drwex: (Whorfin)
[personal profile] drwex
I am appalled. I probably shouldn't be. It's the Web, it's America. It's clearly commonplace. But... ugh.

I was trying to explain the difference between "discreet" and "discrete" to someone and went to Google for "discreet" to get a definition. What I got was narsty.

"Extramarital Affairs - Discreet Affairs - Discreet Relationships" - www.discreetadventures.com
"Discreet Housewife Dating" - www.lonelycheatingwives.com
"Affairs Made Simple" - AffairMatch.com
"Married Dating" - MarriedSecrets.com
"Married Dating Personals" - www.Desperate-Wife.com
"Lonely Housewives" - www.Married-Woman-Personals.com
"Extramarital Dating" - www.discreetadventures.com

And that's just on the first page.

I'm not exactly surprised - yes, I realize that there's a godawful lot of cheating going on. I am a bit taken aback by the brazen nature of the phenomenon. I suppose that ought not to surprise me, either. It's just more confirmation that I Am Not One Of Them.

Date: 2007-08-29 12:20 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] quezz.livejournal.com
I find it odd that so many of you are criticizing these websites. Is it because they seem to adhere, in an odd way to "traditional values," and thus are a perversion of them, or is it because there's only one type of poly out there in your minds?

Many, if not most of you, are polyamorous. You're doing the same thing, just under different perceived rules. If you are married, and you choose, with or without your partner's consent, to have another relationship. you are having extramarital affairs. The difference is not that discrete, if I may call upon the theme of this discussion.

We don't know if some of the people who utilize these websites are doing so with permission; we don't know if some of them are simply engaging in web-fantasy, and I personally am not sure if any of this is more wrong than choosing polyamory forms, or perhaps engaging in BDSM fantasy (something that many of you also do.)

I also don't know where to draw the line in terms of extramartial affairs/relationship/"secondaries". When is it cheating for poly people? When one leaves their primary for their secondary? When one doesn't follow a contract, if it's written up? If you put it on the Web, is it icky then? If you pair with the "wrong type of person?"

This whole thread looks dangerously close to stones in glass houses. I personally didn't engage in anything extramartial, though I thought about it a couple of times, and very openly. I decided that extramarital of any kind was not for me. I don't judge anyone who has chosen extramarital relationships quite so quickly anymore, becaue I just don't know enough about the motivations people have to have them -- I don't have the desire, and I personally hope I never do.

Date: 2007-08-29 03:30 pm (UTC)
dpolicar: (Default)
From: [personal profile] dpolicar
Hm.
That's a fair point, actually.

To be clear... I think everyone above is assuming that the "discretion" being advertised is that your spouse won't know. In that context, I flat-out disagree with you... the difference between lying to your spouse and not lying to your spouse is fundamental, not just "dressing".

But one could adopt the reading that what is meant is "the neighbors won't find out." Under that reading, I'm more inclined to agree with you.

My intuition as a member of this society is that the former is clearly what's meant, but I'm hardly infallible.

Incidentally, if it matters for any reason, I'm unmarried and have been in a monogamous relationship for the last 15 years.

Date: 2007-08-29 04:09 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] quezz.livejournal.com
I've seen polyamorous couples be discreet (the neighbors/kids/whatever don't need to know) and I've also seen polyamorous couples break the rules they set for themselves, with one or both partners choosing discretion because they are lying to their partners or not being entirely open about their activities. I find this just as reprehensible as any "traditional" extramarital affair. It is perhaps even more reprehensible to me because the poly community is so insistent about their openess and applying their rules that they still break in such situations.

My point is if you're breaking the rules, you're breaking the rules. Since I don't know what the "rules" are in any given case, I won't judge until it's public that rules were broken. These websites might suggest rule-breaking, but I still don't know enough to say that it is rulebreaking.

Date: 2007-08-29 04:46 pm (UTC)
dpolicar: (Default)
From: [personal profile] dpolicar
I agree with you that it's not guaranteed that the people who go to these sites are breaking (or contemplating breaking, or reading about breaking) the rules of their marriage, whatever those rules may be.

Though, again, I would say that's the way to bet, and it's not unreasonable to make that inference. That's not to say that you're under any obligation to have any opinion at all on the matter, but it is to say that I'm not sure your tone here is entirely justified.

The fact that some people in poly relationships break the rules of those relationships seems somewhat irrelevant to me, though I certainly agree it's true.

Date: 2007-08-31 04:34 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] harlequinaide.livejournal.com
Since you didn't do the research, I went and checked the sites out. Unsurprisingly, they're not actually dating sites; they're thinly veiled porn. They don't consist of "lovelycheatingwives," so much as older women paid to set up profiles to make themselves seem like lonely, cheating wives, for the edification of the primarily male porn audience (and the primarily young male audience that goes for "Cougars" as replacements for their mothers; older men tend not to look for women of the stripe advertised on these sites, because they're too busy chasing after their own lost youth).

This fits with what I know about the internet, and about the social psychology of personal ads. To whit: women don't use them. Or, more specifically, women don't tend respond to male ads. In studies of personal ads, male respondents are significantly more common, by (if I remember correctly) a ratio larger than 10:1. I wouldn't be surprised to find that the "housewives" on these sites are actually women and men working in a phone-bank like atmosphere: the chat-room work tends to be handled by male and new employees, and women graduate to the phones, eventually. They are never really willing to meet their "paramours," but they spend a lot of time having cybersex, for which the men pay the website a certain fee (and clearly, the women don't, because they're employees, and, as I said, women tend not to answer these kinds of ads).

Do I what? Know people who work in a phone bank like that? Why yes, yes I do.

As to your other comment, which, regardless of intention is a thinly veiled insult, I might suggest that "honesty within the terms of the relationship" is the difference. If the terms of my relationship are such that having netsex with another woman is against the rules (spoken or unspoken), then that's cheating. If the rules allow for that then, by dint of the definition of the word "cheating," it's not. For further definitions of "cheating," I recommend the various on-line dictionaries. Likewise, if my relationship allows extra-marital sex, but not, say, extra-marital movie-going, and I go to the movies with a hot bi babe, that's cheating, too. Because it's breaking the rules, regardless of my motivations.

The shorthand is usually "lying about it," versus "not lying about it." If you feel the need to lie about the sex you just had, or the deep emotional conversation, or the fourth beer with your friends, then it's probably cheating. A poly relationship is only a superior structure in that it discourages lying by permitting the most frequently lied about behaviors. I believe that [livejournal.com profile] drwex's issue, here, is that mainstream society (whatever that is, assuming that it exists) disdains the more honest (by definition) lifestyle in favor of the more discrete one.

It is a fact that the majority of relationships in America are monogamous by default. According to the studies that I've read, a majority of people (three-quarters, or thereabouts) consider netsex cheating. I couldn't say whether or not the people who frequent those sites are in relationships, or are just lonely bastards being taken advantage of, but if they are in relationships then statistically, they're probably cheating.

Profile

drwex: (Default)
drwex

July 2021

S M T W T F S
    123
45678910
11121314151617
1819 2021222324
25262728293031

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jan. 1st, 2026 03:00 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios