Re: [UUPoly-L] Friends (Quakers), sexuality and polyamory...what would you say to this?




From the essay at Quakersong.org:
"Some couples believe that they can love each other whole-heartedly and also support each others? sexual intimacy with others. Many Friends have seen abundant evidence that faith communities blessing life-long same gender unions bears spiritual fruit. I personally have not encountered evidence that group marriage or open marriage in any of the above forms has any spiritual benefit. On the contrary, I have seen significant evidence that sexual intimacy outside of the marriage relationship undermines in a fundamental way one?s capacity to love one?s life partner with all one?s heart."

I was generally put off the essay. Nevertheless, I see a kernal of truth in the paragraph above.

What few studies are available suggest that the odds are stacked against people who decide to try sexually open relationships. Sure, some sexually open couples have satisfying relationships that last a lifetime. My spouse and I have been sexually open the entire 23 years of our marriage; we are happy and plan to stay sexually open the rest of our lives. But we also consider ourselves a couple of oddballs. Although studies are too limited to allow firm conclusions, the evidence so far suggests most couples who try open marriage eventually return to monogamy or break up. They tend to experience a bump up in staisfaction when they first open their relationships. But the longer they try to maintain the open relationship, the more likely they run into the problems sexual non-monogamy can create. These problems can be very serious and threatening to the relationship. Moreover, the effects of these problems can accumulate over time. Sexual non-monogamy, over time, for many or most couples, erodes psychological bonds and attachments. They start seeing costs of sexual non-monogamy as outweighing the benefits of sexual non-monogamy. So they either quit being sexually non-monogamous or they quit being a couple. (If anyone wants the studies and sources that have led me to these views, I will be happy to give details. I'm at work now and not close to my personal library.)

Would I recommend anyone try sexually open marriage? No. I could not in good conscious recommend people try something when I honestly believe their chances of success are poor. But people are going to try it anyway. I would like to see more tolerance when people make this decision, even if it's not the decision most would make.

I think--and this is pure opinion--two things are required to have a sexually open relationship that remains satisfying and lasts a lifetime.

First, something in the core of your personality must yearn for a sexually non-monogamous lifestyle. For me, that core personality characteristic is bisexuality. I want the freedom to experience all aspects of my bisexual orientation. I could not imagine living the rest of my life having sex with just women or just men. I would rather deal with the problems and occasional heartaches that come with a sexually non-monogamous lifestyles than not express my bisexuality fully. For other people, it may be something other than bisexuality. But if you're going into open marriage because you've grown bored with your current partner, or you just want to experience the thrill of it, or you've read a book and thought the ideas sounded credible...good luck. You'll need it.

Second, you have to develop skills in maintaining emotional bonds and psychological attachments. If you want your relationship to stay together through the rough periods, you need to maintain: (a) your ability to have fun together, (b) your sense of emotional closeness or intimacy, and (c) your sense of having a secure attachment to each other. Many people fail to maintain these aspects of their relationships. They either don't realize how important they are, or they don't know what to do in order to maintain them. If you think honesty and good communication is all you need...again, good luck. You'll need it.

If I wanted to put my opnion into "spiritual" terms...and I'm going to regret this, I know it...I'd say you better have a feeling that God has destined you and created you to have a sexually non-monogamous lifestyle, and thereby God has challenged you through the school of hard knocks to become more skilled than most at developing and maintaining close relationships. If you take these relationship skills and apply them to helping people outside your marriage, then maybe sexually open marriage could be part of a spiritual path.

My two cents.
Kelly

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