POLYAMORY
GAY POLYAMORY
Is this a picture of Gay Poly?

une guirlande de fleurs musclées et tordues;
a NETwork of bodies linked in an erotic social fabric,
the womb of a new culture,
a QUEER INSURGENCY.
Thank you Steven Arnold
for this weaving of bodies d'après Genet;
it comes from page 84 of
Lust: The Body Politic.
1991 Los Angeles: The Advocate (Liberation Publications).
Are you poly?
How can you tell?
Some of us want more than coupledom offers. Here are some CORE VALUES
which polyamorous relationships are intended to embody:
- Multiple facets to each person require multiple partners
Each of us has many varied aspects to who we are, what our personalities thrive on and
how we can grow and mature; we differ in what turns us on erotically, musically, gastronomically,
visually, etc. This wide range of aspects to each of us offers
multiple sides for us to be close to living-partners: some who help discipline our impetuousness,
some who whet our culinary appetites, some who cuddle amazingly and offer a deep trust we hunger
for and some who are so playful our lives would be poor without regular intercourse with them.
- Better feedback promotes self-actualiztion
By living with multiple partners, each of whom can support us or prod us, as appropriate in different ways, we are
motivated to seek our own individual actualization rather than just fitting in with one partner with whom it is
tempting to get into familiar ruts, familiar patterns of going out, staying in, stroking, arguing, ... With multiple eyes
and ears to see any pair of us interacting, we get better feedback about how we behave which may improve our vision of ourselves.
Giving and sharing feelings works more freely with multiple partners, partly because it MUST for shared multiple relations to work
well and partly because one gets better feedback on oneself and one is less obdurate about what is "true" since one gets more
sources of feedback.
- More financial security
With more people pooling incomes and sharing expenses, temporary job-losses are more easily covered giving each of us
more sense of security and less fear in leading our lives in job markets and in bureaucracies to which we are attached.
Furthermore, rent per person falls as the size of the household rises.
- Freedom to pursue new loves
Many humans seem open to constantly finding a new person erotically attractive. Indeed, this is an amazing gift of renewal,
like a perpetual source of new muses for our creative spirits. For us who are open to this in our relationships, we have found
that new lovers can actually enrich our relations with current lovers, whether by engaging in multipartner sex or by relieving
us of the need to always be there for another partner or by making us more enjoyable to be around. This is another way poly
promotes our individual self-actualization by freeing each of to take responsibility for recognizing and acting on our own
erotic arousal.
- Trust = Freedom from fears about our relationships
Many of us experience pangs of anxiety when someone we are very close to falls in love with or just interacts closely with
someone else. By sticking with each other when this happens and even being each other's cheerleaders, by getting pleasure
from our partnerŐs deep pleasure and satisfaction, we are able to give up fears of abandonment and loss that seem to lie
behind much jealousy. This commitment to each other is what it means to be faithful to our partners. We can also get past
fears of exclusion, if our shared understanding of our poly relationship insists on inclusion of all in the household who
desire to join in erotic play. We also share an understanding about how open with each other we are about all our erotic
interactions. There might be some loss of a sense of specialness, of uniqueness, if we allow for more than one erotically
intimate partner in our lives. For some people this can be a determining factor against poly. But for others of us, this
is not a loss we perceive, since we gain from our partners' keen erotic instincts and activities.
No movement thrives without the critical capacity to imagine what is possible.
beyondmarriage.org