Polyamory in the News
. . . by Alan M.



April 8, 2016

Super-cool little Poly 101 video being distributed to the world's media



Yesterday this popped up all over: a living-together vee family with kids happily describing their life to a friendly interviewer. No, you can't click it; watch here: Is Polyamory Just About Having More Sex? (6 minutes) (April 7, 2016).

You can see it on the sites of the Asbury Park Press in New Jersey, the Coastal Courier in Georgia, Today's Farmer magazine in Canada, the Post-Crescent in Appleton, Wisconsin; KPAX-TV in Montana, WEWS-TV in Cleveland, Canoe.com . . . .

Why? The video is made and distributed by Newsy, which markets videos to media worldwide — to enliven newspaper websites, for instance, or for TV news to cut and splice into their own reports, or to make life easier for every shlub who gets the order, "The consultant says our site needs more video."

Know anybody in the media? If they could ever use a fine little Poly 101 bit, point them to this.

Updates: Five more videos appear in this series.

On Tuesday Newsy put up a peppy 4-minute intro to poly vocabulary (dated April 5), made with the same three people and interviewer in the same sitting.

And now we see the same group doing a more serious piece, How Do Friends And Family React To Polyamory? (April 8).

And a fourth: Do Your Kids Know You're Polyamorous? (April 8). Their kids are 1 and 6.

And a fifth: How Do You Find Others Interested In Polyamory?  (April 12). Answers: poly meetups, the big Poly Cocktails the three operate in their local area, and of course OKCupid.

A sixth: Is Polyamory a Feminist Idea? (April 13). This ends with what seems to be the wrap-up for the series.

On the page of each is a transcript. Here's the transcript for the first described above:


Asking For A Friend: Is Polyamory Just About Having More Sex?

Polyamory can come with many partners and many misconceptions. Newsy's Cody LaGrow asks a polyamorous unit what it's really all about.

By Cody LaGrow | April 7, 2016

Caroline is married to Josie. Caroline is also in a committed relationship with Adam. They share one house and two kids, and they all call the shots under the same roof. This is a polyamorous relationship.

Polyamory, the philosophy or state of being emotionally and sexually involved with more than one person at the same time, comes with many misconceptions. Caroline, Josie and Adam cleared up questions many may have about polyamory.

Newsy's Cody LaGrow: Do you think monogamy is unrealistic?

Caroline: "I hate the idea of polyamory and monogamy being pitted against each other. Obviously, one thing that makes polyamory different than monogamy is, in theory, you are having sex with multiple partners. But it's not just about sex. You are loving multiple partners. And this is really what polyamory is about. It's about love. And that expression of love usually leads to sex."

Cody: How often do you hear that you're having your cake and eating it, too?

Josie: "You hear it ... and that it's just different. I think a lot of people view us as the weirdos on the fringes of society, but to us, it feels weird to not have a choice. And just sort of default to monogamy."

Adam: "I found that monogamy, sort of, constrained my ideas about love. Like, I needed to find the one person for me. That is a huge thing to go about doing."

Caroline: "What do we in society call 'the one'? The one romantic person in your life, the one sexual person in your life, your best friend, the one person who is going to give you financial security, the one person who is going to give you family security, who you're going to have children with, who you're going to build all of these things with. And I think in a lot of societies and cultures, we rely on more than one person to do that."

Cody: How do you know if you're polyamorous?

Adam: "Poly is about the commitment of actually being with someone. There's a different commitment here, and there's a different commitment there. That's also the glorious thing about it because you get to decide that."

Cody: What kind of things should you expect to take on in a polyamorous relationship that are different than a conventional relationship?

Adam: "A Google calendar."

Caroline: "I think the primary thing is learning how to be very communicative. Learning how to communicate things that are often hard to communicate when you're in a typical relationship."

Cody: How do you manage jealousy?

Josie: "When they first started dating, I realized I was sort of having a night, and I'm jealous, and this is a little hard, and I learned what I needed to do. ... At the end of the day, it's not their job to make me not jealous. It's mine."

Cody: When did you first realize you wanted to be polyamorous?

Josie: "It varies a lot from one person to another. Caroline and I started talking about it. We were monogamous for years, and we started talking about it five years ago."

Cody: What's the biggest change you have noticed now that you're polyamorous?

Caroline: "The number one thing I learned when I became polyamorous was there is a great deal of self discovery that comes with it. You learn all about what makes you insecure. You learn all about what makes you insecure in a relationship. All about what makes you jealous in a relationship. All that makes you angry."

Cody: Do you think being in a polyamorous relationship makes you communicate more?

Group: "Yes."

Cody: Do you think it makes you identify boundaries more?

Group: "Yes."

Cody: Do you think that’s more helpful in a relationship?

Group: "Yes."

Cody: So we all should be polyamorous?

Group: "No! No! No!"

Adam: "That's a trainwreck."

Josie: "When we were monogamous, we definitely could've benefited from the communication skills, the self-reflection skills, really all of the things we've learned since becoming poly. Any relationship can benefit from that. Being poly just sort of forces it on you. In a way, that monogamy doesn't have to often."

Cody: What do you want someone to take away from this?

Josie: "I would say, that it's not about sex. I mean sex can be a part of it. It doesn't have to be. ... It's about allowing the freedom of our relationships to become whatever it is they want to be."

Caroline: "It's about love. I think, for me, it's been very important in my life to allow love to flourish and take the forms that it should, or want to, and to not limit it or constrain it for what 'you're supposed to do.' It's been very rewarding."

Adam: "It's very complicated. And for people who don't commit themselves to knowing their own feelings and being honest and being open about the whole process, it's going to be tough."

Cody: Why do you think people have such a hard time grasping the concept of polyamory?

Caroline: "I don't think that they do. I think they just don't put it in the context of romantic relationships. You can have one child, and introducing another child in no way pulls love from that first child."

Josie: "Everyone understands that you can be in love with a partner and want to sleep with somebody else. People cheat all the freaking time. It's amazing the people who have less of a problem with cheating than they do with polyamory. We are doing the same thing; we are just being honest about it. Isn't that better?"

Caroline: "It's somehow scary or threatening, but I think people completely understand the idea but only apply it to one particular kind of relationship."

Cody: So, you're telling me you guys are normal?

Josie: "Our daily struggles have very little to do with me and Adam competing with each other over Caroline's time or anything like that. More like, how are we getting dinner on the table tonight?"

Caroline: "Who did the grocery shopping? Who's going to pick up the car?"

Adam: "How exactly to do the dishes?"


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