Everybody Does It | It wasn’t so long ago that we knew how to define our relationship status as something other than single, in a relationship, in an open relationship, engaged, married, or “it’s complicated.” We used to, and still do before we come to one of the aforementioned ‘definitive’ conclusions, use all manner of descriptions to label what we are so hesitant to label. In college, when these statuses emerged as the common denominator for defining our love lives, some interesting trends emerged. Many of us were proudly single, a few were in relationships, with or without the other party named, no one was married (even if their status stated otherwise). Complicated relationships were rarely labeled as such, and “it’s complicated” was used for comedic effect. The rarest status of all was the open relationship.
So imagine my surprise recently when the boy I invited over for wine and conversation confessed that his lack of an online relationship status was that he was in a true blue open relationship. It didn’t take me long to empathize that this would be an awkward situation to publicize.
At a time when gay marriage is now legal in five states and New York is teetering on the edge of becoming the sixth, it seems that gay monogamy and commitment is more in our face than ever. Many would say, THANK GOD. For decades the rest of society assumed that we were promiscuous whores who spent our evenings in bathhouses and public parks exchanging sex, drugs, and makeup tips. Of course we have the ongoing AIDS crisis to remind us that promiscuity doesn’t pay, but it is also our fervent desire to assimilate and be viewed as a normal part of society that has us rushing to the altar and subsequently, the opposite sides of our Queen-sized beds.
Homosexuals have a proud tradition of blurring relationship lines and negotiating sexual boundaries. With divorce rates steady at 50% there have been numerous articles published recently chronicling heterosexual couples who have experimented with straying spouses for the sake of their union. In these studies, gay couples are cited as trendsetters for these types of open relationships. In the absence of state or church-defined unions, we created our own rules of acceptablity in the context of our partnerships and have benefited by reaping the fruits of these understandings. Gay relationships that allowed for partners to indulge with others from time to time were more likely to stand the test of time.
Though it’s incredible that I know gay couples who will be able to truthfully change their status to married in the coming months, I question whether these traditional models are a step forward. We should have the right to marry, but must we exercise it? And if we do enter into these state-sanctioned unions will we continue to blur the lines, or will the legal ramifications be a deterrent?
I feel privileged to live at a time when all the Facebook relationship statuses will become reality, but I feel nervous that perhaps we are losing part of our identity in the process. The fag– hag-marriages and open relationships seem fewer and fewer and boys are even changing their last names online (not in jest, but for real).
It’s refreshing to think that there are still gay men who think that an open relationship, with every bit of adoration and commitment of a partnership, is the most honest way to express the way the feel about each other. It’s not just about sex, but allowing each other the freedom to explore. Then again, many don’t care to list this online, and that absence speaks louder than words. Maybe it’s time I add single to my profile again, lest anyone think I’m taken. But in New York especially, would it be more accurate if we all admitted “it’s complicated?” Because it certainly is.
Related posts:
- Steve Hayhurst wants your L.T.R. to be legally recognized–even if he’s not in one There’s a reason why they don’t give out roses @ Splash at 3:00am. In the wam-bam, thank-you-man culture of gay bars and clubs, Valentine’s Day...
- Pride is for Love(rs) | Everybody Does It The one time we all want to be single is summer time, when beach visits, interns, and general debauchery abounds. But the one thing we...
DivingWading Into Relationships EVERYBODY DOES IT // No matter how old we get there are some habits from our childhood that are hard to break. Though I broke...- My dangerous relationship with Facebook Right after I check my email every morning, I check my Facebook profile. If there’s nothing new — No events, no updates, no potentially criminal...
- Public Displays of Gayness Everybody Does It | I had a threesome in a hot tub when I was 22. It was spring break, and I was in Palm...
Tags: Fourgy, Open Relationship, Orgy, Polyamory, Threesome, Threeway
-
Nice write-up. I was discussing this topic with a friend recently. He insisted that if gays could marry, gay culture would essentially disappear. I totally disagree. I mean, gays have the right/ability/etc. to live in the suburban paradises of Westchester and Long Island. Many do, but I think it’s safe to say that most don’t. And I think marriage will follow that same pattern: those who want to choose that lifestyle will, and those who don’t will not.
-
that’s wonderful!
spread the aids!… I mean, spread the love! -
bullshit, blair. open relationships are always disasterous. “freedom to explore” comes before marriage, period, and anyway should be restricted to only when your status is “single.” anything else is not exploring, it’s cheating. …and if your partner knows and approves, then don’t fool yourself: you’re single.
-
First, great blog. Now I have another reason to procrastinate.
I agree with John. The “freedom to explore” usually ends with the discovery of a brand new love interest. I have known countless people in open relationships and I see one guy who refuses to stop cheating and another guy just going along with the game because he doesn’t want to lose the guy. Many times an open relationship draws out a relationship that should have ended long ago. I realized that’s why it is called cheating, whether it is an agreement or not.
Personally, I gave up cheating (sanctioned or otherwise) a few years ago. Guess what, I was able to exit relationships that were just not fulfilling any longer.
What I am saying is only my experience. If it go early works for someone, I say more power to you.
-
There are disastrous polygamous relationships, disasterous open relationships and diasterous monogamous relationships. There are also loving, honest, deeply enriching versions of all three. This article suggests a kind of Team Gay (open relationships) vs. Team Straight (monogamous relationships) but the fact is the things that make all relationships work – honesty, trust, openness and communication – are the same things that, in their absence, make all relationships fail. When you have these things in place, the type of relationship is mere personal preference. I happen to prefer monogamy. That doesn’t make me any less gay and I find the notion completely absurd that this makes me a naive sell-out to oppressive heternormative ideals.
-
My partner and I are now married and continue to be in an open relationship. Our premise is honesty – both agreeing that we will want, and act on, having sex with other men during our lives. We have been together six years and we have had this philosophy from the first day. We joke sometimes that we are ‘two sluts in love.’ We usually try to find a third to have sex with us together. These are often our most satisfying sexual adventures and the men that are easiest to become friends with when the sexual heat cools. The men we see individually can be more of a tricky situation. This is where jealousy can arise, secretiveness, and yes, lying. It takes quite a bit of effort to keep the communication open. The hallmark no-no is to have a fling with a guy, then bring him around as a ‘friend’ later without telling the other the truth of the circumstances. The road can be rocky. Most impasses are cleared with an honest conversation with very candid self analysis of true feelings. I’d like to be involved in a blog with other gay couples in open relationships to process issues and offer support and advice, and to seek the same from others.
-
As long as open relationships are part of gay culture, society will never vote in gay marriage. They see gay men as perverts, incapable of monogamy. Marriage is between two people, not Tom, Dick and Harry. If you need other guys to spice up your relationship then your relationship isn’t very good to begin with. Part of the problem is sex addiction among gay men. It’s much more common for them than straight men. It also explains why gay men have high rates of HIV and STD’s. It’s a sad situation.
I think it’s funny when people say “it’s not about sex”. It’s not? Then what’s it about? You’re having sex with other guy’s dicks. My partner and I have sex with each other and it never gets boring. We have male friends who are just friends. We don’t have sex with them. Never even saw their dicks.
I’ve seen too many open relationship fail when one of the guys falls for the hookup. And as someone who working in the medical profession, I’ve also seen too many open relationships become victims of STD’s.
-
You’re right. Straight people do have open marriages but it’s far more common among gay men. A straight guy is happy when he gets one woman who loves regular sex. But women are more into sex when the love goes with it. It’s easy for a gay man to get sex and now with the internet you can request it and get it the same day.
Gay men often fall for the sex before the love and then there’s not much left to fall back on. And often when they are in love and consider it a relationship for some reason they get bored with the sex. When they were single they could have sex with 5 different guys in a week, and now they’re “stuck” with just one penis.
Sex addiction is far easier for a gay man than a straight man. A gay sex addict can get it for free with all the internet hookup sites. A straight sex addict is usually paying for it, unless he’s a rock star or movie star.
-
I don’t understand it. I can only hope the new generation of gay men will be socialized to believe that hooking up is inappropriate. How many more have to get HIV or die of AIDS?
Next year, 2011, will be the 30th anniversary(hate to even call it that) of the beginning of the AIDS crisis. There were isolated cases of it prior to 1981, but that’s when it really starting spreading like wildfire in the gay community. Here we are in 2010 and the promiscuity continues.
“…MSM constitute more than half of all new cases of HIV and are the group in which the number of new cases each continues to slowly increase. What’s new today is that the CDC has calculated *rates* of HIV/AIDS prevalence among MSM, not just raw numbers…the CDC estimates that there were 692.2 new HIV cases in 2007 per 100,000 MSM. Having a rate as well as the raw numbers allows comparisons for the first time to other population groups at risk, such as women and heterosexual men.”
AIDS 50 Times Higher In Gay/Bi-Men Than Other Groups

12 comments
Comments feed for this article
Trackback link: http://www.homo-neurotic.com/2009/05/18/open-relationships-everybody-does-it/trackback/