There are those who really don’t understand it and those who instead indicate polyamory as the secret to making us all happier: here’s what
Polyamory indicates a loving condition in which the partners, by mutual agreement, can have two or more relationships at the same time.
For some, this condition is unthinkable, sharing one’s love is an idea light years away: the risks of this condition would be too much and sharing – inside and outside the covers – can be highly stressful.
For many others, however, it can be the ideal condition for living a relationship.
And there are even those who argue that polyamory will make us all happier, we explain based on what they say.
Why might polyamory make us happier?
The pleasure of freedom
If you decide to live polyamorous relationships then you will enjoy the maximum of relational, emotional and sexual freedom. Polyamory leaves the possibility of dating whoever you want, when you want, in the way you prefer. The only basic condition is respect and total transparency between partners.
The rest is all granted.
Does it improve society?
According to a survey conducted by the Ashley Madison platform, more than half of its members – and 22% of Americans- think that a shift towards forms of polyamory could improve society. Women in particular seem well disposed because they see it as an advantage for individual sexuality and sexual expression.
In short, more personal well-being would also lead to greater serenity with others.
Polyamory assumes the same respect but with more transparency
Monogamy seems more and more a choice far from today’s reality. The condition of choice for couples remains but it is often punctuated by betrayals, subterfuges and then separations and divorces.
On the contrary, polyamory allows you to live the relationship with more transparency towards yourself and your sexual and emotional instincts but with the same – or perhaps even more – respect of a traditional couple.
In fact, even those who marry polyamory create an agreement for an enlarged couple made up of common rules and decisions.
When these are not respected we speak, in the same way, of betrayal.