Is jealousy rational?
Oct. 18th, 2004 08:35 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
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Jealousy, particularly in polyamorous settings and groups, seems to me to be an attribute that no one wants to admit... the closest thing to labelling a "bad" emotion. But it is commonplace, IMO... and possibly rational.
Suppose A has an existing long-term relationship with B, and then B begins developing a new interest in C. Assume that A,B, and C are all reasonably busy people with other career and relationship commitments filling out their respective schedules, so there isn't lots of slack available. Love may be infinite, but time and energy are finite resources. Reasonably, A can expect that B's new energy and time going into developing a relationship (or friendship) with C will come from somewhere -- probably drawn from several places, including the relationship between A--B. Unless A is secretly looking to withdraw from or dump B, A will see this reduced time and energy from B as a loss, with a concomitant gain for C.
At the same time, A loses in other ways. Any emotional instability or drama or other fallout between B and C will ripple outward, and some of it find its way from B--A, increasing A's emotional support burden to B. And if there is sexual contact involved between B and C, then there's additional overheads -- tracking C's sexual history, current test results, risks posed by other partners. And A's net STD risk goes up overall, without A having any additional benefit or fun themselves.
And if A and B are together in a household with merged finances, B's pursuit of C may actually cost A something... plus there are second-order effects like B's vacation time being used with C and then not available for the annual holiday with A, etc.
So, in a new relationship of friendship between B and C... they each gain a new experience with each other, a new connection, shared likes and activities, NRE, perhaps ongoing love and support from each other.
But, rationally, what's in it for A? A would seem to be a identifiable loser from the new connection between B--C, therefore jealousy would be a rational response on A's part. And A would be justified in not supporting the B--C connection.
A's network would see one of its linkages (between A--B) reduced in energy and strength, especially for the first year or so during NRE, if that happens. The only gains that I can see are if C brings something positive to A's network... making B happier or relieving A of the burden of going clothes-shopping with B, say. Or if adding C adds resources (season tickets? social connections? different viewpoints?) to the local area network. Or perhaps, given a poly network, if C develops some connection to A as well.
So... I'm open to being convinced otherwise, but I could see jealousy as a frequent-but-rational response. For poly people, I view it as a kind of dues-paying... gritting one's teeth and letting one's partners go, in exchange for the right to do likewise if one so chose. A given net loss, balanced by one's own possible future net gains in new relationships and friendships.
Someone's willingness to try poly might then balance on the magnitude of the loss(es) vs. that person's probability of finding other connections themselves. Not that there isn't lots of cause for jealousy in the mainstream -- looks at daytime TV -- but with more-frequent, ongoing connections, I think that poly is particularly jealousy-provoking, potentially. Hence the socialized "jealousy is bad" response in poly circles...
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Date: 2004-10-18 03:48 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2004-10-18 03:52 pm (UTC)Please think about this before you immediately respond with an argument. If I'm going to get into this with you, I want to see some evidence that your statment of "I'm open to being convinced otherwise" is accurate.
-J
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Date: 2004-10-18 03:57 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2004-10-18 03:58 pm (UTC)If I'm A, then jealousy would be not wanting C to have B. Generally, if I feel anything, it's more envy, meaning I want to be part of the event/plan/time, but not that I don't want B to have it.
But that's true of any outside activity that doesn't include me, not just poly. What if B decides to take up swing dancing? Or RPGs? Or any activity I'm not part of? There's a balance in any relationship, of activities that include both partners, and activities that include only one. Why should it be any different in how time, money, etc. are considered?
Does that make sense? I'm kind of doing a brain dump rather than thinking it completely out.
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Date: 2004-10-18 04:03 pm (UTC)And A's net STD risk goes up overall, without A having any additional benefit or fun themselves.
[...]
But, rationally, what's in it for A?
I have additional benefit and fun when my partners have new partners:
Not saying it's this way for you, just that in my life, new loves for my partners are generally a good thing.
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Date: 2004-10-18 04:13 pm (UTC)To be honest, it was hard for me to get past that, as it is, from the outset, fallacious. Either you've read or heard me say I get jealous sometimes, or you haven't been paying attention. I can promise you
Suppose A has an existing long-term relationship with B, and then B begins developing a new interest in C. Assume that A,B, and C are all reasonably busy people with other career and relationship commitments filling out their respective schedules, so there isn't lots of slack available. Love may be infinite, but time and energy are finite resources. Reasonably, A can expect that B's new energy and time going into developing a relationship (or friendship) with C will come from somewhere -- probably drawn from several places, including the relationship between A--B. Unless A is secretly looking to withdraw from or dump B, A will see this reduced time and energy from B as a loss, with a concomitant gain for C.
This makes sense to me only if A and B are at the minimal overlap of their needs for each other's time and energy. Imagine if I wanted to hang out with, say,
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Date: 2004-10-18 04:42 pm (UTC)I'm assuming that the workshop isn't about how squash feelings of jealousy, but rather about how to work through them. Teeth-gritting, while a way to respond to feelings, is not the only option.
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From:Jealousy...
Date: 2004-10-18 05:55 pm (UTC)Speaking from personal experience, having been A, the NRE of B and C, can cause both compersion and jealousy at the same time.
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Date: 2004-10-18 11:31 pm (UTC)And to be technically correct, what we are holding tonight is not a "workshop," but a discussion group. The workshop is what we get AFTER we hold the discussion group. :^)
Looking forward to seeing you and others tonight!
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From:And...
From:Also, regarding your post subject:
Date: 2004-10-25 05:41 pm (UTC)If you like being in pain, more power to you, but if you're really trying to figure out why you feel the way you feel so you can make it stop feeling that way, you may have to go beyond rationality, because feelings are inherently irrational and have to be addressed in ways beyond logic.