I personally think more than one wife sounds like a fucking nightmare.
"MassPackersFan" wrote:
Most people would think like this of course. Considering my first marriage isn't a nightmare, I guess I'm naive (deluded?) enough to think another relationship could also be a positive experience. ;)
I think this fear rests upon the presumption that two women living together will necessarily be jealous of and catty toward each other. My initial response to this idea would simply be, "That's why you choose 'em carefully," but obviously that's a facile approach to the issue.
More to the point, I think that this fear ignores the plethora of practical benefits having an additional partner can bring to the table. For example, bringing another wage earner into the fold increases the household's disposable income without necessarily drastically increasing its expenses rate of consumption. Moreover, having a third set of hands instantly slashes household and childcare responsibilities: our girlfriend cheerfully and without prompting helps us clean, and she loves to take care of the kids. With the reduction in housework comes additional free time for pursuing outside interests and hobbies. And also, as our girlfriend pointed out when we were first talking about getting involved with her, increasing the pool of partners reduces the sexual demands on any one partner.*
It also ignores the ways in which having multiple partners can improve your sex life. For example, it turns my wife on when other women want me, partly perhaps because she's bisexual, but mostly because it validates her choice of me as a man. The fact that other women desire me shows that I'm desirable. I know she's not the only woman who reacts like this, either. On the man's side, polygamy certainly exploits the
Coolidge Effect to both partners' advantage, instead of to their detriment, as usually happens in a marriage. (The idea that married couples have less sex as time goes on is solidly rooted in science; the phenomenon has been observed in all "higher animals" that have been studied.)
I don't think it would be looked down upon if people can be convinced that it is what everyone in the relationship wants. People are so used to the monogamist lifestyle though that they usually assume there is some unhappy "victim" getting played... At least that would be the case for the people I'm used to.
"MassPackersFan" wrote:
A good point, of course, and I'm sure there are situations in which that happens. But all such relationships cannot be painted with that brush. In my case, we actually want that kind of relationship, and we believe we get a lot out of it (it's drawn us so close together), and it would be nice if others would give us the benefit of that doubt.
I'm sure down South etc. there are a lot of people who would be offended by it for religious reasons.
"MassPackersFan" wrote:
Ironically, religious proscriptions of polygamy are not rooted in the Bible at all. The only direct prohibition of polygamy in the Bible is for leaders of the church: bishops and deacons (1 Timothy 3). Yes, as people like to point out, the Bible portrays the potential negative consequences of polygamous relationships, but it's not as though the monogamous relationships in the Bible were paragons of perfection either. The Bible depicts imperfections in all human interactions (human-human, human-world, human-God), because it views humans as inherently flawed; we're more than capable of screwing up any kind of relationship. Plenty of strictly monogamous marriages fail everyday; that's not the fault of the relationship type -- it's the fault of the people within the relationship.
From what I can find in the literature, the Western religious opposition to polygamy seems to be more of a cultural than a doctrinal stance, one rooted largely in Roman (and hence Catholic) romantic idealism and a desire to create a separation between Christians and pagans. In essence: "The pagans around us are polygamists, and we're not pagans, so we won't practice polygamy." Of course, such a line of reasoning ignores the fact that most pagans
didn't have multiple wives, whether out of inclination or the sheer inability to afford them (the same reasons why most Muslims don't have multiple wives). Not to mention the fact that pagans also wear clothes, go to the bathroom, make love, have children, travel, sing, eat. (Then again, there have been sects throughout Christian history that have forbidden their members to engage in one or more of those very things, too.) As the author of this article points out, the basis of anti-polygamy laws has almost always been rooted in pragmatic religious bigotry: banning polygamy was simply the easiest way to kick the Mormons out.
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* Though the importance of this "benefit" seems to be diminishing rapidly. When we first started expressing interest in something serious with her, she said she only liked to have sex once every week or two. She had just broken up with her boyfriend of five years; apparently, Taiwanese men aren't interested in much more than penetration -- as quickly and to the point as possible. Now that she's starting to see there's so much more to sex than penis-in-vagina, she's blossoming into quite the little sexual aggressor.
Not that that's a surprise. Sexually awakened women have much stronger sex drives than even the most virile of men.