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Thursday, March 3, 2011

5 Things You Need To Know About Having An Open Relationship

Despite what the image tells you, it's really not that complicated. In fact, an open relationship is easy once you know the rules, the players, a few basic concepts, and of course, you're able to communicate honestly and openly.

I've had many discussions with people on both sides of the issue, and while they often disagree on principle, they are more alike than they realize. And I don't mean on the fact that they will likely both disagree with my next comment.

In all of my open-relationships over the years I've learned that a "true" open-relationship is based in monogamy. And what I've also learned is that monogamists have a harder time grasping the concept of monogamy than the polyamorists. It seems that more and more people these days are exploring with the idea of an open-relationship. Many though, do it for the wrong reasons, and the wrong way. If you want to explore, here are 5 things to keep in mind:

1) Talk, Talk, and Talk Some More: If you're going to pursue an open-relationship you need to talk, and to talk openly. In order to avoid jealousy or resentment, one partner can't hold back desires or wants when an open-relationship is on the table. You may each not get everything you want, but you have to communicate what type of open-relationship you each want and what your boundaries are.

Boundaries and limits will take on different forms depending on the couple, but things that should be discussed are:
  •  Who, or what kind of people can join
  • What kind of open-relationship do you both want
  • What is appropriate contact with the same/opposite sex
It may seem like over-kill to get into the smallest of details, but is exploration worth possibly destroying a relationship you've spent months or years building? Remember, you have a primary partner that you come home to every day. They are your first priority.

2) Don't Do It Just Because: I've heard every bullshit excuse in the book when it comes to couples wanting to try an open-relationship. Hell, I've spouted out some of my own. The two most common are:
  • We want to spice up our sex life. No you don't. One of you wants to try something...more like someone...fresh, and you're willing to let your significant other fuck someone so you can.
  • It will make the guy/girl I'm with happy. Yeah, I'm sure it will, but will it make you happy? If you do it once, for that reason, then expect it to come up again.
The only reason a couple should explore opening their relationship is when they are doing it for themselves as a couple. It's a "we" thing, not a "me" thing. If you're in it together and tuned into the needs, wants and concerns of one another, you'll have fewer issues transitioning.

3) It's Not An Excuse To Cheat: In a monogamous relationship we trust that our partners will be faithful. In an open-relationship we allow our partners certain agreed upon freedoms that we trust they won't overstep. 

There are many -- mostly those new to the lifestyle -- who think  that an open-relationship means a free-for-all. Where, slipping up is not cheating. In arrangement where things such as playing together is a rule, an innocent kiss away from your partner IS considered cheating.

Last summer I started dating this girl for a few short months, who raised with me the idea of an open-relationship. Her offer: She only wanted to play as a couple and only have women join us. While she had friends that were open to joining us then and there, we decided that first, we had to establish a solid relationship. When we went downtown, she would enjoy it when I was dancing with, or all over some other girl for her to watch. While I was okay with that, it was only when we were together. Despite her assurance that I could go have "innocent" fun, as long as she could hear about it, I couldn't bring myself to do it. Anything solo, to me, is cheating.


4) Pick Your Partner(s) Carefully: Whether you're inviting one person to join, doing a full-swap, or any other combination, you should pick your partners very carefully. A few selection tips include:
  • Stay away from friends. The only time a friend should be invited is when they can be trusted not to interfere after the fun has been had. A friend may seem like the best choice because of the comfort level, but can you look at one another the same moving forward?
  • What's your name again? Don't pick just any random person(s), of course you should screen them first, but someone(s) you don't know are the best first option. Having a person or persons who are there for one thing, and one thing only, will alleviate any tension or pressure after the fact. This is a person you don't have to see again if you don't want to, or who you can call when you both feel like.
  • Slow and Steady: Whomever you select, make sure they fully understand your limits and boundaries before proceeding. They should be comfortable taking time before things happen - if they do - and that they are fully aware anyone can pull out at any time. A back-out clause is a beautiful thing, especially if it's your first time. The ability to tell someone this has to stop, even after things have begun, should be agreed upon first.
5) Don't Neglect Your Partner: Unless you both swing both ways, one partner will be at a greater advantage than the other, sexually. And opening your relationship should never be more about one partner than the other. After all, you're doing this for both of you, and you should be paying equal attention to your partner as you are to the person who is joining you.


There is so much more I would have liked to touch upon, but the issue of an open-relationship is broad and often difficult to capture in one post. It truly is something that has to be explored verbally between two people. It's something that, while I've done in the past and continue to ponder to this day... would I ever do it again? Who knows? I certainly wouldn't tell anyone on here.

1 comment:

  1. First: there's a lot of good advice in this post, especially (but not exclusively) for an established couple thinking of opening their earstwhile monogamous relationship to outside parties. That is not the only way an only relationship develops, though.

    A "true" open relationship? An open relationship is consensually non-monogamous one, simple as that; there are lots of different styles of engaging in non-monogamy and none is "truer" or more valid than any other (except perhaps NON-consensual non-monogamy, AKA cheating), though a certain range of that experience may feel more true to YOU based on what you're comfortable with.

    Second: Saying an open relationship (non-monogamy) is based in monogamy is rather oxymoronic. You may as well say true atheism is based in theism... which only makes sense if what you mean to say is that the polyamorist/atheist, in examining the status quo (theism/monogamy), rejected it and made a conscious choice not to follow it.

    Sexual monogamy means engaging in a sexual relationship with only one partner at a time, for a given period of time. Though it becomes conflated in many people's minds with things like commitment, love, respect, and trust, those things are not what makes a relationship "monogamous". If you mean that a good open relationship is based in those things, too, then - great! I agree with you. But you should pick words that mean what you mean; or at least define things for us if you're going to go around ascribing new connotations to words.

    If, by "based in monogamy", you mean that many open relationships look a lot like monogamous ones (from the outside, at least), I won't disagree with you there, either - as I said above, good relationships of any kind share many of the same qualities and values - except to quibble again with your use of the word "true". I do know some very happy and functional poly people who structure their relationships very differently from mine.

    I fear that you may mean that (in your mind) the only good way to engage in an open relationship is to start with and return to monogamy. That works for some people, but I, for one, identify as poly in much the same way as I identify as bisexual (ie. it's a key part of my sexual orientation), and it would be both pointless and misleading for me to engage in a monogamous relationship "to start off". There are, of course, periods of time when neither of us has outside partners (you've got to sleep sometime... kidding.) but the conversation and acknowledgment that we *could* is omnipresent. I'd advise anyone who has identified a poly aspect of their sexuality to be upfront with prospective partners from the beginning about what they want, or might want down the road.

    Third: this is the second post I've read in which you discuss cheating and refer to an "innocent" kiss - you keep using that word; I do not think it means what you think it means... If an activity is forbidden and doing it is unforgivable, I'd say it is, by definition, not "innocent". Conversely: if you think it IS innocent, why is it forbidden?

    Now that I've spent 500 words basically asking you to choose yours more mindfully... I'm going back to Twitter and my 140-character shackles.

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