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2.44 MB

Extraction Summary

2
People
2
Organizations
0
Locations
1
Events
1
Relationships
4
Quotes

Document Information

Type: Blog post / personal essay / article (printout)
File Size: 2.44 MB
Summary

This document appears to be a printout of a personal blog post or essay discussing relationship dynamics, specifically comparing swinging, polyamory, and cheating. The author reflects on their personal transition from monogamy to non-monogamy, discusses jealousy management, and references a blog called 'Polyamory In The News.' The page bears the Bates stamp HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_018603, indicating it was part of a document production for a congressional investigation.

People (2)

Name Role Context
Unknown Author Author/Narrator
Writes in the first person ('I') about their experiences with polyamory, swinging, and monogamy.
Unidentified Friend Friend
Described as the author's "most adamantly polyamorous friend".

Organizations (2)

Name Type Context
Polyamory In The News
Cited as having a piece on poly culture vs. swing culture.
House Oversight Committee
Producer of the document (implied by Bates stamp HOUSE_OVERSIGHT).

Timeline (1 events)

Various (General)
Friends' Weddings
Unknown
Author Friends Friends' brothers Friends' parents

Relationships (1)

Author Friendship Unidentified Friend
Author refers to him as 'my most adamantly polyamorous friend'.

Key Quotes (4)

"I never advocate cheating, ever."
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Quote #1
"Another difference between swinging and polyamory is that swingers tend to be more at home in mainstream culture, whereas polyamorists tend to be geeky or otherwise 'alternative.'"
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Quote #2
"In fact, my most adamantly polyamorous friend used to call me his 'reasonable monogamous friend.'"
Source
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Quote #3
"A Few Advantages of Monogamy (this is not a complete list)"
Source
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Quote #4

Full Extracted Text

Complete text extracted from the document (3,259 characters)

than one partner. (I've been researching polyamory since my teens, but only in recent years did I decide to actively pursue it.)
+ Swinging: Usually emphasizes couples with their own close bond, who have relatively casual sex with other partners. (Another difference between swinging and polyamory is that swingers tend to be more at home in mainstream culture, whereas polyamorists tend to be geeky or otherwise "alternative." The blog Polyamory In The News has a great, long piece on poly culture vs. swing culture.)
+ Cheating: One partner does something with an outside partner that wasn't accepted or understood in advance. In monogamous relationships, cheating usually involves having sex with an outside partner. Cheating exists in polyamorous or swing relationships as well: for example, a person might cheat on a non-monogamous partner by breaking an agreement -- an agreement such as "we don't have unprotected sex with other partners."
Just in case it needs to be said: I never advocate cheating, ever. As for the first two, I know both poly people and swingers that I consider totally decent and wonderful folks! I have more personal experience with and interest in polyamory, though.
Yet one thing that often gets lost in conversations about all these options is the advantages of monogamy. Of which there are many. Although I don't currently identify as monogamous, I had a very strong monogamous preference for years. I knew that polyamory existed, and I thought about it a lot, because it's interesting -- but I just didn't feel like it was for me. (In fact, my most adamantly polyamorous friend used to call me his "reasonable monogamous friend." He said I had examined polyamory enough to reasonably reject it, whereas he felt most people never consider polyamory deeply enough to have a thoughtful opinion.)
And lately lots of my monogamous friends have been getting married. So I've been thinking about the positive aspects of their relationship choices as I dance at their weddings, devour mini-quiches, flirt with their brothers and try to avoid offending their parents. (Okay, I've actually only flirted with one brother. So far.)
A Few Advantages of Monogamy (this is not a complete list)
+ Jealousy management. Some people experience jealousy more than, or less than, or differently from other people. Plenty of people in non-monogamous relationships experience jealousy -- and plenty of non-monogamous people handle it just fine, through open-hearted communication. (Often, jealousy is managed through very detailed relationship agreements such as a "relationship contract.")
But there are also plenty of people who appear to lack the "jealousy chip."
And then there are plenty of people who experience so much jealousy, who feel that jealousy is such a big part of their emotional makeup, that the best way to manage it is simply through monogamy.
Personally, I used to get a lot more jealous than I do now. I think I'm less likely to get jealous these days partly because I've gotten better at finding low-drama men. Jealousy has a reputation for being an irrational emotion, and sometimes it genuinely is an unreasonable, cruel power-grab. But I think jealousy is often quite rational, and often
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