses questions as a follow-up column? -
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Re: A few questions about this
Sun, October 18, 2009 - 9:19 AMYou may, however, only after getting a lot more background from me--because I think looking at it from the perspective of what I say here may lead to a very simplistic view of things, indeed.
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Re: A few questions about this
Fri, October 23, 2009 - 11:23 AMIt's no one's job to figure you out, just as it's not your job to figure someone else out. That kind of behavior goes right up there with the ol' "if you don't know why I'm mad at you, I'm not going to tell you" game. The only responsibility you have to your partner is to respect his boundaries, but it's also up to said partner to let you know what they are and enforce them as well.
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Re: 10 Tips for Great Poly Relationships
Mon, October 19, 2009 - 11:01 AMGreat tips. I'm a mono person in a poly relationship. I find these will be very helpful! My favorite is #2.
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Re: 10 Tips for Great Poly Relationships
Wed, October 28, 2009 - 10:30 AMGood post. Maybe it should be Ten Commandments of Polyamory. Anyways, YAY Noel! -
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Re: 10 Tips for Great Poly Relationships
Wed, October 28, 2009 - 10:36 AMAre you kidding? I can whittle Polyamory Commandments down to one.
"Don't be a fucking idiot."
(I actually call this Rule One, and it was originally applied when I started pumping iron). -
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Re: 10 Tips for Great Poly Relationships
Tue, November 3, 2009 - 6:00 PM"If something smacks you in the expectation, " - thats awesome. (and yes, i get this slap once in a while... and i am reminded again.
and the "don't be a fucking idiot" is pretty similar to my partner's attitude.
his two motto's are- A. Don't be stupid. and B. don't be an asshole.
I feel that there are a couple of tips that help me all the time.
1. Own your own shit. - i.e. if you feel aweful- own your feelings and identify why you feel them. and then...
2. Figure out what You need.
3. voice what you need and be honest.
4. listen to what your partners say.
a good example - i feel crap when I have to hear my lover making love to someone else and i'm not involved. SO- should i get mad and ask them to quit? nope- I figure out why i feel crappy at that moment- and then remove myself from the situation or ask them to help me not have to hear them have sex at that time... but I'm not going to stop them from doing something they want to do- its their choice. - there are lots of examples. thats just one that has recently come up. :)
I think being in multiple, overlapping and extended relationships has made me a better communicator. :)
thanx for the tips as well!
trish -
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Re: 10 Tips for Great Poly Relationships
Sat, November 7, 2009 - 3:14 AMI loved this phrase as well ...
"If something smacks you in the expectation, "
I am finally getting to the point in my emotional maturity (ha) where I sometimes recognize when my expectations are acting irresponsibly (and my partner is NOT) BEFORE I open my mouth and say stupid things ... -
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Re: 10 Tips for Great Poly Relationships
Sat, November 7, 2009 - 4:15 AMThat is awesome.
I am consistently amazed at how seldom this is seen as a desirable habit to which to aspire, even among people I'd consider successful, responsible adults.
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