11/10/2024 | Press release | Archived content
Growing up in the modern Western world leaves most of us thinking humans are meant to find their match and hold on for dear life until the bitter end, but history has something else to say about that.
Historically, most non-monogamy has been in the polygamous context of a man with many wives, but that's more than enough evidence to show humans have never actually been married to monogamy. Hell, even the Bible regales us with some of history's sluttiest men, from Genesis on down to the town trollop Solomon and his 700 wives - all purportedly sanctioned by God themself.
As for throuples, the concept certainly predates our recent social awareness - because the queers have always been ahead of our time, obvs.
The gay liberation movement in the 1960s laid much of the groundwork for our modern approach to non-normative relationships. Now, thanks to growing visibility in the media, it seems like everybody and their mama is curious about breaking out of the confines of their monogamous relationships.
Whoever said three's a crowd clearly didn't learn that the triangle is the strongest shape - and they were probably straight, bless their heart.
What are they? How do they work? And who's doing it?
The partners in a throuple might be bisexual, pansexual, gay, queer, or otherwise, and any beautiful combination of genders you can imagine. Gender and sexuality don't limit poly relationships, so any three-person relationship that is consensual, balanced, and committed qualifies as a throuple.
Like Neapolitan ice cream, throuples come in various flavors. Here are some essential terms to help you understand them:
Mainstream society has a less-than-flattering opinion of poly practitioners, feeding close-minded views to even the most forward-thinking individuals. Let's dispel some popular myths.
If you're considering a triad, don't let stereotypes get you down. Humans and our relationships come in all shapes, sizes, and combinations. If you're doing life in a way that works for you, then you're doing it right.
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They say three is a magic number, and these benefits make us inclined to agree:
Joining a throuple isn't all sunshine and rainbows. Here are ways they can make your life more complicated:
Interested in entering a trinity of affinity? Here are some tips to make a triad work for you:
Picture us with a megaphone up against your ear so these words rattle your brain and infuse into your DNA. Communication (underline, bold, exclamation point!!) is the only thing that can make a throuple work. Communication is actually the only thing that can make any relationship work.
Schedule time for all of you to check in with each other. Open, honest, consistent, and compassionate communication is the absolute baseline for a healthy polyamorous relationship. Everything else falls apart without it.
Set your boundaries, respect everyone else's, and check your expectations if they're unreasonable. Figure out your logistics. Do all three of you sleep together, apart, or rotate through different combinations? We recommend three separate blankets for temperature regulation if you're smooshed together in one bed.
Do you all go out together for date night? Maybe sometimes it's all three of you, and sometimes two of you do dinner so the other person can have some healthy alone time.
Stay ahead of conflicts as best you can. If you wonder, worry, or feel jealous, ask your partners about it. If any part of the triad dynamic isn't working for you, bring it up immediately. If one of your partners raises an issue, meet them with curiosity and care instead of judgment or defensiveness.
Don't hesitate to seek professional guidance and counseling either pre-emptively or as needed. More and more therapists specialize in LGBTQ and alternative relationship structures every day.
Don't forget to celebrate your individual and collective milestones. Your partners are your community, and you should lift each other up in support and celebration as often as you can.
Communication, consent, and commitment are the foundational building blocks of any throuple relationship. Beyond that, you're free to determine how you approach your relationship. You're already throwing convention out the window, so there's no need to follow a prescribed model or fit your relationship into something normative.
And whether the throuple lasts forever or not, there really is no such thing as a "failed" relationship. People come and go from each other's lives; if you learned, grew, and loved in your time together, the end of a relationship can't take any of that away from you.
If you're looking for other throuple-curious cuties, Grindr is the place to find them. Download the Grindr app now and get started!