Polyamory teaches people that love doesn’t have to follow just one path.
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Polyamory teaches people that love doesn’t have to follow just one path.
Love is not pie. You won't run out. Love is Pi. Real, irrational, and never-ending. Happy Pi Day, Love Rebels! loverevised.org Skilled alternative relationship coaching.
Late‑night moments where two separate affections feel exactly the same. 🥃📷
The rest of this midnight rhythm lives here.
This pride month, if you act like it's okay to ask me about my sex life or ask if I'm sexually active JUST BECAUSE I am polyamorous, you're getting thrown in the wood chipper.
Love is bigger than the rules people make for it.
I'm Helen, 28, living polyamorous lifestyle. I've become very aware of how little energy I actually have after work, so I'm careful about how I spend it. I don't like rushing from one thing to another just to feel busy. I'm comfortable with relationships that respect time, space, and real-life limits.
I like people. I like being close to them. I like caring and being cared for. But I don’t want to belong to just one person and I don’t want someone to belong to me. I can hug, cuddle, talk deeply, and love spending time together without promising “forever” or “only you.” Being close doesn’t mean we have to make big promises. It just means we enjoy each other right now. I tell people the rules clearly so nobody gets tricked or hurt. I won’t pretend I’m something I’m not just to make someone feel better. I don’t fix people. I don’t save people. I don’t become their only support. I stay kind, honest, and warm but I also protect my own space. If someone likes this way of being, we can play together. If they don’t, that’s okay — they can choose something else. Nobody is bad. Nobody is wrong. We just have different ways of loving. That’s who I am.
hi genuine question about non-monogamy/ENM/relationship anarchy: how do i navigate being mindful of the boundaries of my partner's partner when those boundaries include not communicating with me or allowing our shared partner to communicate much with me re: this person's boundaries? also how do we establish a """custody""" agreement/how we share our time with our shared partner if we can't talk?
obviously communication is key and i've already told my partner i would like to open communication to his partner, i'm just wondering about what more experienced people might think