murray wrote:Lola,
I'm not judging your preference. I just enjoy the intellectual give-and-take. No offense intended. I often find that when I have to defend an opinion or preference, the mental exercise of doing so clarifies and confirms why I have that opinion or preference in the first place.
Cheers.
My opinion is that it is better that prostitution exists if it is going to reduce rape - there must be some instances where a man might be a would-be rapist but instead is able to let it out by seeing a prostitute.
It is also possibly better that a man visits a prostitute rather than attempting to "pick up" a random girl at a club for one-night of sexual pleasure
I do think that women should learn not to associate kink with prostitution. A lot of women, including my wife, have accused me of treating them like a prostitute if I ask them to act or dress in a kinky way. I think they are misguided by that opinion. Fortunately my wife is generally quite understanding as to my kinky nature and goes out to satisfy it.
Lola wrote:mostirreverent wrote:I was wondering if having more women in a given relationship would give me more opportunities for sex.
Depends on what the relationship is based on.
mostirreverent wrote:Lola wrote:mostirreverent wrote:I was wondering if having more women in a given relationship would give me more opportunities for sex.
Depends on what the relationship is based on.
I would assume the relationship would be based on the same tenants as a F/M one. Only the availability to have sex with one woman when the other is not so inclined might come from a M/F/F one. There is not a presumption of a relationship based solely on sex in my question. I asked about the sexual nature of such a relationship since I never seem to get enough.
mostirreverent wrote:I did not say 100% F***. If it is say 50love-50fuck, then there is more F*** with two women, or chances for. Sure, you could have 50/50 with one and 100/0 with the other, but that seems odd from a normal female perspective, as most women want some sex. Personally, I can’t see being attracted to an asexual female since that quality in itself would undermine other parts of her personality. I don’t envision such a woman being that fun, funny, or having a great smile. Then she is just a roommate, which is fine, but would not be a true M/F/F relationship as I think we both mean here. I’m not even sure she would make a great roommate…
mostirreverent wrote:I guess I would define a romantic relationship as one that would necessarily involve some type of sex. The difference between a sexless relationship and a friendship would be what, the level of caring? How is it different from that with a family member?
''There are, of course, as many different varieties of polyamory as there are people; there's no one right way to create a polyamorous relationship, But being polyamorous does not give you license to make like a bunny in heat.” These seem at odds with one another. The first sounds like it is limiting variety in those types of relationships. No one is saying just sex.
On some level, the lower incidence of sex makes sense.
And to underscore, I did not mean to infer that these relationships were not full and devoid of romance and caring. I never said just sex, but that was my main interest in terms of the dynamics which you have answered.
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