How to Make
It Work
- Tools for Healthy Polyamorous Relationships
by
Brian Frederick
1. Tell the
Truth.
Lasting relationships are built on trust. Trust is built on
honesty. Honesty
isn't hard and it's a good habit. Bite the bullet, tell the
truth. If your
relationship can't weather it, you are in the wrong relationship;
but it
probably can. Telling the truth is easier than lying, all rumor
and myth
to the contrary. Lies are a lot of work. They weigh you down and
isolate
you. Small lies get lonely and seek out bigger lies. Don't ask
one lover
to lie or keep secrets from others. Secrets may not be lies but
they breed
lies. Secrets build walls and discourage intimacy. Know the
difference
between privacy and secrecy.
Resist the desire to tell someone what you think they want to
hear or try
to protect them. "Especially do not feign affection."
If you're
not sure about love, say so. If your relationships are not a high
priority
in your life, let people know. Encourage honesty in others. Above
all,
be honest with yourself. Are you looking to build a family or for
a little
sexual variety?
2. Know Yourself. This is the most important tool
and sometimes
the hardest to find. Spend quality time with yourself and find
out what
you're like. Most people never do. Learn to tell when you are
moody or
unreasonable or defensive or hyper-sensitive or blinded by New
Relationship
Energy. Know your limits. Discover where you could do better.
Learn what's
healthy for you and what's not. Figure out what your priorities
really
are. Learn when to take a walk and cool off.
Many people never see the consistent patterns in their own
behavior that
are obvious to everyone else, like always pursuing the same type
of lover
or always turning relationships into soap operas or lovers into
adversaries.
They are blind to themselves. What don't you know about yourself?
If you
know about your addictions you can transform them into a
preferences and
eventually into a choices, but first you have to know about them.
Take time to discover things like: what baggage are you carrying
from your
childhood or your last relationship, what do you need and what do
you only
want, what pushes your buttons and why, which things are you
willing to
compromise on, what are your core motivations, what makes you
jealous or
insecure or competitive, at what point are you over-extending
yourself,
what are your patterns, strengths and weaknesses, etc. Remember
to learn
your good points too. A lot of this goes back to honesty.
3. Take Care of Yourself. Work on you. "Grow
your own
garden in your own soul, don't wait for someone else to bring you
flowers."
Instead of looking to other people for validation or satisfaction
or happiness,
learn to make it yourself. This is a vitally important skill for
living.
You will always be at other people's mercy - until you learn to
satisfy
your own needs. Once you do, you gain a freedom and confidence
that can
never be taken away. You can meet people as equals and choose to
enjoy
each other instead of carefully exchanging needs in a
scarcity-driven emotional
economy. Ironically, people find this kind of independence very
attractive.
Take time by yourself to think about what you need to work on and
give
yourself the space to do it. Take care of yourself, be kind to
yourself,
like yourself, love yourself, accept yourself, forgive yourself,
respect
yourself, serve yourself, nurture yourself, just be yourself and
please,
sharpen a knife and cut yourself some slack. Everyone is too hard
on themselves
and everyone's mirrors are warped. Yours are too; learn to
compensate.
Learn emotional first aid. Your relationship with yourself is the
foundation
of all your other relationships.
4. Take Responsibility. Own your feelings. No one
can make
you sad or angry or happy either, they are your emotions. They
exist in
your head and nowhere else. You own them. You. There are always
choices.
Accept that sometimes you feel good or bad for no reason at all -
not because
of the people or events in your life. When you make someone else
accountable
for your feelings, your disempower yourself.
Playing the victim or martyr is just a way to manipulate people.
To say,
"I hurt you because my parents hurt me", is to
surrender your
life to other people and to the past. Be here now. Take charge of
your
own feelings and actions and life. You are responsible for seeing
that
your own needs get met. (Yes, even your own sexual needs.) Don't
tell other
people "do me, make me happy, protect me." Learn to
take care
of yourself.
If there are problems in one of your relationships or if your
life is a
mess, stand up and carry your share of the responsibility (and no
more),
even if you don't think you deserve it. Taking responsibility is
not taking
blame. "It's all your fault," causes new problems, it
doesn't
solve any. The more responsibility you take over your own life,
the more
freedom you have.
5. Encourage Growth. Remember to care about your
lovers as
human beings. Support them in advancing their careers, spiritual
pursuits,
educations and ambitions. At their own pace and in their own way.
Help
them to heal and understand themselves better. Encourage them to
take time
by themselves and give them the space they need. Help them
cultivate strength.
Ask them to do the same for you but tell them how; they can't
read your
mind. One way to encourage growth is to give those you love the
freedom
to love others.
Some people find neediness and weakness very attractive. Maybe
they think
they'll be abandoned if their loved ones get strong. They might
try to
keep people weak and needy so they'll stay. They might give
generously
but with conditions and strings attached. This is not
unconditional love
- it may not be love at all - it might just be aggressive need.
Growth can be stunted by difficult emotions like insecurity or
fear of
abandonment. One way to manage a limiting emotion is to meet it
head on.
"The only way out - is through." Don't hide from it;
that just
gives it power. Dive in and weather it and survive it and examine
it. Your
fear is far worse than reality. Learn that and the emotion loses
its power
and you grow stronger. You can even use jealousy, insecurity,
etc. to teach
you about yourself. They are valuable. Pay attention to them and
learn
from them.
6. Respect. Respect is a form of love. Respect
yourself,
set limits and boundaries and respect those of other people. Know
how and
when to clearly say `no' and how to listen when others say `no'.
Never
tolerate abuse. You deserve better. Remember to be polite to your
partners,
they deserve it even more than the stranger down the street.
Try not to save all your best stuff for one partner and take your
partners
for granted, especially when they are together. Try to treat them
evenly
or someone will feel slighted. Comparisons make people compete
and force
someone to be the loser. Find a way for everyone to win.
Respect relationships as well as people. Each relationship seems
to have
a natural shape; don't try to force it to be something else.
Think of each
relationship as a separate entity that could be healthy or sick.
Resist
the urge to use a relationship to get your head in order; a lover
is not
a life raft. If you need therapy, see a doctor.
It's easy to project your expectations onto other people.
"Maybe they'll
change." Don't try to force a person to be someone they are
not. People
are package deals; accept them for who they are, good and bad, or
don't
accept them at all.
If you want respect, keep your word. Keep to the spirit of your
agreements;
don't squabble over semantics looking for loop-holes to exploit.
If you
make an agreement in the kitchen, keep it in the bedroom. Every
agreement
you've ever made is really with yourself.
7. Communicate. If you want a healthy relationship,
strong
communication skills are a necessity, not a luxury. Trouble
usually starts
when talking stops. Things come up all the time that have to be
worked
through patiently and lovingly, even when you're having a bad
day. It gets
easier over time, but it takes work and a willingness to break up
scar
tissue and tear down walls. Communication skills are what make a
person
a good lover.
Arguing skills are not communication skills. Arguing better than
someone
doesn't make you right, it just makes you better at arguing.
Sometimes
people strive to `win' an argument at the cost of their own
relationship.
Negotiate a way for everyone to win.
Listening is more important than talking. Listen actively and
don't just
hear. Make eye contact. Be here now, don't wander. Paraphrase
their words
to see if you heard them right. Notice your own words and
feelings, ask
why they are what they are. Listen to unhappy feelings (yours and
those
of others) without needing to fix them. Listen to disagreements
without
taking sides. Listen to non-verbal communication, which usually
speaks
more clearly than words. Be aware of how the people in your life
are loving
you.
Some talk is not communication. If you get lost in the woods and
pass the
same landmark several times, you are making the same mistake over
and over.
Raising your voice or speaking harshly makes you harder to
understand,
not easier. Use "I" statements instead of
"you" statements.
"I think you're wrong" is easier to accept than
"you are
wrong." Directness works better than manipulation.
Clearly express yourself; people can't read your mind. Tear down
the wall
between your feelings and your words. Set limits and boundaries
and communicate
them. Make sure everyone knows what they are getting into. Learn
how to
defuse arguments. If necessary, learn how and when to say
goodbye. Actions
communicate better than words. Show people that you love them.
Share kindness
and affection and laughter. When in doubt, rub their feet.
8. Attitude. Having tools isn't enough, you have to
really
want to use them. Ya gotta wanna. Your disposition will make it
work or
blow it. Find a way for everyone to win. Make important decisions
unanimous.
Shine a positive light on difficult situations too; many
relationships
wither from negative energy. Don't turn little things into big
things.
Look for solutions, not someone to blame. Practice tolerance,
patience,
flexibility, generosity, understanding, forgiveness. Learn to
apologize.
Laugh at yourself.
Be wrong; you can't learn from errors if you always gotta be
right. Let
it go; be happy instead. Listen more than you talk. Give someone
else the
last word. See things through their eyes; empathy is the cure for
anger.
Stay calm and remember to breath. Let down your walls, trust,
open up,
risk and let yourself be vulnerable. Without vulnerability there
is no
intimacy. Take your time and emphasize friendship over romance.
Savor what
you have instead of dwelling on what you don't have. Practice
truly unconditional
love. Share.