The Transactional Model of Relationships
Polyamorous people tend to think about relationships a lot. I'm no exception. What I want to talk about today is the transactional model of relationships.
A transactional relationship is a relationship where both (or all) parties are in it for themselves, and where partners do things for each other with the expectation of reciprocation. Almost all relationships start here. People tend to date a person because of what they get out of it. Doing otherwise would actually be kind of weird. Genuine concern for a partner's well-being (some might call it "love") is something that generally grows as the relationship progresses. But some relationships never get past the transactional stage. I suspect that many, if not the majority, of relationships never do. I've fallen victim to this myself. There are times when I've bought something for Gina, or done the dishes, or done her some other sort of favor, and expected something in return. But there's a deeper foundation that some relationships reach, where people do things for each other just to make the other person happy for altruistic* reasons. I truly believe that some relationships transcend selfishness, and reach a place where both partners are happy in large part because the other partner is happy.
Some poly relationships work on the transactional model. You see this is relationships which involve a lot of rules (or ridiculous relationship agreements). The idea is that "I let my partner see other people, and in return, I'm allowed to see other people as well." Side note: this is why I dislike the term "negotiation" in a relationship context. It's adopting the language of business transactions.
This doesn't work with the kind of polyamory I practice. As I've said before, polyamory isn't all about you. My preferred style of polyamory is something people do for their partners, not for themselves. It's based on a mutual desire not to deny each other the things that we each want. The transactional model doesn't work there. If you try to do poly for yourself, you start worrying about things like who has more partners, counting date nights, money spent on partners, and keeping a running tally of who is benefiting more from the arrangement. You start worrying if things are "fair." You start getting resentful if you feel like your partner is getting more goodies than you.
Granted, it's a spectrum, and not a binary. Some relationships are entirely transactional, and some are entirely altruistic, but most fall somewhere in between. I think that the best relationships, or at least the ones that appeal to me, are much closer to the altruistic side of the spectrum than the transactional one.
What do you think? Can a transactional relationship be fulfilling? Are all relationships really transactional, and we just fool ourselves into thinking otherwise? Discuss in the comments. __________________________
* I don't actually believe in pure altruism, but that's a discussion for another time. What I'm talking about if functional altruism