When I think about cheating in relationships, a wide range of scenarios ranging from the woman who confides her deepest desires and fears to her coworker instead of her husband, to the highly sexed “player” that will bed any woman who spreads her legs for him, come to mind. There’s emotional cheating, physical cheating, psychological cheating, et cetera. Whatever particular form of cheating is involved, cheating is any activity that violates the trust in a relationship by breaking agreed upon rules, whether tacit or explicit. So with all of the negative connotations surrounding the idea of cheating in relationships, is ethical non-monogamy a viable alternative?

“Ethical non-monogamy” is the term used to describe any number of relationship configurations that allow one or more of the relationship partners to fulfill their needs for companionship, intimacy, love and sex with multiple people, with consent and agreement from all parties involved. Examples include:

Polyamory – Many loves. A combination of Greek and Latin terms, ‘Poly’ (Greek) meaning many or several and ‘Amor’ (Latin) meaning love. People who practice polyamory maintain multiple sexual and/or romantic partners simultaneously.

Swinging – Partners in monogamous relationships engaging in recreational sexual activities that do not involve romantic or non-platonic components.

Polysexual – This term also employs the Greek word ‘Poly’ and sexual, to form a word meaning many sexual partners. These relationships are sexually non-monogamous, but not emotionally intimate.

Polyfidelity (polyexclusive or polyfaithful) – Group marriage. This word, invented by the Kerista Commune sometime between the 1960’s and 1970’s, combines ‘Poly’ meaning many, and ‘Fidelity’ meaning faithfulness. Polyfidelitous groups have three or more participants, most often involving more than one man and more than one woman, who consider themselves married to one another. They may live together, share finances, raise children together and share other responsibilities normally associated with traditional marriage. Participants in these marriage groups engage in sex exclusively with other members of the group.

Primary, Secondary and Tertiary relationships – This is a polyamorous relationship structure in which a person has multiple partners who are not equal to one another in terms of interconnection, emotional intensity, or power within the relationship. The primary partner is the lover one spends the most time with, and is generally the person who is engaged in the more mundane aspects of their lover’s life. The secondary partner usually enjoys regularly scheduled meetings with their lover, and they keep in pretty constant contact. The tertiary partner connects with their lover once or twice a year, or just by happenstance.

Open marriage – Is a marriage in which the partners agree that each can engage in extramarital sexual relationships without it being considered infidelity.

Because ethical non-monogamy is based on the premise of honesty and open communication of one’s sexual and emotional needs with their partner or partners, it eliminates, in theory, the betrayal and incidence of lying and sneaking around which plague more traditional relationships when one or both partners become dissatisfied with their perceived level of fulfillment from the union. But emotions are not controlled by agreements entered into between consenting parties. They are instinctive and intuitive, without reasoning or knowledge. So what happens when emotion takes over and jealousy rears its ugly head?

Feelings of jealousy do arise from time to time in non-monogamous relationships, but surprisingly, the incidence of this is relatively low. Part of the basis for non-monogamous relationships is the realization that one partner cannot fulfill all of the sexual and emotional needs of another. Therefore, one’s partner engaging others to satisfy the needs their primary partner cannot meet is usually met with feelings of relief, acceptance and understanding. When irrational jealousy persists, non-monogamous relationships, like monogamous relationships, may end.

So is an ethical non-monogamous relationship a viable alternative to a traditional monogamous relationship if the goal is to enjoy a loving and sexually satisfying relationship while avoiding the limitations of monogamy, and the pain and repercussions of cheating? At a time in American culture when nearly 50% of people in relationships cheat; where women outnumber men by almost 10% and finding a partner is as easy as touching a few buttons on your smartphone; for more and more people the answer is yes. Ethical non-monogamy provides people with options. It allows the freedom to embrace and express evolving ideas and preferences about sex and love, and recognizes that two people who were compatible at any one stage in their lives may not evolve in the same or compatible ways.

While ethical non-monogamy isn’t for everyone, if people can have a relationship where they honor themselves, honor their partner or partners, are committed to open communication, mutual respect, compassion, and trust; I say go for it! Better to have a partner who lets you know what they’re all about up front, than to find out after you’ve invested time and emotions into a lie.

Cheers to connecting on a deeper level!
Ketima

Author's Bio: 

Relationship Coach and author Ketima Whitehall knows a thing or two about the challenges couples face in romantic love relationships. As a victim of infidelity, Ketima has been on the brink of break-up and fought, not only to save the 13 year relationship, but to turn it into the kind of passionate love story so many couples long for.

As a relationship coach, certified through the internationally acclaimed Coach Training Alliance, Ketima puts her experience and training to use helping others build deeper connections and achieve the fulfillment they dream of in their friendships, work, familial and romantic love relationships. Connect with Ketima at ketimawhitehall.com