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d-29670House OversightOther

Personal blog reflection on polyamory and relationship dynamics

The passage is a personal narrative about relationship preferences with no mention of influential public figures, institutions, financial transactions, or misconduct. It offers no actionable investiga Author discusses evolving views on monogamy vs polyamory. Mentions a personal relationship with someone referred to as "Mr. Inferno". References feminist concepts like "the fog of abuse".

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #018643
Pages
1
Persons
0
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The passage is a personal narrative about relationship preferences with no mention of influential public figures, institutions, financial transactions, or misconduct. It offers no actionable investiga Author discusses evolving views on monogamy vs polyamory. Mentions a personal relationship with someone referred to as "Mr. Inferno". References feminist concepts like "the fog of abuse".

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personal-blogrelationshipspolyamoryhouse-oversight

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http://clarissethorn.com/blog/2012/05/01/relationship-tools-monogamy-polyamory- competition-and-jealousy/ EVOLUTION: [storytime] You Don't Always Know What You're Thinking I wrote this in late 2010. I have mixed feelings about it now. I think I made important points, but I will also say this: if you don't have a clue what's going on in your head and don't even know where to start, then that can be a bad sign. I think that when people are unhappy, or dealing with situations that are more than they can handle, they often settle into a kind of mental "fog" so they don't have to think about it. (The feminist writer Autumn Whitefield-Madrano has a great article describing how this happens in abusive relationships; she calls it "the fog of abuse.") Yet at the same time, I do believe that we should consciously make space in ourselves for new feelings to emerge, especially when we're pushing our limits. Self-awareness must include allowing new feelings to emerge at their own pace. te ok ok You Don't Always Know What You're Thinking In May 2010, I wrote a post called "Am J Evolving Away From Monogamy?" in which I talked about my urge towards polyamory, and my confusion about that urge. I talked about my previous dislike for polyamory, and I talked about how new it is for me to feel like I want to be polyamorous. I talked quite a lot, really, but a week later, I started feeling like I hadn't covered everything... or like I just wasn't correct about some things I'd written. But how could I be incorrect? I was, after all, writing about myself and my own feeings. How could I be wrong about what I myself was thinking? I guess I realized quickly that I'd claimed things about my past self that weren't quite true. That didn't acknowledge my own complexity. For example, I wrote that although I've toyed with polyamory in the past, my most recent poly leanings came up only because I got my heart broken by a gentleman who I sometimes refer to as Mr. Inferno. I theorized that perhaps I'm just scared of commitment. While it is certainly true that I'm not big on commitment these days, I later recalled that actually -- at the beginning of my relationship with Mr. Inferno, I had some doubts about being monogamous. I was monogamous because he was very sure that was what he wanted, but I remember a point when I thought about trying to negotiate something different. Polyamorous people are stereotyped as being commitment-phobic. I know all about that stereotype -- in fact, I have angrily defended my poly friends from it for years! (Even when I was very fiercely monogamous, I got so mad when people who don't know

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URLhttp://clarissethorn.com/blog/2012/05/01/relationship-tools-monogamy-polyamory

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