Yes, yes – I’m glad you joined me today to discuss this
terrible affliction.
One lump or two? Cream? Good.
I believe I’ve heard it described before as “freelance” or "agency" polyamory.
Yes, now, insofar as I can tell, freelance polyamory is a
condition where a person who identifies as polyamorous – somebody who
supposedly espouses the values of polyamorous relationships (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Values_within_polyamory)
- and suffers from temporary bouts of amnesia.
Indeed.
Spoon?
And believe it or not, the abrupt memory loss often
coincides with situations where the afflicted polyamorous person can grossly
indulge in their desires without having to assume accountability for their
actions to anyone, let alone their other partners.
Yes, I know, it’s terrible.
Indulge me only to provide an example.
Let’s say your husband informs you that he’s about to go out
on a date with another partner. Not a
problem and perfectly reasonable, you might believe, but then let’s say you
were to dig a little deeper and ask some clarifying questions of your life
partner:
·
Where will you be going?
·
When will you be back?
·
How much money are you likely to spend?
·
Can I set some expectations on what kind of sexual
contact you may be engaging in?
·
Is there a place I can reach you?
·
When you come home, can I expect we’ll have some
fun together?
·
I’m a little uncertain about this – can we talk
before you go?
·
I’m your wife – can I get a little priority in
your decision-making?
·
So how was your time together? Tell me about
what you shared.
Whereas the poor inflicted freelancer would likely respond:
·
“That’s none of your concern. You don’t need to
know anything about my other relationships.”
·
“I don’t know. Whenever I want to be or when my
other partner is done with me.”
·
“Uncertain, but enough for the two of us to have
fun tonight.”
·
“I’m not going to discuss that with you. What my
other partner and I do sexually doesn’t concern you.”
·
“You can reach me on my cell phone. If I don’t
answer, I’ll see you when I get back.”
·
“No, I want to focus on the moment that I’m
spending with my other partner and not with you, and if I’m totally exhausted
and drained afterwards when I come home, so be it.”
·
“Listen, your emotional responses are your own.
You really need to deal.”
·
“I so hate hierarchical language. Can I just
refer to you as Skippy?”
·
“Are you kidding? I’m telling you nothing of the
great, amazing time we had.”
Yes, it’s simply incredulous, I know, and I realize this may
come as an awful surprise. After all, as you and I have discussed these many
years, if polyamory is a community that champions honesty, communication,
dignity, respect, loyalty and fidelity … the freelance polyamorist is an
aberration.
The way I see it, the freelance polyamorist:
1.
Disregards emotional appeals as a personal
weakness;
2.
Deflects responsibility for their own actions in
favor of short-run fulfillment;
3.
Finds accountability in any form constraining on
their other relationships;
4.
Are intentionally secretive and obscure
concerning their other dealings finding such questions intrusive – transparency
is a weakness;
5.
Somehow believes that – just because you step
away from your wife or husband for an evening – all of those sticky emotional,
financial, spousal, or parental obligations that relationship entails just
evaporates or is non-existent … because it’s convenient to push that aside to
get what they want;
Yes, perplexing isn’t it?
More tea?
And apparently, the condition is transmissible! If one
partner selfishly believes as the freelancer, then they’re apt to assume the
same belief system and impose that upon others as to, again, fulfill their
desires.
Yes, truly beyond my understanding. This condition seems to
run contrary to the very values polyamory wishes one to aspire. It’s simply
selfish to the core, and not selfless, or compassionate, or communicative, or
trusting, or …
Well! I think I’ve stirred this pot well-enough, dear. Would
you care for some stew?
s1m0n
3 comments:
"...all of those sticky emotional, financial, spousal, or parental obligations that relationship entails..."
One problem is that, normatively, most or all relationship obligations and expectations go unspoken. We aren't used to thinking of itemizing all the behavioral expectations as we might in a contract, we just assume everyone's on the same page in terms of what a "relationship" entails.
That said, hear hear! Whatever expectations or obligations are agreed upon by all participants in relating should be honored wherever and whatever the partners are doing, including when relating to other partners.
May I ask if you have been affected by a "free-lancing" partner? Polyamory isn't a socially reinforced norm with built-in expectations (unless you socialize with other polyamorous groups). I have experienced lapses from the original agreement. It is sometimes hard to keep to the plan.
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