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Internet pushes poly
03-04-08 02:18
Internet Pushes Polyamory to Its 'Tipping Point'
by Regina Lynn
Wired Magainze
February 29, 2008
The internet is famous for hooking people up for everything from blind
dates to political activism.
For people into polyamory -- a way of life in which participants engage in
multiple intimate relationships simultaneously, with the knowledge and
consent of everyone involved -- the internet provided a handy label for
their lifestyle and a launch pad for injecting the concept into mainstream
consciousness.
"Around 1990, we found this nifty name to call ourselves, instead of
'responsible, consensual nonmonogamy,'" says Dr. Kenneth Haslam, a retired
anesthesiologist and curator of the Kenneth R. Haslam Collection on
Polyamory at The Kinsey Institute for Research in Sex, Gender, and
Reproduction. "About that same time, the internet came along -- and it was
at exactly the right time. The internet is a tipping point for polyamory."
>From its somewhat murky etymological past to 1992's creation of the
alt.polyamory Usenet newsgroup, the term has swept to mainstream
acceptance: Polyamorist, polyamorous and polyamory made the Oxford English
Dictionary in 2006, and these days, polyamory (poly for short) is more
visible than ever.
The Washington Post ran a long feature on the subject for Valentine's Day,
while actress Tilda Swinton's relationship status -- she's part of a poly
triad -- seems to have garnered as much press as her Oscar win.
While having multiple committed partners is not a new concept, many
polyamorists have told me they felt lost, guilty, alone or freakish until
they came across the word polyamory on the internet and for the first time
had a context for the way they felt about love.
"You can argue that before the internet, the poly community didn't exist,"
says Franklin Veaux, author of What, Like, Two Girlfriends?, a respected
polyamory FAQ. "There's no question that the rise of the internet and the
rise of polyamory coincided, although poly does predate the net by 6,000
years or so."
Geeks have not traditionally been viewed as relationship experts, yet as a
subculture, we are open to alternative ways of life. We immerse ourselves
in science fiction and fantasy, imagining other cultures and experiencing
relationships not necessarily bound by puritanical traditions.
"I remember thinking that the fairy tale doesn't make any sense, because
if the princess lives in a castle, why should she have to choose one of
the two princes? Castles are big and there's room for all three of them,"
says Veaux, who was raised in a Nebraska town of 275 people, with not a
poly role model in sight.
"I grew up in middle-class suburbia unaware of any alternatives but one,
very negative: monogamy or slut," says Sharra Smith, one of Veaux's
partners. "I tried to be monogamous and failed miserably; after a very bad
relationship, I said, 'That's it, no more, I'd rather be a slut.' Then I
learned there's a middle ground."
Cunning Minx, creator and host of the Polyamory Weekly podcast, says she's
seen a significant change in how the mainstream media treats polyamory in
just the three years since her first episode.
"Poly used to be so alternative you had to adopt this entire different
culture [to participate]," she says. "While it's definitely still an
emotional and spiritual upheaval for many people to shake off the
paradigms of monogamy that are so ingrained in us, now you can meet poly
people in a group and talk about it in a safe place."
Polyamory is just the kind of thing you'd expect in an era of love without
borders, where time and distance no longer prevent us from finding true
mates, and when no one has to live alone with their kink, desire, fantasy
or love style -- because someone, somewhere shares it.
"A lot of people are trying [polyamory], but we don't have any models for
this kind of relating," says Anita Wagner, author of the Practical
Polyamory blog. "There's a tremendous demand for resources, information,
guidance, help."
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