SPLICED Magazine Issue 04 April/May 2014 | Page 21

SPLICED COLUMN / WHILE WE'RE ON THE SUBJECT OF... ISSUE 04 For most, the notion of polyamory is relegated to the confines of wet dreams, drunken experimentation and questionable latenight downloads; but polyamory has long been a cultural staple. The ancients in Greece & Rome married, but orgies were commonplace as a means of celebration, and it was customary for a man to take a younger bloke under his *ahem* wing as a rite of passage (bear in mind these are the same lot that shagged goats in the name of Dionysus and had dedicated vomitoriums – the ancients knew how to party). Islamic law still allows for a man to have up to 4 wives at a time. Jews would customarily be able to marry their brother’s widow in addition to their own wife thus absorbing the family as their own. Nomadic Tibetan brothers often married the same woman, sharing their matrimonial privileges. The Mormons, more creepily perhaps, devised and implemented the ‘sister-wives’ concept. Our president is flying the flag of our local cultural bylaws. For most countries polygamy may not be legal, but polyamory is on the rise. You may be doing it right now. By definition dating is a polyamorous practice. Hedging your bets, dating more than one person at a time to figure out which may be the better match? That’s polyamory in practice. And why not? The Women’s Liberation movement dispelled the necessity for a marriage to provide sole financial security. The medical leaps beyond bloodletting and leeches now call it an orgasm instead of hysteria. The sexual revolution and ever-progressive laws have entirely opened the divide between homo, hetero and everything in between; recognising a person’s inalienable right to love who they want, for as long as feel and marry whomever they choose (in certain parts of the planet at least; in others entertaining this concept alone could have me incarcerated). [ Or executed! – Ed ] 02 The original reasons for a til-death-do-us-part twosome have largely been nullified, as have the expectations surrounding them. The model of the average household has dispersed and the nuclear norm is a possibility but not a staple. People are increasingly independent, self-sustaining and open to alternative means of loving – one of which is to open the relationship to the possibility of two becoming three (or more). And it makes sense. Logistically, think of the rent split three ways even if there is a stay-at-home-whatever, it’s still a double income household. Think of three-ways. Fullstop. Gone are the worries of boredom, or obligation. For any activity you’re not in the mood for right now, there’s a 66% chance that someone else will be in keen to take one for the team; making dinner, seeing the family, making sure the kids are sorted. Worries of sex getting stale are suddenly moot. Three heads are better than one, so to speak. Find the right balance and everyone’s happy. All. The. Time. For any argument there’s a built-in tiebreaker. For any tear, 4 shoulders. Best of all, holidays are cheaper the more people there are. Same thing for bulk cleaning products. It’s almost as if they want you to diversify. True, there are cons. A third member in any tribe means an extra opinion on everything. There’re two people constantly leaving the toilet seat up, or two to complain about it. Apartments don’t generally come with enough cupboard space for one person let alone more (though diversifying does make clothes sharing a given), nor are there standard 1-bed 3-bath options, nor baths the size of swimming pools, though these are problems a plumber can fix. The biggest hurdle for most is jealousy (though the earth requires both moon and sun to keep everything in orbit.) And perhaps omnisexuality. To that I can only concede that polyamory isn’t for everyone. Still, if you can put petty jealousies aside, brave the (envious) glares of the sanctimonious soccer moms and embrace the notion of an expansive lifestyle based on mutual respect and adoration split three ways – three may just be the magic number…  21