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Threesome Marriages (Samesex "Marriage" ushers in Polyamory and Polygamy)
The Daily Beast ^ | May 7, 2009 | Abby Ellin

Posted on 05/08/2009 10:13:24 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet

First came traditional marriage. Then, gay marriage. Now, there's a movement combining both—simultaneously. Abby Ellin visits the next frontier of nuptials: the "triad."

Less than 18 months ago, Sasha Lessin and Janet Kira Lessin gathered before their friends near their home in Maui, and proclaimed their love for one another. Nothing unusual about that—Sasha, 68, and Janet, 55—were legally married in 2000. Rather, this public commitment ceremony was designed to also bind them to Shivaya, their new 60-something "husband." Says Sasha: “I want to walk down the street hand in hand in hand in hand and live together openly and proclaim our relationship. But also to have all those survivor and visitation rights and tax breaks and everything like that.”

Maine this week became the fifth state, and the fourth in New England, to legalize gay marriage, provoking yet another national debate about same-sex unions. The Lessins' advocacy group, the Maui-based World Polyamory Association, is pushing for the next frontier of less-traditional codified relationships. This community has even come up with a name for what the rest of the world generally would call a committed threesome: the "triad."

Unlike open marriages and the swinger days of the 1960s and 1970s, these unions are not about sex with multiple outside partners. Nor are they relationships where one person is involved with two others, who are not involved with each other, a la actress Tilda Swinton. That's closer to bigamy. Instead, triads—"triangular triads," to use precise polyamorous jargon—demand that all three parties have full relationships, including sexual, with each other. In the Lessins case, that can be varying pairs but, as Sasha, a psychologist, puts it, "Janet loves it when she gets a double decker." In a triad, there would be no doubt in Elizabeth Edwards’ mind whether her husband fathered a baby out of wedlock; she likely would have participated in it.

There are no statistics or studies out there, but according to Robyn Trask, the executive director of Loving More, a nonprofit organization in Loveland (yes, really), Colorado, dedicated to poly-education and support, about 25 percent of the estimated 50,000 self-identified polyamorists in the U.S. live together in semi-wedded bliss. A disproportionate number of them are baby boomers. (Paging Timothy Leary: Janet Lessin claims on her Web site that she's able to travel astrally.)

As with a couple, the key to making a triad work is communication. The Lessins' group specifically advocates something called "compersion": taking joy in another person's joy. Thus, they know how to process jealousy. “We don’t have anything take place off-stage,” says Sasha Lessin. “You witness your lover making googly eyes and you share your feelings. It’s not difficult for most people to be compersive once they feel they’re not being abandoned.”

Like most people in the poly community, the Lessins, who also helm the school of tantra (they take pleasure of the flesh quite seriously), take great pains to discuss pretty much everything. Some people even write up their agreements like a traditional prenup, detailing everything from communal economics to cohabitation rules. And buoyed by an increasing acceptance of same-sex unions, others want more legal protections. "We should have every right to inherit from each other and visit each other—I don’t care what you call it, we’re not second-class citizens!” says Janet Lessin. “Any people who wish to form a marriage with all the rights and duties of a marriage should have the legal right to. The spurious arguments of marriage being for procreation of children is ridiculous.”

That said, Valerie White, executive director of the Sexual Freedom Legal Defense and Education Fund, a legal-defense fund for people with alternative sexual expression in Sharon, Massachusetts, says she believes that triads are actually a great way to raise a family. "Years ago, children didn’t get raised in dyads, they got raised with grandparents and aunts and uncles—it was much looser and more village-like," says White. "I think a lot more people are finding that polyamory is a way to recapture that kind of support.” For a year, Loving More's Trask and her then-husband were both involved with another woman, who was a part of the family. Trask's three children knew all about it. “I’m totally out,” says Trask.

Many others aren't. Larry, Rachel and Andie would only talk to me anonymously, due to the fact that Rachel, 47, works at large, traditional financial institution in Manhattan. Larry, 56, met her on a commuter ferry two years ago. At the time, Larry was a member of Poly-NYC, a polyamory group in New York; on their first date, he told her about it. Rachel had just gotten out of a year-and-a-half-long relationship with, unbeknownst to her, a married man. “I was so overwhelmed with Larry’s honesty," she says, "I said to him, ‘I need to look that up and understand it.'"

A few months later, they met Andie, 56 at a poly retreat in upstate New York. Andie has been has practiced "multi-partnering" since the early '90s, and was giving a talk on the subject. Rachel turned to Larry and said ‘Wow, that’s someone I would turn poly for!’ “She was so elegant and classy. I just felt she was a beautiful person.”

While Larry, on the other hand, was not especially attracted to Andie, he was fully supportive of Rachel exploring her attraction. She didn’t, but ran into Andie at a few other events. Andie, in turn, began noticing the quality of the relationship between Larry and Rachel. “They didn’t just go to those meetings and do what happens to other poly partners, that they disappear from each other,” she says. “They stayed together.”

Three months ago, they reconnected at yet another retreat, and this time the three bonded on an emotional level. So they decided to figure out how to make a three-way relationship work. This involves weekly conference calls where they discuss the tenets of the relationship (honestly, respect, communication, jealousy) and agree to undergo blood tests for STDs. They talk about what they want out of life, and each other. “There are people who’ve been married 20 years and never had these kinds of conversation,” says Andie. “I feel blessed.”

Akien MacIain and his wife, Dawn Davidson, have been counseling dyads, triads, quads and once even a quint, in San Francisco for over a decade. On their Web site, they offer tips for creating agreements—among them, “Use Time Limited Agreements Where Needed” (i.e., two weeks, two months, and so on) and “Check in Periodically; Renegotiate if Needed.”

“A triad is a series of dyads, but it’s more complicated because if I’m in a relationship with one other person, there’s my relationship with the other person, her relationship with me, and the relationship that each of us has to the couple,” says MacIain. “When you make it a triad there are four factorial connections. It’s very hard.”

And yet some make it work. Doug Carr, Robert Hill, and Paul Wilson have been a happy threesome for 29 years. The three men, who live outside Austin, Texas, share a bed, a checking account, and joint real-estate properties in each of their names—“a left-handed form of cementing the relationship in a legal context,” says Hill, 69, a retired financier (because of their arrangement, they, too, requested I use pseudonyms). Their ranch is split three ways; they call themselves “husbands” and wear matching wedding bands. Back in 1980, when they met at a furniture store in Dallas, Hill and Wilson were a confirmed dyad for 10 years. Carr, now an assistant dean at a local college, fell for both of them; they developed a friendship, which soon turned to love.

Wilson, 61, a consulting engineer for the health-care community, admits that initially he was less gung ho. “I thought, how is this going to turn out? You can’t read an article in Readers Digest, ‘Twelve Ways to make a Triad Work.’" He finally saw the light on a trip to Vienna the three men took. “I decided to go for it. I turned to them and said, ‘I love you,’ and I love you,’ and let’s make it work.”

They held a commitment ceremony in 1984 for 20 friends, and then a reception for 200 in their house, where we “introduced ourselves to the world as a triad,” says Carr, 49. They would like to marry legally, though they are not holding their breath that it will happen any time soon.

“As far as we’re concerned, in the eyes of God we’re already married—and from an economic standpoint, we’ve taken that as far as we can, ” says Hill.

Despite the fact that they are also “Dad, Daddy and Pappa” to the 4-year-old quadruplets Carr sired with a lesbian couple, they actually see themselves as quite traditional. “We’ve patterned our relationship on the relationships of our parents,” says Hill. “So many gay people throw away all the values they learned at home. Some are worth throwing away, but a lot are not."

“The crux of all this,” he says, "is commitment.”


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Front Page News; Government
KEYWORDS: agenda; culturewars; gaymarriage; gaystapo; homobama; homosexualagenda; homosexualmarriage; homosexuals; moralabsolutes; perverts; polyamory; polygamy; polygyny; rino; rinoromney; romney; romneymarriage; samesexmarriage
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To: melsec

Look at the royal families of Europe - there’s your answer. It isn’t pretty


181 posted on 05/10/2009 7:51:38 PM PDT by Mom MD (Jesus is the Light of the world!)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

About ten years ago, I was posting on a message forum for women, and one woman introduced herself to us as “bisexual polyamory”. She said she had a husband and a girlfriend, and they all lived together with her and her husband’s sons. She claimed back then that being “polyamory” was the same as being “homosexual” in that she was “born that way.” (FTR, no, I myself don’t believe anyone is born either way.)

She also claimed that we all were repressed because each of us was married to one man. And she claimed that not allowing their threesome to marry was “discrimination”. We would argue with her and point out why polygamy was wrong. But, most worrisome was that she said she and her husband produced adult films. She also said sometimes the sons would curl up with her and her girlfriend. When we asked if her children were even involved in pornography, she kept vague and said, “Define pornography.” We didn’t know who the woman was, but we all were worried about those children.

That was ten years ago. And even back then there were a few articles in the MSM about polyamory couples. I remember thinking then that, after “homosexuality”, polyamory would be the next step down.


182 posted on 05/10/2009 10:21:54 PM PDT by Tired of Taxes (Dad, I will always think of you.)
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To: This Just In

Only in so far on the defense of traditional marriage. I was not talking about any other general societal problems.


183 posted on 05/10/2009 11:26:00 PM PDT by Truthsearcher
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To: Truthsearcher

I did answer your question, the answer is the same answer you’d give to gay atheists who wants to marry, assuming you have one.

You do have one, right?


Do you believe that all gays are atheists?


184 posted on 05/11/2009 7:45:48 AM PDT by Grunthor
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To: This Just In
I must ask, are you gay or a polygamist?

Then I must say you have ignored every word I have ever said.

Divorce is only available in the case of Adultery, unless you are Catholic with lots of money. In any case that was Jesus's statement. Before Jesus a man could divorce his wife or any reason, but Jesus said it was not to be from the beginning. Implying that man had perverted God's will in the matter.

185 posted on 05/11/2009 8:50:07 AM PDT by itsahoot (Each generation takes to excess, what the previous generation accepted in moderation.)
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To: Grunthor

Do you have a point to make? If so make it instead of asking rhetorical questions.


186 posted on 05/11/2009 4:12:08 PM PDT by Truthsearcher
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To: itsahoot

I see you could not find any “wrath” in my previous posts.

“Divorce is only available in the case of Adultery...”

Not so. The Greek word used in Matthew’s gospel is pornea, which is translated “marital unfaithfulness”, harlotry(including adultery and incest), and idolatry (Matt. 19:9).

Like yourself, some say that Jesus meant adultery, and that adultery constituted grounds for divorce. But there is another Greek word (moicheia) which means adultery; in fact, that word is used in the same verse, thus drawing a distinction.

Pornea can be paralleled with “hardness of heart”, therefore braking the marriage covenant with the Lord. Naturally, this unfaithfulness may take other forms besides sexual promiscuity (Matt. 19:8[citing Moses’ Law]).

Husbands are to love there wives as Christ loved the church and gave himself up for her (Eph. 5:25)

In 1 Corinthians 7: 10-16 we read another example of divorce which did not involve adultery.

Unlike Christ and the church, a man whom beats his wife and/or abuses her psychologically has broken that vow to the Lord to love, cherish, protect, nurture, built up, and serve her.


187 posted on 05/12/2009 12:24:44 AM PDT by This Just In
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To: This Just In
I see you could not find any “wrath” in my previous posts

I guess one could avoid the whole issue as Jesus did and stay unmarried, on the other hand we could just pay off a priest or two and get a divorce for any reason we felt like lying about.

I have been married to the same woman for thirty seven years, and I can tell you that most married couples I know only have an arrangement, not a marriage, which makes it very easy to get bored with their spouse. No fault divorce is an abomination.

188 posted on 05/12/2009 10:09:10 AM PDT by itsahoot (Each generation takes to excess, what the previous generation accepted in moderation.)
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To: itsahoot

“...only have an arrangment, not a marriage...”

Anecdotal. Most couples I know are married, and a majority of them have been together for over 30 years. But that’s beside the point.

How you could extrapolate that Jesus avoided the whole issue is failing to actually read the Lords Word. He did not answer the Pharisees trick questions in the way they were hoping he would, but he did address the issue of marriage, among other things.

The Lords Word is not like a buffet, where you conveniently pick and choose the passages you like and pass over others. Not only did Jesus address the issue of marriage, but we find other passages in scripture as well that address this directly or by example.


189 posted on 05/12/2009 10:44:17 AM PDT by This Just In
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To: This Just In
How you could extrapolate that Jesus avoided the whole issue is failing to actually read the Lords Word.

sarcasm |?s?r?kaz?m| noun the use of irony to mock or convey contempt : his voice, hardened by sarcasm, could not hide his resentment. See note at wit .
ORIGIN mid 16th cent.: from French sarcasme, or via late Latin from late Greek sarkasmos, from Greek sarkazein ‘tear flesh,’ in late Greek ‘gnash the teeth, speak bitterly’ (from sarx, sark- ‘flesh’ ). b

190 posted on 05/12/2009 11:42:40 AM PDT by itsahoot (Each generation takes to excess, what the previous generation accepted in moderation.)
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To: Truthsearcher

“Do you have a point to make? If so make it instead of asking rhetorical questions.”

I have yet to ask you a rhetorical question. You have yet to answer a real one.


191 posted on 05/12/2009 3:21:08 PM PDT by Grunthor
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To: itsahoot

Sarcasm? Is that what you call sarcasm? The mockery and contempt was easy to read in your posts. Hence the “wrath”, and so on and so forth, but sarcasm?

One has to be witty, clever, jocular. You possess none of these characteristics, unless bitter can be described as sarcasm.


192 posted on 05/12/2009 11:45:14 PM PDT by This Just In
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To: This Just In
One has to be witty, clever, jocular. You possess none of these characteristics, unless bitter can be described as sarcasm.

I don't have a clue how you got on my case, but back of dufus. You and I are not in disagreement unless you want to argue about how many Angels can dance on the head of a pin. In which case I don't go there.

193 posted on 05/13/2009 12:47:21 PM PDT by itsahoot (Each generation takes to excess, what the previous generation accepted in moderation.)
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To: Grunthor

You obviously don’t understand what the term “rhetorical questions” means if you think you haven’t asked one.

If you have something to say, say it. If not stopping wasting my time.


194 posted on 05/13/2009 2:02:20 PM PDT by Truthsearcher
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To: itsahoot

You should have a clue. You’re the one that wanted to engage in “witty” exchange.

Put down the mic and get off the stage if you can dish it out, but can’t take it. You were serving up some lame ducks anyway.


195 posted on 05/13/2009 4:11:54 PM PDT by This Just In
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To: Truthsearcher

“You obviously don’t understand what the term “rhetorical questions” means if you think you haven’t asked one.

If you have something to say, say it. If not stopping wasting my time.”

Do you believe that all gays are atheists?


196 posted on 05/13/2009 4:54:12 PM PDT by Grunthor
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To: This Just In
Put down the mic and get off the stage if you can dish it out, but can’t take it. You were serving up some lame ducks anyway.

Rule # 1 from Sal Alinsky's rules for radicals seems to be your best tool.

197 posted on 05/14/2009 10:12:25 AM PDT by itsahoot (Each generation takes to excess, what the previous generation accepted in moderation.)
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To: itsahoot

Right [/s], which is why we’re having this exchange.

Saul’s rule is that you destroy opposition, not suggest an option. With Communists, there is no exchange. There is a total silencing of the opposition.


198 posted on 05/14/2009 12:33:43 PM PDT by This Just In
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