Love is abundant, and every relationship is unique
Relationship anarchy questions the idea that love is a
limited resource that can only be real if restricted to a couple. You
have capacity to love more than one person, and one relationship and the
love felt for that person does not diminish love felt for another.
Don’t rank and compare people and relationships - cherish the individual
and your connection to them. One person in your life does not need to
be named primary for the relationship to be real. Each relationship is
independent, and a relationship between autonomous individuals.
Love and respect instead of entitlement
Deciding to not base a relationship on a foundation of
entitlement is about respecting others’ independence and
self-determination. Your feelings for a person or your history together
does not make you entitled to command and control a partner to comply
with what is considered normal to do in a relationship. Explore how you
can engage without stepping over boundaries and personal beliefs. Rather
than looking for compromises in every situation, let loved ones choose
paths that keep their integrity intact, without letting this mean a
crisis for the relationship. Staying away from entitlement and demands
is the only way to be sure that you are in a relationship that is truly
mutual. Love is not more “real” when people compromise for each other
because it’s part of what’s expected.
Find your core set of relationship values
How do you wish to be treated by others? What are your
basic boundaries and expectations on all relationships? What kind of
people would you like to spend your life with, and how would you like
your relationships to work? Find your core set of values and use it for
all relationships. Don’t make special rules and exceptions as a way to
show people you love them “for real”.
Heterosexism is rampant and out there, but don’t let fear lead you
Remember that there is a very powerful normative system in
play that dictates what real love is, and how people should live. Many
will question you and the validity of your relationships when you don’t
follow these norms. Work with the people you love to find escapes and
tricks to counter the worst of the problematic norms. Find positive
counter spells and don’t let fear drive your relationships.
Build for the lovely unexpected
Being free to be spontaneous - to express oneself without
fear of punishments or a sense of burdened “shoulds” - is what gives
life to relationships based on relationship anarchy. Organize based on a
wish to meet and explore each other - not on duties and demands and
disappointment when they are not met.
Fake it til’ you make it
Sometimes it can feel like you need to be some complete
super human to handle all the norm breaking involved in choosing
relationships that don’t map to the norm. A great trick is the “fake it
til’ you make it” strategy - when you are feeling strong and inspired,
think about how you would like to see yourself act. Transform that into
some simple guidelines, and stick to them when things are rough. Talk to
and seek support from others who challenge norms, and never reproach
yourself when the norm pressure gets you into behaviour you didn’t wish
for.
Trust is better
Choosing to assume that your partner does not wish you
harm leads you down a much more positive path than a distrustful
approach where you need to be constantly validated by the other person
to trust that they are there with you in the relationship. Sometimes
people have so much going on inside themselves that there’s just no
energy left to reach out and care for others. Create the kind of
relationship where withdrawing is both supported and quickly forgiven,
and give people lots of chances to talk, explain, see you and be
responsible in the relationship. Remember your core values and to take
care of yourself though!
Change through communication
For most human activities, there is some form of norm in
place for how it is supposed to work. If you want to deviate from this
pattern, you need to communicate - otherwise things tend to end up just
following the norm, as others behave according to it. Communication and
joint actions for change is the only way to break away. Radical
relationships must have conversation and communication at the heart -
not as a state of emergency only brought out to solve “problems”.
Communicate in a context of trust. We are so used to people never really
saying what they think and feel - that we have to read between the
lines and extrapolate to find what they really mean. But such
interpretations can only build on previous experiences - usually based
on the norms you want to escape. Ask each other about stuff, and be
explicit!
Customize your commitments
Life would not have much structure or meaning without
joining together with other people to achieve things - constructing a
life together, raising children, owning a house or growing together
through thick and thin. Such endeavors usually need lots of trust and
commitment between people to work. Relationship anarchy is not about
never committing to anything - it’s about designing your own commitments
with the people around you, and freeing them from norms dictating that
certain types of commitments are a requirement for love to be real, or
that some commitments like raising children or moving in together have
to be driven by certain kinds of feelings. Start from scratch and be
explicit about what kind of commitments you want to make with other
people!
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This
is a new translation/adaptation to English of a relationship anarchy
pamphlet by me, Andie Nordgren, published in Swedish as “Relationsanarki
i 8 punkter” by Interacting Arts in 2006. More in Swedish on http://www.andie.se - a website I ran actively between 2004 and 2008, where relationship anarchy was defined and explored by myself and others.
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