BSR- I think that I'm just coming from an entirely different view on this. It gets into one of those lovely philosophical topics where you can broaden it all the way into, what does marriage mean at all? (would be happy to spin off into that if you like!)
Honestly, no, I'm not a relationship anarchist. I've seen so many horror stories from that side of things, and I believe that a lot of them are only in relationships for as long as it is good for them. Probably a lot of the things I'm about to say are what y'all think of me, so if it's coming from me, that should say quite a bit. I see people who don't value the relationship as its own entity with its own wants and needs (like we discussed upstream- I see a relationship as both individuals, and an entity). They seem selfish to me, in a lot of ways, and I'm sure they're not all like that but it's rather a predominant feature that I see in the RA/solo poly community.
My husband and I have always had an open and poly relationship. I asked him to marry me- he'd never been married before. But I certainly didn't have to marry him to stay with him, and after my horror show of a divorce (my first marriage lasted 14 years, by the way), my family was surprised I wanted to take that risk again.
I consider myself to be a descriptive hierarchical polyamorist. That means that I consider myself to have a hierarchical relationship based on "the way things are" because I parent with DH and we have legal entanglements. It doesn't mean that any future relationships are limited by artificial constructs- they can grow in whatever way they happen to go. I have some personal boundaries (i.e no more children) but they aren't related to hierarchy. There's a big difference between that and a prescriptive hierarchy, which basically says to future partners, this is my spouse so you basically will always come second no matter what and you should be grateful for whatever snippets of my time I give you and that's that. Kinda like an AP, honestly. People, especially unicorn hunters, often treat secondary partners in a deplorable fashion and it's appalling. But that's a bit of a digression, my apologies. I guess you would consider my personal philosophy to be somewhere in the middle of that spectrum from strict hierarchy to relationship anarchy.
As to why be married, I wrote this a while back:
What is a marriage? Is it only about sex? Is it only about love? I think this is a question that we all have to answer for ourselves. What does your marriage (or in general if you're not married) mean to you?
Sex with others, or love with others, doesn't cheapen my marriage in any way. I married DH not only because I love him, not only because I like to have sex with him- but because I want to build a life with him. He doesn't check all the boxes but who does? That's a beyond unrealistic expectation. I know I don't check all his either. But that's not the point. The point is that we want to grow old together and be life partners. We not only love each other, but we choose each other every single day. We share love and passion, tears, anger, and everything on the spectrum. He's my best friend, and I'm his.
I'm not even sure why the sexual fidelity has come to play such a large role in relationships, other than the concern in the past for men having to raise others' children unwittingly. I don't know why sex has become so strongly correlated with love in Western society, when so many other cultures have other norms about sex.
To me, marriage isn't just about a legal agreement. It's not just about who you have sex with. And it's not just about children, or security, or couple's privilege. It may be about all those things, but to me it's something more. It says to me, I want to share this journey with you. I love you and accept you for who you are now, knowing that we will both grow and change over the years. It says to me, I will make sacrifices for you as you make them for me, because our relationship has intrinsic value and we want to invest in it and each other.
So I will never vow to DH that there will be no others; quite the contrary, I have promised him there always will be. But he knows that whatever connections I build with others do not take away from what I have with him. So why did I want to marry him? Because he's become the person in this world that I can trust to always have my back (and to point out when he thinks I am wrong, to boot), to know the innermost secrets of my heart, and to support me to reach my goals.
I can have a committed relationship with DH without sexual or romantic fidelity. Commitment doesn't have to mean forever, although we both want and hope it will be, just like everyone else who says those magic words. Commitment for commitment's sake if a relationship is toxic never helped anyone.
To address those specific examples you brought up- I decided that I am rooted right where I am. For various reasons, I will not be moving. DBF knows that, and it has nothing to do with his importance to me, but if he accepts a job offer somewhere far away, he knows the romantic aspect of our relationship would end because I am not happy in long distance relationships. I would hope we could eventually transition into friendship but I know it would take time to deal with the hurt feelings. As for the serious illness, if your "outside partner" was upset about cancelled dates, I would say that doesn't say a lot about the emotional connection. If I had a life threatening illness, I would expect DBF to be right there supporting me through it as well. I would do that for him, too. While I'm not averse to relationships casual enough that you just have dates every once in a while, that's not what I really think of when I think polyamory. That means ethical romantic relationships, and a romantic partner should be more concerned about their partner than cancelled dates and should want to be there and help, in my opinion. As for breaking up with someone to focus on your spouse, I wouldn't do that. I don't think it's ethical to treat other partners as disposable. I am not sure what would have to happen to make me think that was necessary, because I can take care of my spouse without dropping everything else in my life. If I had a platonic best friend, I wouldn't drop them because my spouse needed me, so why would I need to do this with a romantic partner? And people tend to be understanding. When DBF was overwhelmed with work in the fall and we saw each other barely once a week for two months, I didn't break up with him because I felt neglected. I supported him and when he could put the crap down, he made sure to show me how much he appreciated it. I'm sure if I needed to focus more energy on DH he would do the same for me.
Did I answer what you were asking in that massive response?
[This message edited by PSTI at 11:41 PM, December 28th (Saturday)]