Latest Article|September 3, 2020|Free
::Making Grown Men Cry Since 1992
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“Compersion.” It’s a word that describes happiness at seeing a partner get joy from someone else—almost the opposite of jealousy. Monogamous lovers might hesitate to imagine feeling anything aside from anger at the sight of their other half being loved by someone else. But compersion is a kind of fulfillment gained by the polyamorous, those who maintain honest, committed romantic relationships with more than one person. The word "compersion" is one of many invented or co-opted by polyamorous people to give names to nouns and verbs outside the dominant paradigm of monogamy. Julian Wolf thinks back to a confusing time before she had words for her preferred method of loving. "It took me going to college and finding other strange and fun people that lived differently before I got words for all of the things I had been doing my whole life," Wolf says. Erik Erhardt, too, remembers life before learning the vocabulary of polyamory. "When I was finally given the language of polyamory as an alternative relationship model that allows me to express and share love with multiple people, I realized that this was something I could have identified with 15 years ago," he says. "I just didn’t have the language to say, This is possible." The Geometry of Relationships Wolf is a "normal"-looking person by day. With straight red hair and conservative business attire, she’s eating oatmeal and taking a break from her nine-to-five day job to talk about her "starfish."Many polyamorous relationships can be shown through geometry. Imagine the "V" model: One person dates two people who are not dating one another. There’s also the triangle: One person dates two others who are also dating each other. There’s the "N," the square or any other shape a person might want to dream up. Not that long ago, Wolf was dating five people. Her friend Riotgrrlscout came up with a shape for it. Wolf was the center of a starfish whose arms sometimes touched and sometimes didn’t. Erhardt found himself in one shape or another over time, having started his journey to polyamory through the book The Ethical Slut. "It’s kind of like a polyamory bible. It was one of the first books to describe what polyamory was, to describe skills a person needs to be successful in this relationship model." Erhardt, too, dresses soberly. He’s in a gray, striped button-up shirt and steel-framed glasses. He comes to his interview with packets of printed material, references and resources. Erhardt was introduced to polyamory by a former girlfriend. After four years of monogamy, the woman decided she was interested in considering polyamory. "I wanted to think about it, too," he says. "So we did that process together." Erhardt, who is getting his PhD in statistics, describes himself as the kind of person who goes about everything in a studious way. He uncovered websites. He found The Ethical Slut and another book called Polyamory. He dug up a podcast by Cunning Minx in Chicago called “Polyamory Weekly.” Years later, Erhardt can’t imagine going back.
compersion/frubble: The feeling of warmth associated with seeing one of your partners getting along with another partner wibble: A pang of insecurity when seeing a partner being close to another metamour: Your relationship with one of your partner’s partners NRE: New Relationship Energy polyamory: Loving more than one person romantically. Also an umbrella term that relates to a personal philosophy. polyobvious: Being open with all of the people involved in a relationship about what’s going on polygyny: Having more than one wife or female partner at a time polyandry: Having more than one husband or male mate at a time swingers: People who enjoy recreational sex with more than one partner, though not necessarily with emotional attachments primary: A term used to establish a hierarchy in a polyamorous relationship. A woman with a husband and another lover might consider her husband her primary. secondary: A man with a wife and another relationship might consider the additional love his "secondary" intimate network: A group of relationships without hierarchy or with a fluid hierarchy
Local www.nmtng.org New Mexico: The Next Generation. A local group of 18- to 35-year-olds interested in kink, fetish and leather relationships. Meets monthly. Julian Wolf is the co-founder and chairman. www.tinyurl.com/3x2o6r Ethi-Q Slutdom. A local group that meets odd-week Thursdays for fun social gatherings and the discussion of polyamory. Erik Erhardt is the facilitator. www.mybdsm.com/salutes/aelifestyles Alternative Erotic Lifestyles. Local 18+ pansexual group that hosts monthly dinners and workshops. National www.xeromag.com/fvpoly.html A polyamory FAQ from writer Franklin Veaux www.polyamory.org The home page for the group alt.polyamory. Includes support and networking. www.polyweekly.com A weekly podcast by Cunning Minx Books The Ethical Slut: A Guide to Infinite Sexual Possibilities by Dossie Easton and Catherine A Liszt Polyamory: The New Love Without Limits by Deborah M. Anapol Redefining Our Relationships: Guidelines for Responsible Open Relationships by Wendy-O Matic