OK, I just saw this thread, so I have to throw in my defense of "screwing around willy-nilly" and "stay outta my bedroom" thinking.
First of all, let me get one thing out of the way-- I'm in no way, shape, or form a nymphomaniac or even unusually sexual. I have had fewer total partners than most women my age, and I'm currently dealing with some hormonal issues that cause me to have a very low sex drive, so I'm really the last person who would be interesting in maintaining the right to have scads of sex with strangers just because I feel like doing it myself.
I'm polyamorous, which mostly means that I'm naturally predisposed to have different needs met by different people, including romantically. For example, my primary SO is someone I'm very deeply involved with, have been for a long time, and our relationship is a very emotional one, whether it's being extremely happy together or extremely angry at one another. It's rather mercurial, but it's worked for us so far, and we're committed to continuing to make it work. But when I'm with him, it's never "shut off the brain and just enjoy each other's company" time, unless we're asleep. We're always talking, doing something, etc. My secondary partner is someone I can not see for six months and pick up right where I left off, or see every day for a week and be fine. He relaxes me and I turn off the intellectual/emotional part of my brain when I'm with him-- it's just friendly companionship. He wouldn't be a suitable primary partner for me at all, because I AM an intellectual/emotional person, but he meets a need that I don't stop having just because someone who IS a suitable primary partner for me is around. My primary SO has someone who fulfills much the same purpose for him.
So, I get my needs met in a way that makes perfect sense to me and no sense to most monogamous people.
Conceivably, someone else has a need that can be met by safely and ethically engaging in promiscuous sex with strangers, and as long as they are not violating anyone else's rights by doing it (say, raping others), I see absolutely no reason why my or anyone else's choice of how to get their romantic/sexual needs met is better than that hypothetical person's choice to be extremely promiscuous.
If someone wants to accept the risks of "screwing around willy nilly," that's like me accepting the risks of telling someone I really like that I'm polyamorous and can't have a long-term monogamous relationship without going totally nutso, and knowing I may well lose them because I revealed that. It's part of the choice I made when I recognized this part of myself as something I can't change and don't want to change. It's also like someone else accepting the risks of lifelong non-sexual committment to another person-- if someone wants to marry another person and never have sex, for life, I may not understand their motivation, but they are accepting the risks, such as developing a sex drive later in life after making that committment, or being spurned by others who don't understand committment and love without sex. Why would I want to butt into that choice?
Individual sexual liberty is a pet cause of mine, but it's not JUST because my own preferred relationship type is not a traditional one. I just see no way to make a value judgment about whose sexual choices are better; therefore, everyone deserves and has the right to their own choices.
First of all, let me get one thing out of the way-- I'm in no way, shape, or form a nymphomaniac or even unusually sexual. I have had fewer total partners than most women my age, and I'm currently dealing with some hormonal issues that cause me to have a very low sex drive, so I'm really the last person who would be interesting in maintaining the right to have scads of sex with strangers just because I feel like doing it myself.
I'm polyamorous, which mostly means that I'm naturally predisposed to have different needs met by different people, including romantically. For example, my primary SO is someone I'm very deeply involved with, have been for a long time, and our relationship is a very emotional one, whether it's being extremely happy together or extremely angry at one another. It's rather mercurial, but it's worked for us so far, and we're committed to continuing to make it work. But when I'm with him, it's never "shut off the brain and just enjoy each other's company" time, unless we're asleep. We're always talking, doing something, etc. My secondary partner is someone I can not see for six months and pick up right where I left off, or see every day for a week and be fine. He relaxes me and I turn off the intellectual/emotional part of my brain when I'm with him-- it's just friendly companionship. He wouldn't be a suitable primary partner for me at all, because I AM an intellectual/emotional person, but he meets a need that I don't stop having just because someone who IS a suitable primary partner for me is around. My primary SO has someone who fulfills much the same purpose for him.
So, I get my needs met in a way that makes perfect sense to me and no sense to most monogamous people.
Conceivably, someone else has a need that can be met by safely and ethically engaging in promiscuous sex with strangers, and as long as they are not violating anyone else's rights by doing it (say, raping others), I see absolutely no reason why my or anyone else's choice of how to get their romantic/sexual needs met is better than that hypothetical person's choice to be extremely promiscuous.
If someone wants to accept the risks of "screwing around willy nilly," that's like me accepting the risks of telling someone I really like that I'm polyamorous and can't have a long-term monogamous relationship without going totally nutso, and knowing I may well lose them because I revealed that. It's part of the choice I made when I recognized this part of myself as something I can't change and don't want to change. It's also like someone else accepting the risks of lifelong non-sexual committment to another person-- if someone wants to marry another person and never have sex, for life, I may not understand their motivation, but they are accepting the risks, such as developing a sex drive later in life after making that committment, or being spurned by others who don't understand committment and love without sex. Why would I want to butt into that choice?
Individual sexual liberty is a pet cause of mine, but it's not JUST because my own preferred relationship type is not a traditional one. I just see no way to make a value judgment about whose sexual choices are better; therefore, everyone deserves and has the right to their own choices.
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