Monday, June 1, 2009

Pseudopolyamory

Kevin Smith's "Chasing Amy": Holden, Amy and Banky are a pseudopolyamorous triad with Holden as the "apex" between two relationships, a heterosexual romantic relationship and a "heterosexual life partner" relationship.

It is very common in today's day and age for people to have a non-sexual companion that in most ways resembles a boyfriend or girlfriend. Often times, these people will redefine these relationships when they find a "real" boyfriend or girlfriend, and they almost always redefine the relationships once they are married.

However, frequently, this redefinition does not happen. The pseudopartner keeps his or her original importance, and what happens is a relationship that is composed of not only the two romantic partners, but each partner's respective pseudopartners.

There are many permutations of pseudopartner:

* The heterosexual/bisexual female's pseudoboyfriend, as I have already described.
* The deep and complex relationships between gay men and their female best friends.
* The common lesbian phenomenon of remaining good friends with an ex.
* The even more common "heterosexual life partner" phenomenon
* To some extent, the role which the "Wolfpack" may fill in a young man's life - it is his primary commitment and the girlfriends of all the pack members, are secondary.


The pseudopartner, when the relationship is not redefined after "real" partnership, usually ends up resented by the romantic partner who is the "left-out" party, but frequently, coupled people in a pseudopartnership will not redefine the pseudopartnership or part with the pseudopartner. After all, "it's not cheating!" because "we're NOT 'like that'!".

Pseudopartnership is actually a destructive force in couple relationships, as there is often a deeper and longer-standing intimacy between the pseudopartners. The pseudopartner will be the first one who hears about the news of the day, and often (because of long-standing trust) will be the first called if there is a problem.

The partnership energy that the romantic partner receives, ends up being the "left-overs" that were not given to the pseudopartner first.

Furthermore, existence of a pseudopartner can prevent both people from having deeper relationships; they end up seeking new partners only to give them what they are not receiving in their pseudopartnership.

It is helpful, in pseudopolyamory, to consider the pseudopartners the "primary" relationship while considering the sexual and romantic partners "secondary".

It is also helpful to single people - if they want a full and complete partnership with another - to learn to spot when prospective mates have a pseudopartner, and to consider those people unavailable.

Women more often end up having to tolerate their partner's pseudopolyamory than vice-versa, and make excuses for it - "they're just friends" or "she's like a sister".

It does not often work the other way around, for heterosexual men. Men will see another man around, and consider the woman unavailable - or if they learn of a pseudopartner after they have coupled with the woman, they will make very clear that they do not tolerate the pseudopartner's presence.

A pseudopartner is NOT the same as a "best friend", although most people do indeed call their pseudopartner their "best friend". But a "best friendship" can easily become a "pseudopartnership" if one allows the best friend into the spaces that only a partner can and should fill.

The following are signs that a person's "best friend" is in fact their pseudopartner:

* Standing date with the friend, just like in a relationship - they are together every weekend
* Even after you get together, the person is always around - often the first of the two to be coupled will feel guilty about leaving the other person out.
* The person manages to always be included in your time with your partner
* Friend is (usually) uncoupled, often the type I refer to as a "toxic single" - this will be one of my next entries
* Your partner talks to the friend every single day, for several hours
* They are with that friend several times a week, and that friend is called upon for every possible need.
* You can't sit at a table with the two people without the entire conversation consisting of their private jokes
* You feel like a third wheel around the two of them, and feel like "something is missing".
* You feel like you will never have a database of shared special moments and memories with your partner because he or she has already shared all of that with their friend
* You rationalize, "but they're not having sex"
* You often have to defend your partner to other people, and explain that s/he and hir friend are NOT sexual

Pseudopartnership is one of the reasons why you should not jump headfirst into a relationship without knowing their friends - otherwise, you will not spot if a person has a pseudopartner, until it is too late. Especially since most people are able to at least somewhat distance from the pseudopartner during the sexually intoxicating "New Relationship Energy" stage.

When a pseudopartnership is severed, often there will be a period of grief - just like a breakup. Some pseudopartnerships can be as deep, profound and involved as marriages, and even involve shared expenses and living arrangements.

Two Sweaters in Love, part 1

Not all Sweater Men prefer Messenger Bag Girls. Many MBGs are (as my colleague puts it) a bit on the "Diablo" side. The Diablo MBG's "ironic" appropriation of masculine traits, love of South Park, many male friends, and constant sarcasm, will eventually begin to grate if the Sweater in question is thin-skinned. He may also get tired of talking about sex.

He may grow tired of hearing about the latest technology, and getting CC'd for every new internet meme, or being told that Rickrolling or some other meme that he has managed to "catch up on" is "so five minutes ago".

Worse, many Sweater Men simply cannot keep up with the sexual appetites of their Messenger Bag Girls. The right to freely and voraciously enjoy sex, for many Messenger Bag Girls, is one more thing on a long list of items (including equal pay) to which they feel entitled.

It can also be heartbreaking for the Sweater who only wants to connect to his partner, and read poetry together, but the partner wants to check Slashdot or Kuro5hin first... and ends up stuck on the computer for three hours because there is always something she MUST blog.

Many Sweaters long for the empathy, sensitivity and beauty that only they understand.

To deal with this problem, many Sweaters (of either physical sex) become homosexual - they only love other Sweaters.

This means that their partners are uniquely suited to understanding the trials and tribulations of Sweater life, and have a compatible mp3 playlist.

It is not easy for gay Sweaters, however. Finding a compatible mate is difficult, let alone finding any mate at all, and for those Sweaters who are past college age - thus denying them the best opportunity to meet their own kind - the Sweater equivalent of a gay bar was invented.

This place is known, commonly, as a coffeehouse.

Coffeehouses are ideal places for Sweaters to meet, connect, and perform all the stages of courtship that lead up to the ultimate act of Sweater Love consummation: attending a concert together, preferably of a local independent band that few people have heard of.

The next essay will detail the stages of gay sweater courtship, from meeting to the mating dance (including the Sweater Stare and the Almost-Hand-Touch) to when the relationship is finally consummated.

I will also discuss the current advances and setbacks in the fight for marriage equality for gay Sweaters.

Stay tuned.