BlueStar Wrote:My parents have been in an open straight relationship for about 3 years now, nothing wrong nor anyone has a problem with it. Issues? All relationships have, even if lately my parents are being too lazy to get stressed on theirs, or get jealous on each other. But as to why they started it after 20 years of marriage (monogamy), well this was something I couldn't understand, didn't want to discuss nor cared about. Every couple has reasons...
As for now I'm satisfied with my fresh monogamous relationship, me and my partner heavily depend emotionally on each other.
BlueStar honey, I don't think very many of us want to consider our parents sex life, so don't feel alone. You're right, every couple does have its reasons for choosing the type of relationship that works for them.
I still happy for you about your new relationship. You deserve it because I think you're a sweet man. You seemed at a point were you needed someone to hold you and make you feel loved and special, The closet is a lonely place to be forced to live. I'm glad you're not alone in your pain anymore.
Anocxu Wrote:95% of open relationships fail..
I have read multiple statistics quotes from every source from CNN to the Family Research Council (which made me throw up in my c*nt a little bit). For the record, I will not use Web M.D. or Wikipedia as sources. Each may contribute a POV, but I don't trust either websites fact, even when they are attributed to a source.
Anocxu, I want to know where these statistic were published? I have spent the last 4 (even a trip to an out dated place called a library where they have those old fashioned things known as books - a neighbor happens to work at one nearby) hours and what I have learned is that there has
never been a definitive study on the viability of open relationship vs. strict monogamy. There is even less written about polyamourous relationships that isn't colored by bias.
Much of my reading involved references to the early 70's and thd practice of swingers, which is the exchange of spouses between married couples. A common statistic I noted was that nearly 1 of 2 marriages end in divorce. There is probably a closer to accurate statistic in a quote below from marriage.answers.com .
Lets get some terminology defined so that we're all on the same page:
First, an "open relationship" is usually defined as one which allows a couple to have sexual relationships outside a monogamous relationship. Various ground rules are established, honesty, communication, etc. are needed to make this a working union.
Second, a polygamous relationship, often associated with multiple Mormon marriage, is an entirely different beast altogether. The Mormons have successfully given polygamy a bad name, through inbreeding, the arranged marriages by elders to underage girls, a strictly paternal hierarchy, a horrible mistake that proclaims women bring love to a marriage - not men, and forced marriages. I won't say that all of these relationship don't work, but the vast majority are unhealthy unions. Polygamy among humans is largely associated with marriage. The norm is that one person, usually a man, has multiple wives, although there are cases where the reverse is true.
Third, polyamory, is a relatively new concept compared to other terms meaning the inclusion of one or more persons in a permanent single relationship. It is not necessarily related to marriage and is not legally recognized in any state in the US ( I have not done research in other countries, but have read nothing to the contrary).
I'm not rehashing my post. Find it here:
http://http://gayspeak.com/showpost.php?...ostcount=9.
Mark and I do not consider ourselves polygamous, nor polyamourous. This is not to say we have not had strong feelings with one or two of the men we have had sex with, but rather we consider each other as the single most important person in each others lives. The instances in which we had strong feelings toward a partner outside our relationship were difficult situations, but we resolved them and carried on, just the ttwo of us.
We work at our relationship.
I will say I think polyamourous relationships must be difficult to maintain. Mark and I have found it difficult to keep our two person relationship on track; I can't imagine the logistics of three or more in a relationship. I think that its probably possible, but it would take a steel level of trust and love to keep alive.
Keith, in answer to your original question, open, polygamous, and polyamourous, relationships (there are most likely other types of couplings such as symbiosis, and swinging -- the exchange of married couples spouses), but those are uncommon and muddy the waters of your question) are not the answer for everyone.
I heartily concur with many previous posts on the subject. Usually open relationships statistically favor gay men. Usually an open relationship doesn't occur to new relationships, but are negotiated only after the issues of time, trust, compromise, and jealousy are addressed. Nothing works for everyone. Nothing is ideal. Absolute terms are usually only useful when qualifying the opposite absolute terms.
I will reiterate my final words in my past:
Quote:For us it works. For some people it doesn't. Personally I think it isn't the amount of people in a relationship that make it a success or failure. It's honesty, trust, communication, compromise and mutual concession, not quitting when the hard stuff makes you cry, the amount of time and effort you put in to make it work, and the willingness to evolve over time. A good, healthy relationship doesn't just happen; people have to make them happen.
Quote:[COLOR="Red"]In their controversial book Sex at Breaking Dawn: the Prehistoric Origins of Modern Sexuality, researchers Christopher Ryan and Cacilda Jetha explain that the reason humans are not good at monogamy is because we were never monogamous creatures to begin with.
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-- ellecanada, (from the book listed in quote)
Quote:The divorce rate in America is currently at its highest, with 41% of first-time marriages and 60% of second-time marriages ending in divorce. One of the leading causes of divorce is infidelity, where either one or both partners are not loyal during their marriage. In an effort to avoid this issue, many couples have turned to "open relationships," where partners are free to date or involve themselves with others. In Hollywood, this practice has become quite popular. The following article will explore the open marriage of famous couple Will Smith and Jada Pinkett.[/quote
-- Dr. Susan Heitler, Denver clinical psychologist
Quote:[COLOR="Red"]
"Homosexual marriage degrades a time-honored institution. Homosexual marriage is an empty pretense that lacks the fundamental sexual complementariness of male and female. And like all counterfeits, it cheapens and degrades the real thing...."
[/COLOR] --Family Research Council, Timothy J. Dailey, Ph. D. (They'll give anyone a Ph.D these days)
-www.polyamory.org
-www.psychologytoday.com -- Stephen J. Betchen, D.S.W.
-dictionary.com
-salon.com -- Sierra Black
-cnn.com (under duress with a large grain of salt. This article was derived from Oprah.com, thus written to appease a politically correct mass audience) -- Karen Salmansohn, via Oprah.com
-cnn.com --Emanuella Grinberg (much better article)
-ellecanada.com -- Simone Paget
-ellecanada.com -- Briony Smith
-nytimes.com -- Scott James
-frc.org -- Timothy J. Dailey, Ph. D (Family Research Council -- complete propaganda, see quote above)
-bbc.com -- Daniel Nasaw
-married.answers.com -- Dr. Susan Heitler
There are more, but y'all must get the point that I did my homework here.