Poly Theory Manifesto
Poly Theory Manifesto
Poly Theory Manifesto
associate
performance
with
theatre,
music
or
dance,
but
at
a
basic
level,
the
word
perform
just
means
to
do
something,
and
performance
means
a
doing.
For
example,
think
of
the
performance
of
a
high-
performance
vehicle.
In
that
sense,
performance
refers
to
the
effectiveness
and
efficiency
of
the
car.
High-performance
simply
means
it
does
what
is
expected
of
it
very
well.
In
Performance
Studies
we
are
always
inquiring
not
about
what
something
IS
but
what
it
DOES.
Not
its
innate
nature
but
rather
how
it
performs
or
functions.
One
of
the
foundational
principle
of
Performance
Studies
is
that
99%
of
what
we
do
in
daily
life
is
not
completely
spontaneous
original
action,
but
rather,
is
a
repetition
with
a
difference
of
something
that
weve
seen
before.
As
we
move
through
life
performing
these
repeated
doings
of
identity
(our
gender,
culture,
community,
profession,
education,
etc)
we
affect
and
are
affected
by
each
other.
Just
like
audience
members
witness
and
incorporate
what
they
see
onstage
or
screen,
so
too
does
witnessing
and
incorporating
interpersonal
performances
have
the
power
to
change
us.
While
to
some
the
notion
of
performing
can
seem
fake,
in
Performance
Studies
we
think
of
performance
as
a
powerful
way
to
enact
change.
By
doing
our
identity
in
certain
ways,
we
build
communities
and
share
information
with
each
other.
Innovations
in
how
we
do
things
shift
daily
performances
of
identity,
introducing
differences
into
the
shared
behavior
pool
just
as
individual
gene
mutations
introduce
variations
into
DNA.
My
academic
approach
to
talking
about
non-traditional
relationships
involves
the
question
of
what
they
do
and
what
they
have
the
potential
to
do
within
culture.
Im
referring
specifically
to
contemporary
Western
culture,
i.e.
Globalized/(Post)
Industrial
Commodity/Consumer/Corporate
Capitalism
(in
academia
we
call
this
neoliberalism).
This
current
paradigm
circumscribes
most
of
our
personal
choices
whether
we
like
it
or
not.
Im
concerned
about
the
effects
of
this
current
ideological
paradigm
on
the
health
and
well-
being
of
the
planet
and
its
inhabitants.
While
the
goal
of
academia
is
to
remain
dispassionate
and
non-prescriptive,
I
remain
passionate
that
life
on
this
planet
is
beautiful
and
should
continue
(hopefully
thats
the
last
should
Ill
say
in
this
paper).
I
embark
upon
this
academic
inquiry
because
I
believe
the
knowledge
generated
through
doing
poly
has
the
potential
to
disrupt
widespread
habits
of
thought
and
action
common
to
contemporary
culture.
In
addition
to
throwing
a
sabot
into
the
machine
of
globalized
capitalism,
I
also
see
poly
theory
(as
Im
somewhat
playfully
calling
it)
rich
with
alternative
possibilities
for
coexistence
that
can
be
widely
useful
outside
of
our
specific
community.
In
other
words,
in
looking
closely
at
the
daily
life
practices
of
poly
people
I
see
the
generation
of
a
new
body
of
knowledgeor
perhaps
a
newly
remixed
body
of
knowledgethat
has
paradigm-shifting
possibilities.
While
this
sounds
new-agey,
I
see
it
not
as
a
grand
revolution
in
consciousness,
but
a
continuation
of
cultural
change,
part
of
an
ongoing
process
of
shaping
our
shared
social
world.
I
propose
poly
theory
as
a
new
avenue
of
inquiry
for
philosophical
thought
within
the
previously
existing
field
of
cultural
studies,
described
below.
More
than
just
creating
a
new
topic
for
dissertations,
establishing
poly
theory
as
a
legitimate
mode
of
analysis
(like
feminist
theory)
reframes
questions
of
interpersonal
intimacy
as
a
productive
category
of
theoretical
analysis.
The
practice
of
rhizomatic
intimacy,
a
term
I
promise
Ill
unpack
momentarily
results
in
the
development
of
ways
of
knowing
and
being
that,
if
further
disseminated,
may
be
able
to
effectively
perform
change
on
dominant
contemporary
culture.
So
this
is
essentially
a
manifesto
for
a
new
mode
of
analysis:
a
poly
theory
lens
through
which
to
examine
the
world.
What
I
see
through
that
lens
might
be
very
different
from
what
others
see.
Feminist
theorists,
for
example,
frequently
disagree
with
each
other,
but
through
their
ongoing
conversationsand
the
trickle-out
manifestations
of
those
conversations
within
popular
culturediscourse
is
generated,
old
ideologies
are
eroded
and
new
ones
can
accrete.
For
example,
the
feminism
of
Hillary
Clinton,
Lady
Gaga
and
the
characters
in
the
movie
Bridesmaids
dont
agree,
but
together
in
conversation,
they
begin
to
establish
a
discourse,
a
way
of
talking
about
gender
and
power
in
this
contemporary
moment.
Most
practitioners
of
rhizomatic
intimacy
develop
theories
and
philosophical
positions
on
love,
relationship,
identity
and
even
culture
as
a
natural
outgrowth
of
their
lived
experience.
My
theories
here
do
not
attempt
to
stake
out
a
definitive
territory
for
all
of
us
involved
in
this
kind
of
relationship.
Rather,
I
am
trying
to
describe
(specifically
and
dispassionately)
the
implications
of
what
I
see
when
I
look
closely
at
my
experiences
and
those
of
my
friends
and
lovers
struggling
with
and
savoring
life
inside
non-traditional
relationships.
I
value
that
knowledge
as
more
than
simply
anecdotal,
but
as
evidence
of
transpersonal
workings
of
culture
moving
through
us.
When
I
talk
about
culture,
Im
talking
about
shared
meaning.
Culture
exists
from
the
micro
to
the
macro
level:
the
culture
of
a
single
household
to
the
culture
of
the
planet.
Usually
we
talk
about
racial,
ethnic,
religious,
geographic,
age,
sexual
identity
or
interest-
based
groupings:
youth
culture,
gay
culture,
Native
American
culture,
German
culture,
D&D
culture.
It
can
be
thought
about
as
a
shared
repository
of
transpersonal
meaning,
as
well
as
the
mode
of
transmission
for
that
meaning
(its
the
bank
but
also
the
currency).
In
each
of
these
examples,
its
not
being
a
minority,
but
doing
minority
identity
that
results
in
the
generation
of
new
knowledge.
Being
black
doesnt
make
you
wise,
being
trans
doesnt
make
you
wise,
but
doing
black
in
a
racist,
white-dominated
society
means
you
learn
certain
valuable
things.
Doing
transie,
figuring
out
how
to
live
and
love
and
grow
and
thrive
as
yourself
in
a
transphobic
societyresults
in
certain
kinds
of
knowledge.
These
ideas
get
shared
through
art,
academic
writing,
political
activism
and
simple
conversation.
Once
those
ideas
reach
a
kind
of
critical
mass,
there
is
enough
momentum
to
shift
societys
norms.
Usually
the
legislation
lags
way
behind
the
wisdom
of
individuals
living
out
those
existences,
as
well
as
that
of
their
allies.
Culture,
as
cemented
through
legislation,
through
keeps
laughing
at
its
old
inside
jokes
long
after
theyve
stopped
being
funny
to
most
people.
It
is
crucial
to
acknowledge
that
non-monogamous
people
do
NOT
face
the
same
kind
of
violent
discrimination
suffered
by
many
of
these
subjugated
groups.
By
and
large
we
fly
under
the
radar
of
overt
societal
discipline,
and
many
of
us
benefit
from
a
backpack
full
of
social
privilege
based
on
other
factors
that
can
balance
out
the
potential
difficulty
of
our
non-traditional
relationships.
By
comparison,
queer
theory
was
birthed
in
the
crucible
of
the
AIDS
crisis,
and
trans
theory
is
co-arising
with
activism
that
is
focused
on
trying
to
keep
transfolk
from
getting
murdered.
Non-monogamy
is
a
chosen
practice.
Even
if
we
are
somehow
genetically
programmed
to
love
multiple
people,
we
choose
how
many
partners
we
are
going
to
have.
This
identity-structure
is
based
on
actions,
on
choice,
on
consent.
Our
minority
is
a
doing,
not
a
being,
and
it
is
through
this
doing
of
multiple
partnerships
that
new
meaning
is
made.
Personally,
Ill
be
sad
if
a
poly
gene
is
discovered.
The
inconclusiveness
of
whether
non-monogamy
is
a
choice
or
a
biological
proclivity
is
valuable.
As
such,
it
becomes
impossible
to
hammer
down
a
firm
identity
for
The
Poly
Person.
And
why
would
we
want
to?
Our
alternative
relationships
are
not
dedicated
to
building
or
bolstering
individual
identities
but
about
acknowledging
the
myriad
ways
in
which
our
bodies
and
hearts
are
interconnected
and
desire
even
greater
connectivity.
This
is
very
important
for
non-monogamous
activists
to
consider:
how
can
we
advocate
for
increased
social
visibility
and
greater
access
to
rights
without
constructing
another
solid
box
for
us
to
be
inside
and
those
other
people
to
be
outside
of?
As
we
resist
the
boxes
of
monogamy
and
mainstream
relationships
let
us
endeavor
to
avoid
building
new
ones
in
which
to
trap
ourselves.
In
an
effort
to
avoid
these
boxes,
I
propose
the
notion
of
the
rhizome.
Rhizome
is
a
term
in
botany
for
a
specific
kind
of
root
system
that
grows
outwards
in
horizontal
underground
stems,
emitting
many
roots
and
shoots,
each
of
which
has
the
potential
to
grow
into
a
new
plant.
Because
new
stalks
can
grow
from
any
number
of
nodes,
rhizomatic
plants,
like
bamboo
and
clover
spread
quite
rapidly,
expanding
outwards
even
more
than
up.
Rhizomes
are
notoriously
hardy;
they
grow
underground,
protected
from
many
environmental
threats,
and
they
can
store
large
amounts
of
energy.
This
gives
them
a
great
longevity:
certain
colonies
of
rhizomatic
Quaking
Aspen
trees,
for
example,
seem
to
have
been
alive
for
over
1
million
years.
Rhizomatic
structure
and
growth
has
captured
the
imagination
of
philosophers
for
a
long
time.
Carl
Jung
used
the
rhizome
as
a
metaphor
for
the
collective
unconscious.
French
Philosopher
Gilles
Deleuze
adopted
the
term
to
describe
a
model
of
system-
building
that
contrasts
with
typical
Western
habits
of
logic
and
organization.
According
to
Deleuze,
the
traditional
mode
of
rational
analysis
since
the
Greeks
is
based
on
the
model
of
the
tree.
In
this
so-called
arboreal
model,
rational
thought
and
structure
starts
from
a
place
of
solid
certainty
and
moves
outward,
with
each
increasingly
weak
element
dependent
on
the
stronger
branch
before
it.
Movement
through
this
structure
unfolds
through
contemplating
a
series
of
either/or
options,
choosing
one,
and
following
that
choice
until
the
next
juncture
occurs.
Branches
on
each
side
create
symmetry
over
the
y-
axis.
Above
and
below
the
x-axis,
the
root
system
mirrors
the
branches.
The
arboreal
model
is
based
on
a
hierarchical
and
binary
logic
tied
to
a
stable
vision
of
origin
and
end.
As
such,
it
reinforces
notions
of
authority,
dominance,
dependency,
lineage
and
linearity.
Arboreal
models
of
organization
show
up
in
the
famous
model
of
the
family
tree,
as
well
as
in
chain
of
command
schematics
of
how
power
flows
through
institutional
structures.
The
rhizome
is
not
the
opposite
of
the
tree
in
fact
rhizomes
can
contain
hierarchical
or
binary
elements,
they
just
also
exceed
and
transgress
them.
Cutting
across
power
structures
to
connect
at
will,
the
rhizome
model
has
no
beginning,
no
end,
and
no
center.
It
grows
in
multiple
directions
at
once
and
can
suffer
a
variety
of
losses
without
dying.
Asymmetrical,
de-centralized,
and
non-hierarchical,
the
rhizome
model
does
not
prioritize
power
and
doesnt
fear
annihilation
(a
good
example
of
a
rhizomatic
structure
is
the
internet).
I
propose
the
rhizome
as
a
way
of
imagining
the
structure
of
multiple
loving
relationships.
Rhizomatic
intimacy
proposes
a
fundamentally
non-hierarchical
vision
of
connectedness.
This
is
not
to
say
that
every
love
is
the
same:
the
love
rhizome
has
thick
branches
of
intense,
long-lasting,
committed
connection
and
very
fine
wispy
branches
of
short
or
faint
intimacy.
But
the
non-hierarchical
structure
implies
that
all
different
kinds
of
connection
can
be
meaningful,
life-affirming,
and
world-structuring.
Life-partnership
need
not
be
the
pinnacle
of
intimacy
as
commonly
imagined,
but
can
instead
be
a
significant
stalk
on
a
larger
root
system
of
love.
Rhizomatic
intimacy
is
something
that
everyone
practices
to
some
degree:
parents
love
all
their
children,
and
strong
love
connections
frequently
flourish
with
non-romantic,
non-parental
relations
like
friends,
mentors
or
mentees,
aunts
and
uncles,
godparents,
as
well
as
temporary
care-givers
like
nannies,
end-of-life
nurses,
and
sex-workers.
While
everyone
experiences
rhizomatic
intimacy,
non-monogamous
people
are
consciously
investigating
it,
including
the
scary
parts
that
involve
sex
and
long-term
commitment.
Its
not
surprising
that
these
are
the
parts
of
love
that
are
hard
to
imagine
sharing.
Sex
and
enduring
companionship
(especially
between
possibly
reproductive
couples)
has
been
legislated
by
the
social
order
for
as
long
as
humans
have
been
organizing
themselves
into
groups.
Jealousy,
competitiveness,
and
fear
of
loss
around
sex
and
relationship
have
been
engraved
so
deeply
into
our
social
habits
that
they
feel
very
natural.
Whether
or
not
there
is
a
biological
basis
to
jealousy
is
outside
my
area
of
expertise,
but
what
is
certainly
true
is
that
in
both
idea
and
practice,
rhizomatic
intimacy
requires
a
radical
revisioning
of
jealousy
and
competitiveness.
This
is
why
most
people
dont
do
it.
Its
often
the
first
thing
people
say
when
they
learn
about
my
relationship
structure:
Dont
you
get
jealous?
Maybe
some
of
you
lucky
people
dont
experience
jealousy
but
for
me,
part
of
the
practice
of
rhizomatic
intimacy
has
involved
trying
to
understand
this
deeply
physical,
emotional
distressing
experience.
As
a
preliminary
case
study
for
poly
theory
I
want
to
look
at
this
specific
practice
that
non-monogamous
people
do.
What
do
poly
people
do?
They
learn
how
to
deal
with
feelings
of
jealousy.
Firstly,
Id
like
to
acknowledge
this
as
a
skill,
or
what
in
performance
studies
we
call
technique.
Within
non-
monogamous
culture,
there
are
a
variety
of
resources
(books,
workshops,
therapists,
etc)
that
offer
practical
advice
on
what
to
do
when
this
inevitable
human
emotion
arises.
Not
theoretical
concepts,
but
physical
tools:
take
deep
breaths,
ask
for
reassurance,
treat
yourself
to
something
special,
etc.
Very
few
other
contemporary
social
practices
encourage
learning
how
to
dismantle
jealousy.
Certain
apparatuses
have
been
developed
to
help
deal
with
other
difficult
emotions
of
contemporary
life;
we
have
pills
for
depression
and
anxiety,
classes
for
anger
management,
but
jealousy
is
rarely
addressed.
This
is
because,
unlike
sadness
or
anger,
jealousy
is
necessary
for
the
smooth
running
of
contemporary
capitalist
society.
The
threat
that
jealousy
levels
to
individual
self-esteem
generates
a
huge
amount
of
shared,
interpersonal,
circulating
competitiveness,
which
is
the
engine
of
capitalist
economics.
Competition
is
the
philosophy
undergirding
our
failing
global
economic
situation.
When
you
feel
jealous,
you
will
compete,
and
in
our
society,
competition
has
become
almost
synonymous
with
participation.
We
are
sold
on
competition
as
a
necessary
hurdle
for
happiness:
You
must
win
to
be
successful,
you
must
be
successful
to
matter,
you
must
matter
to
be
loved.
This
worldview
creates
workers
for
a
system
that
prioritizes
the
exchange
of
commodities
over
the
exchange
of
human
intimacy.
Jealousy
management
is
not
taught
in
kindergarten
because
such
techniques
are
fundamentally
challenging
to
the
status
quo.
Personal
feelings
of
jealousy
spur
commerce.
The
more
people
remain
afraid
that
they
are
going
to
lose
love,
the
more
products
can
be
sold
to
try
to
soothe
those
feelings.
Advertisers
attempt
to
stimulate
jealousy
through
endless
campaigns
to
buy
more
stuff.
We
are
taught
to
feel
jealous
of
the
happiness
of
the
rich
and
famous
and
encouraged
to
consume
products
in
hopes
of
achieving
the
happiness
that
were
not
sure
we
deserve.
Many
of
us
conceptually
understand
this
system
of
manipulation,
but
that
knowledge
doesnt
necessarily
protect
us
from
its
operation
on
our
psyches.
Under
capitalism
gone
wild,
relationships
begin
to
be
packaged
like
products.
Love,
and
specifically
marriage,
is
commodified,
ie,
turned
into
an
object
that
can
and
should
be
acquired.
After
you
get
your
degree
and
your
job,
you
get
your
spouse,
your
house,
and
then
your
kids.
This
system
of
personal
affiliation
modeled
on
possession
is
a
dangerous
kind
of
objectification
that
continues
very
old
traditions.
It
is
a
not-
distant
ancestor
of
selling
off
your
daughter
to
the
rich
guy
down
the
lane.
This
is
what
contemporary
structures
of
loving
relationship
are
trying
to
shed:
first
feminist
marriage
and
later
gay
marriage
have
been
working
to
transform
the
institution
from
a
system
where
women
were
chattel
property
into
an
equilateral
alliance
of
human
energies.
As
legalized
marriage
for
same-sex
couples
trudges
slowly
but
inevitably
towards
reality,
non-
monogamous
people
must
continue
to
imagine
more.
Objectification
of
relationships
prioritizes
the
desired
object
of
being
married
above
the
messy
encounter
between
ever-
evolving
individuals.
Let
non-
monogamous
people
insist
loudly
that
relationships
are
not
things
and
that
real
interactions
with
real
humans
provide
much
richer
and
more
enduring
pleasure
than
products
could
ever
give.
Because
of
the
challenges
they
level
to
our
competitive
and
commodifying
urges,
I
see
rhizomatic
relationships
as
innately
anti-capitalist.
When
I
told
a
friend
of
mine
this,
she
said:
Couldnt
exactly
the
opposite
be
argued?
Doesnt
multi-partnership
encourage
unbridled
expansion?
Isnt
adding
on
new
lovers
just
part
of
the
capitalist
fantasy
that
you
can
get
whatever
you
want?
(This
is
a
great
question).
What
I
see
is
this:
through
non-monogamous
relationships,
you
have
firsthand
experience
that
expansion
is
very
difficult
and
requires
radical
change.
For
example,
I
live
in
a
triad,
and
when
my
partners
and
I
decided
to
move
in
together,
it
was
a
big
decision
that
took
a
lot
of
conversation,
commitment,
bravery
and
hope.
This
kind
of
intentional,
conscious
opening
up
(Thank
you
Tristan
Taormino)
is
the
opposite
of
the
Starbucks-on-every-corner
mode
of
manic,
avaricious
capitalist
expansion.
In
the
rhizome,
you
can
only
add
new
shoots
and
roots
if
there
is
the
available
energy
to
sustain
them.
In
poly
relationships,
it
becomes
quickly
clear
that
sometimes
theres
just
not
energy
to
keep
expanding
outwards
in
a
healthy
way.
In
addition
to
techniques
of
jealousy
management,
rhizomatic
relationships
require
the
development
of
greater
systemic
awareness
in
which
each
person
is
attentive
to
the
collective
resources
of
the
group.
It
becomes
a
shared
task
to
assess
if
there
are
sufficient
means
to
pursue
new
connections,
or
whether
its
more
important
to
focus
on
10
11
informs
a
lot
of
my
experience
with
poly
right
now.
In
addition
to
attempting
to
exist
in
a
rhizomatic,
constellational
mode,
I
also
live
the
everyday
experience
of
having
not
one,
not
two,
but
three
different
options
for
everything.
Through
living
this
out
for
almost
two
years
Ive
come
to
realize
just
how
often
my
brain
had
previously
divided
things
up
into
two
options.
This
unconscious,
knee-jerk
binary
thinking
easily
condenses
into
wrong
and
right,
or,
more
accurately
my
way
and
that
jerks
less
effective
and
efficient
way.
(I
hope
youre
all
better
partners
than
I
am,
but
I
dont
think
this
thought
process
is
uncommon).
The
question
of
whos
right
changes
in
a
triad.
There
are
suddenly
more
possible
ways,
and
thus
more
uncertainty
about
rightness
and
wrongness
as
categories.
In
trying
to
make
decisions
I
find
I
listen
more
closely
to
my
partners
than
I
often
did
in
prior
dyadic
relationships.
There
is
still
the
possibility
of
collapsing
into
camps
and
alignments,
but
the
polarized
positions
of
self
and
other
that
are
almost
unavoidable
in
a
dyad
are
not
nearly
as
common.
Sometimes
we
find
a
synthesis
of
our
three
divergent
positions;
sometimes
we
dont
and
are
forced
to
coexist
within
the
complexity
of
our
unique
worldviews.
What
do
poly
people
do?
They
learn
to
break
down
binary
thinking.
The
embodied
practice
of
trying
to
engage
rhizomatically
with
multiple
equals
challenges
the
us-versus-
them
mentality
that
is
responsible
for
our
failing
two-party
system
of
national
politics
as
well
as
most
instances
of
global
conflict.
On
a
tiny
scale,
my
family
is
attempting
to
imagine
systems
better
than
contest
or
war
through
which
we
can
either
resolve
or
learn
to
live
within
the
differences
between
us.
This
requires
work
and
a
commitment
to
dedicated
and
authentic
intimacy
politics,
which
is
another
phrase
I
offer
up
to
you.
This
term
is
a
remix
of
the
notion
of
identity
politics,
a
phrase
that
has
been
used
since
the
1970s
to
describe
how
oppression
imprints
upon
individual
consciousnesses
and
results
in
the
formation
of
political
perspectives.
All
the
aforementioned
social
justice
movements
engaged
in
active
identity
politics,
mobilizing
the
force
of
their
own
experiences
to
call
for
changes
in
social
priorities.
Identity
politics
have
been
lauded
by
some
as
responsible
for
most
of
the
progressive
social
policies
of
the
last
few
decades,
and
maligned
by
others
as
having
divided
America
into
smaller
and
smaller
social
interest
groups
competing
in
the
ever-
expanding
Oppression
Olympics.
I
offer
up
intimacy
politics
as
not
a
replacement
but
a
necessary
sister
or
perhaps
lover
to
identity
politics.
Intimacy
politics
calls
for
action
based
on
awareness
of
the
unfair
power
discrepancies
that
identity
politics
have
revealed.
Intimacy
politics
is
also
aware
that
the
most
productive
force
for
change
lies
not
in
individuals
but
in
the
intimacies
between
them,
where
existence
and
co-existence
is
negotiated,
difference
is
touched,
and
compassion
is
cultivated.
Intimacy
politics
reminds
us
that
love,
not
commodities,
should
mediate
relationships
between
beings.
It
values
sustainable
linkages
and
slow,
conscious
expansion.
Intimacy
12
politics
proposes
that
it
is
possible
to
have
a
"you"
and
a
"me"
without
having
an
"us"
and
a
"them."
Im
not
an
evolutionary
biologist,
but
I
hypothesize
that
the
desire
to
love
and
be
loved
is
a
deep,
prehistoric
instinct,
much
like
language.
The
notion
that
life-long,
partnered
monogamy
is
a
natural
instinct
seems
as
silly
as
saying
French
is
a
natural
instinct.
Monogamy
and
polyamory
are
both
beautiful
emanations
of
the
love
instinct,
but
both
are
just
arbitrary
outcroppings
of
a
deeper
structure.
Examining
rhizomatic
intimacy
is
a
potent
reminder
that
love
is
bigger
than
we
can
imagine,
and
that
attempting
to
systematize
it
into
human
culture
is
an
unavoidably
awkward
reduction.
A
relationship
is
a
metaphorical
structure
that
love
hangs
out
in
for
a
little
while.
Its
a
model,
which
doesnt
mean
it
isnt
real
or
significant.
We
need
the
constructed
dioramas
of
representation
in
which
to
glimpse
the
hugeness
of
the
cosmos.
But
its
important
to
take
responsibility
for
the
models
that
we
build
and
understand
that
what
we
make
on
a
small
scale
we
also
manifest
in
grand
ways.
This
is
another
intensely-lived
reality
of
rhizomatic
relationships:
We
are
making
this
all
up
not
just
sex
and
romance,
but
all
human
edifices.
Through
the
practice
of
non-monogamy,
we
learn
that
inherited
structures
surrounding
love,
sex,
and
shared
daily
life
are
negotiable
between
consenting
adults
acting
with
integrity.
Let
this
awareness
remind
us
that
so
too
all
systems
regulating
human
organization
and
behavior
are
vulnerable
to
change,
not
based
on
exertion
of
power,
strong
over
weak,
but
on
increasingly-intimate
exchanges
of
knowledge
within
equally
empowered,
always-already-interconnected
points
within
an
ever-expanding
network.
This
is
love
in
the
rhizome.
This
is
dedicated
to
my
rhizome
with
particular
gratitude
to
Joe,
Beth,
Marty,
Damien,
and
Leanna,
all
of
whom
I
relied
on
in
those
last
desperate
hours
when
I
feared
I
was
nuts.
All
images
courtesy
of
random
people
on
the
internet.
Thanks
random
people!
If
you
want
to
talk
more
about
these
ideas,
email
me
at
polytheorymanifesto@gmail.com
13