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Welcome to Our Diary

Posted on Jan 14th, 2008 by asecondlifediary : A Second Life Diary asecondlifediary
the founders


This blog is the diary of our journey to create an Intentional Community  in Second Life. We hope to use it as a laboratory to discover how such communities work, and when they don't. Our blog will be a journal of what we learn. We are hoping that the members of our community will demonstrate and share with us these capacities and principles:

Natural Capacities: deep capacity for love, passion for the community's shared purpose/intention, trust, emotional strength, sensitivity/openness/perceptiveness, good instincts, self-sufficiency, honesty, intelligence/critical thinking ability, curiosity, imagination, creativity, responsibility, expressiveness, flexibility, and tolerance.

Responsible and Sustainable Operating Principles: stop at one child per woman, practice radical simplicity, pledge to buy local, leave the Earth as you found it, practice bioregionalism & permaculture, cooperate & collaborate, practice consensus democracy, value everyone's time equally, pay attention to nature, be self-sufficient, incur no debts, be generous, organic and responsible, and understand and use the power of relationships.

If you're interested in Intentional Community, or have experience with one, or would like to meet us in Second Life to discuss it, please leave us a comment!


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Meeting One Another ... and finding love

Posted on Jan 14th, 2008 by asecondlifediary : A Second Life Diary asecondlifediary
Miraharpchaiselook
This journey that my 'Loved One' (I'll call him Cal) and I are beginning together is so wonderful and exciting that we wanted to share it with you.    After all, who doesn't love "A New Beginning"?

One of the differences you will notice between us is that he's very academic and theoretical in his approach and I'm instinctive and primitive.   He's also very intense and idealistic. Which is why he appeals to me.

He gives so much of himself, and yet he assures me he still has plenty left to give others. I can believe that, but still ... I am a little sceptical until I see for myself that it IS possible to give and give and give and give and give and still have more.     More than anything, I want to give him the opportunity of living a lifestyle he so believes in.    

But first, I'd like to share how we met and fell in love.

We both belong to Second Life - a virtual reality world where your dreams CAN come true!   In Second Life (or SL for short), it is possible that "if you can imagine it, you can experience it" and it was with such thoughts in mind that I went looking for some kind of physical intimacy back on 17th November 2007.     

I teleported into 'Midnight Reflections', which is a quiet, atmospheric place with the sound of dripping water and crickets chirruping.   I'd made a decision that I wasn't going to beat about the bush, I would just ask the first man I saw for sex.    It was pure carnal desire that was driving me.

But when I saw Cal, sitting on a mushroom, minding his own business, all I wanted was a hug.

I think of myself as an outgoing, shy person so it was easy for me to say, "Excuse me, but I'm in desperate need of hug. Would you mind?" His response was, "You've come to the right person. Take a look at my profile." (Which of course is a photo of himself and some pertinent information).   What I read in his profile was the answer to my whispered prayer.   While I hoped that such a person existed, I wasn't entirely sure I would ever meet them.

So we hugged.    But when our embrace came to an end, I found that I couldn't separate myself from him. I didn't want to move. I wanted to stay close.   He told me later that he felt exactly the same.   He saved the transcript of our conversation which followed and I share an edited version with you:

HIM: Why so sad?
ME: Oh, just someone I care for is no longer as much a part of my life and I miss them. That's why I needed to be held ... to get a little bit of comfort ... even from a stranger.
HIM: That's why I'm here. You picked the right guy.
At this point he offered me 'Friendship', which is a way of establishing contact with others in Second Life so you know when they are online.
ME: Thank you for throwing me a life preserver.
HIM: Would you like to walk and chat?
We walked a bit and then found a poseball labelled "Fate". (A poseball enables you to sit, caress, dance, play tennis etc).
HIM: Want to find out our fate?
We sat and found that 'Fate' was a pose that had us lying side by side on grass, gently stroking one another's faces and bodies - very sweet and caring. He asked me about the relationship (or the ending of it) that had caused me so much pain and we talked about that for awhile.
HIM: I'm trying to learn to just take what comes. To not be demanding ... to create an abundance of love, where everywhere there seems a scarcity.
ME: That's what I set out to do in SL - just to see what it offered and to enjoy that.
HIM: Mmm ... me too ... guess I'm lucky so far. But I find the women here more mature and loving than most of the men.
ME: I had several people I was seeing, but when this man came into my life and asked me to be his partner, I just couldn't be with the others.
HIM: I couldn't give up any of those I've come to love, for just one ... No matter how special.
ME: Well, I didn't throw them away ... I just stopped being intimate with them. I thought I could continue having the mutliple relationships, but it appears as though I'm faithful no matter where I'm having the relationship - First Life or Second!
HIM: There must have been a reason you wanted to be intimate with them though. All my relationships here are intimate - just in different ways.
ME: Well, I suppose we all need something in our relationships with others.
HIM: Possessiveness and jealousy are the enemies of love. It can be so much more.
ME: I just want to surrender to what the fates offer me here.
HIM: Good for you ... to have the courage to let go of fear and insecurity. The mores of RL (Real Life).
ME: So, what is a man who has several intimate relationships, doing sitting all alone in a forest?
HIM: The women I love are all busy tonight. I don't demand anything of them ... I want them to be free to be with me when they want, on their own terms. So your request of a hug from me was a sign ... my reward for generosity.   I'm learning so much from the women I meet here.
ME: Oh good .... at least there will be ONE MAN in the world who understands a little. I must say, I liked the attitudes you expressed in your profile. I'm interested to hear about the women you love.
HIM: The qualities they have in common are:
1. Emotionally strong
2. Emotionally sensitive
3. Intelligent
4. Imaginative
5. Good at communicating in writing.
ME: I don't know that I can define the kind of person who appeals to me.
HIM: I couldn't either, until I started to see a pattern. My instincts tell me you have them all.
ME: But I've always thought that I would like someone who is manly, without being macho; sensitive, without being soppy; someone with honour and integrity and showing gallantry.
HIM: Mmmm ... high standard. lol
ME: Someone who enjoys expressing themselves. With a loving heart and I must have honesty.
HIM: Absolutely! I forgot that on my list.
ME: I can't imagine what it would be like to walk into your home and find your partner fucking somebody else in your bed.    Apart from the betrayal, it's absolutely such bad manners!
HIM: Unless of course it's by consent and equal ... a foursome instead of a threesome.
In Second Life, you create your 'look' by choosing particular kinds of shapes and skins to reflect the look which best appeals to us. At this point in our exchange, I realised that I was in an 'alternative' avatar, which is different to my usual 'look'.
ME: This is the face I love, she is my beautiful jewel.
HIM: Very expressive ... haunting ... vulnerable looking.
ME: I love how we express ourselves here. What we create reflects our souls ... our essence.
HIM: The tenderness of this pose brings tears to my eyes.
ME: It's funny that you should be a writer, cos I am too. I write memoirs, but I used to be a journalist.
HIM: Telling rich stories is the key to changing the world.
ME: I thought I would try and make a living here in SL through my writing and for the first six months in SL I wrote for one of the newspapers here, but now I want to explore other avenues of expression and just continue to earn a living in First Life. (I regard Second Life as my Real Life).
HIM: I'm glad you're exploring with me.
ME: So am I. I'm glad you were sitting on that mushroom as I came by.
HIM: Our meeting was intended before you arrived ... we just played it out. Our lives are stories that we each star in. And we can either direct ourselves, or let ot hers do it for us.
ME: Tell me something wonderful!
HIM: I am happier than I have ever been in my life.
ME: That's a wonderful experience to have.
HIM: I've learned that love can let us do anything. I can't think of anything more wonderful than that. lol
ME: Yes, love is the answer.
HIM: Have you ever heard of polyamorous communities?
ME: I've only heard the expression. I don't know what it entails, apart from sharing love.
HIM: They are stable groups of equal numbers of men and women who all love each other. And who share trust and lovely completely and honesty. So there is never a need for jealousy or possessiveness.
ME: Where do I sign up?  lol
HIM: The women I love think it is idealistic and impossible.
ME: I love idealism.
HIM: But I am not so sure ... I believe it is natural.
ME: It's a worthy ideal I think. I'm not so sure of human nature though. One thing I do know about myself is that if I am WITH someone, I want their full attention.
HIM: Absolutely, yes. But then later you can be with someone else.
ME: Yes.
HIM: I'm coming to like you a lot.
ME: Cos I'm telling you what you want to hear? lol
HIM: lol Boy, you are smart!
ME: How many of the criteria have I met?
HIM: I've re-read the script of our conversation because I wondered about that ... It's not a test ... just a pattern I've noticed. I could love you in any case. You would be easy to fall in love with.
ME: It is a sweet surrender.
HIM: You ARE a writer.
ME: I'm watching our avatars.
HIM: Me too ... can't take my eyes off them/us. I long for gentleness, tenderness. So little of it in RL.
ME: Do you know, when we first met and you gave me that hug ... I just didn't want to move away from you. I wanted to stay close.
HIM: Me too. And I love the fact that you were strong enough to ask.
ME: I was thinking you would be thinking, "Oh here we go! Some guy in a dress hitting on me!"
HIM: I just found it charming. Can I tell you something I'm hesitant to say?
ME: I love to hear everything!
HIM: To me, this conversation is more erotic than SL sex. We are 'making love'. I just want to hold you close all night and learn more and more about you.
We then chatted about our lives - our dogs, where we lived, domestic stuff.
ME: I'd be interested to see one of these polyamorous communities.
HIM: I want to set up such a community here in Second Life to experiment and learn first and then hopefully co-create on in Real Life. We'd have to start it.
ME: We?
HIM: You and me ... you'd pick the men and I'd pick the women. We'd each meet each other's choices, and if we agreed, two by two, we'd invite them to join us.
ME: Like Noah's Ark? I never thought, when I started out on my walk, that I'd end up organising a Polyamorous Community. lol
HIM: It's just a dream of mine .... it's new. Yes, like Noah's Ark ... exactly!
ME: I like the sound of that.
HIM: Wow! That's wonderful. Want to get to know you better first though. It's funny, but I can feel your heart beating.
ME: What else can you feel?
HIM: lol Your breath on mine. Your gentle touch. The strength of the muscles in your body. You must be in good shape.
ME: I wish!
HIM: I feel our souls touching.
ME: I have some delicious sensations moving through my body.
HIM: Me too. We're going to have a relationship that lasts ... so there's no hurry.
ME: Patience is not one of my virtues. I think you should know that.
We then went on to play "Twenty Questions" which was a great way of getting to know one another better. Here are just some of the questions and responses.
ME: What do you like about me best?
HIM: Toss-up so far between intelligence (so sexy!) and communication skill (so rare!)
ME: Favourite fantasy?
HIM: You'll think I'm kidding, but it's meeting a stranger in the forest (behind my house) and falling in love and making love for hours and hours.
ME: Do you realling think we have something going on here?
HIM: I think so ... I keep reading the thread and I think it's real.
ME: Such a wonderful treasure to find.
HIM: Mmmmm ..... I'm just bursting with happiness. Okay, my question. Favourite novelist, short story writer and poet.
ME: Oooooh .... Dorothy Parker, Oscar Wilde, Jack London, Charles Dickens, Mark Twain, Kahlil Gibran ...
"Come close beloved of my soul, for I fear loneliness ..."
I'm not so hot on poets. Okay, my turn.
ME: Will you be my man?
HIM: Yes ...
ME: lol I expected there to be some provisos in there. (smiles)
HIM: I'm taking this all as it comes ... trusting my instincts ... and trusting you.
ME: As I trust you.
HIM: Here's a tough one for you ... How/where do you draw the line between SL and RL?
ME: First Life is where I live; and Second Life is where I'd like to be.
Or are you asking if I want something more from you than what we can have here?
HIM: Yes ... or at least if you think you will want something from me in RL too.
ME: I think it's safer to keep it in SL.
HIM: Thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you!
I knew my instincts about you were right.
ME: Don't get me wrong though ... I do have a tendency to be clingey ... especially if I'm feeling needy. I need a lot of attention.
HIM: I can handle that in SL. You're worth it.
ME: I hope so.
HIM: No need to hope ... I know.
ME: Next question. What's the lousiest thing you've ever done to a woman?
HIM: When I was younger, I ran away from love because I was afraid. I would never do that again ... hard lesson.
ME: What gave you the courage to explore love again then?
HIM: Just learned ... and learned ... and learned ... so I would never make such a terrible mistake again.
ME: It's funny how all this is scarey and thrilling at the same time.
HIM: Not scary to me ... I trust you and I just KNOW this is right.
ME: It's important that I feel safe with you. God I hope you're not just some guy who has read a manual and knows all the right things to say! lol
HIM: lol No, I don't think there is one for that. It's taken me a long time to get here. You've just arrived in my life at the right time. Just think ... if you hadn't asked me for a hug ...
ME: I know. But as soon as I saw you, I was glad I'd found you.
HIM: I am so so so so so happy and bursting with love.
ME: I want so much to give myself to you.
HIM: We'll give ourselves to each other.
ME: I'm looking forward to loving you. Sharing love with you.
HIM: Just when I thought I couldn't be happier, I meet you! Life is too wonderful.
ME: It certainly has turned around for me! This morning I was in tears, and now here I am, lost in love with a man I just met. But I am a big believer in fate.
HIM: You had me at "I'm a writer too".
ME: You had me when I read your profile.
HIM: Oh ... I love you so much already and we've only just begun! James Taylor once said, "The secret of life is enjoying the passage of time" and I'm going to enjoy enjoying it with you.
ME: Okay, here's another question for you. Would you describe yourself as more dominant or submissive?
HIM: Neither. I like to take turns.
ME: Good answer! Exactly right! Okay, it's a done deal. It's love!
I've got to tell you though, that I have a tendency towards bossiness, so I need a strong man to keep me in check.
HIM: That will be an interesting test for us. I'm emotionally strong, but I won't tell anyone I love, what to do.
ME: No, I don't like being told what to do ...
HIM: I over-compensate for most men who keep women too much in check.
ME: I just need you to pull me into line, if I need pulling into line. I value my freedom too much. Not that I want to give you a job to do ... I'm just letting you know that if I start to get a bit over-bearing, I am open to you letting me know that I'm out of line.
Hopefully, we will both feel comfortable letting the other know what we need etc.
HIM: We'll work it out. This will be something for us to explore. It may be a challenge for me to learn though ...
ME: Last question. What would be a deal breaker for you?
HIM: Any dishonesty.
ME: Yes. Likewise for me. But it's time for me to go. I have to take my dog for a walk.
Thank you for turning my day around. For being kind enough to hug a stranger. You are going to be very good for me.
HIM: Just love me and life will be wonderful for both of us.

This is where our journey together began.

In future blogs, I want to look at what it is about SL that encourages people to drop their guard and to allow themselves this ultimate freedom - the freedom to fall in love without fear.

I hope you enjoy sharing our journey with us.

Mia




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Establishing A New Relationship ... what's this polyamoury thing?

Posted on Jan 15th, 2008 by asecondlifediary : A Second Life Diary asecondlifediary
Oshocuddle
EVERYONE KNOWS that establishing a new relationship is always a risky experience at the best of times, but Cal's gut instinct that monogamy was not the way to go, did stand out as a major reason for hesitation to jump in to this new connection we had.

What if he met someone else he preferred more than me?   Did he have a very low boredom threshold, was that why he needed more than one woman?   Would I feel as though he'd lost interest in me, if he brought someone else into the relationship?   How would I respond to a new person in OUR relationship?

I had to look at my own insecurities and ego when I voiced these concerns.   But I was reassured by Cal's calm reassurances that what we had together WAS strong and binding and that IF anyone else was included in our circle of love, then we would BOTH love and care for them, not just him.

The way he explained it was that of course, it was natural for us now to focus on one another and lose ourselves in that wonderful first flush of love - to luxuriate in the growing passion for one another and the desire to spend as much time as we could, together.   But he never let me lose sight of the fact, that at some future time, this wonderful circle of love we were making, would accommodate others.

I love Cal.   There is no doubt of that, but there are times when I become what I call a "Relationship Hypochondriac" and I just have to voice doubts, insecurities, fears, insights etc.

Fortunately we're both intense people and all this analysis and investigation of our feelings and emotions is something that we both enjoy (enjoy?) - well, maybe we don't 'enjoy' it, but it seems to be a part of how we process things.

Throughout this whole experience, Cal keeps telling me that he is "happier than I've ever been in my life" and that he feels relaxed and reassured, secure and confident in the strength of the bond between us.   I'm not as confident of my appeal to him however.

Our emotional/relationship histories have been a little different.   I'll leave it up to him to tell his story, but I've been primarily on my own (with a number of "ships passing in the night" kinds of relationships) for the same period of time that he's been in his current relationship.   So it may be that we are looking for different kinds of attachments.   

I yearn for a stable, loving bond but I wouldn't be surprised if he finds that kind of attachment a bit like having his feet nailed to the floor.    We shall see as time passes.

Naturally, whenever I tell anyone I have fallen in love with someone who wants a polyamorous relationship, they are all solicituous of my emotional security.   Everyone sees HIS desire for polyamoury as him just wanting to have "carte blanche" to have lots of other affairs and relationships.    A man's absolute dream!

But it IS more than that.   My understanding of polyamoury is that Cal and I have a wonderful, loving relationship together, but we are also open to including others in our relationship.   For instance, we could meet another couple (or we may even already know them), and as we spend time together, the attachment we feel for them as people, a couple and as a man and a woman, deepens to the point where it just seems natural that our affection for them evolves into a more 'loving' nature.    Where we feel comfortable snuggling up on a couch together, holding hands - both with the same sex and opposite sex partner - spending time with the other person's partner in a non-sexual way (or sexual way).

As an idealistic person, I AM open to the idea that it is possible to love more than one person.   Just because I 'adore' Cal, doesn't mean that I can't feel love for anyone else, and vice versa.   Love isn't a rationed emotion.    Just because I give it to one person, doesn't leave me empty for other people.

But I also know myself well enough to know that I need a lot of attention.   And as unfathomable as the depths of Cal's ability to love many people might be, I still don't know whether I will always feel that I have 'enough' of him to feel loved.    Again, that remains to be seen.

For the time being though, I do love the journey we have begun together.   In all ways.   I want to be a good partner.    A loving partner.   All I know is that I want to be HIS partner.    Who else might come, that is for the future to reveal.

In my next instalment, I will share with you some issues which were brought up by a friend of a friend, which both Cal and I acknowledge have merit in the great Polyamoury debate.

Mia





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Conversation and Community

Posted on Jan 16th, 2008 by asecondlifediary : A Second Life Diary asecondlifediary
Ourisleaer



Our fledgling Intentional Community in Second Life. It's a simple, natural setting. We sleep in a cave beside a waterfall.


Yesterday Mia and I, and our friend Mich, had a long conversation, using Second Life's voice-to-voice facility, about the nature of new social media, when each is appropriate, and the challenges of transitioning from one medium to another. Specifically, we talked about:

e-Mail
chat/IM
chat/IM plus virtual presence (using an avatar)
v2v (voice to voice)
v2v plus virtual presence (using an avatar)
v2v plus virtual presence (using a webcam)
f2f (face to face)

in the context of both 2-person and multi-person conversations. These 7 media each represent (in approximate increasing order) different levels of intimacy with one's conversants.
One of the issues Dave Snowden describes in his work on how complex systems operate (and social networks are complex systems) is the fact we act in multiple identities. My work identity, my neighbourhood identity, my identity in interactions with my First Life friends, and Second Life friends, and my identity on each of my blogs, are each different, sometimes accidentally (because of how people using these media have come to 'know' me, and in what capacity) and sometimes deliberately (because of the need to keep our work persona and our 'personal life' persona separate, sometimes even for legal reasons).

So when you switch from one medium to another, it can be wrenching or jarring for several reasons:

1. Since you aren't 'used' to relating to that person in that alternative persona, your first communications may be very awkward, frightening, even humiliating. When you switch from Second Life to Voice-to-Voice, do you refer to each other by your Second Life or First Life names? Do you need to disclose additional information about yourself? Does this simple medium change fundamentally change the nature of your relationship, because the relationship is now between different identities? (You think Superman had it tough with just two identities, try juggling a half dozen). Even within Second Life, some people have multiple avatars (identities) that they use for different purposes (e.g. business, romance, and fun)

2. You have imagined the other person (or people) to be a certain way, by 'filling in the spaces' that the medium leaves open, and when you suddenly discover they are not what you imagined at all, it can be dumbfounding. When you've only known someone through blog communication or e-mail or Second Life chat or IM, and suddenly you hear their voice for the first time (or meet them face to face), you may discover they're a lot younger or older than you imagined, or they have an accent you weren't expecting (and perhaps don't like), or that they have three eyes, or even that they're a different gender than what you expected. Your perception suddenly changes, sometimes for the better, but often for the worse. The relationship is forever changed. No wonder some people fiercely resist taking relationships to 'the next level'! It's safer not to take the chance.

3. Once you've made the transition from one medium to another, 'richer' one, it's hard to go back. We discussed the fact that long-time online 'pen pals', after they've met in person, often cease communicating by e-mail or IM anymore, for all sorts of reasons. When you're used to hearing someone's voice, or seeing their face, and suddenly you have to go back to just text communication, it can be very frustrating, almost as if you've lost the use of one of your senses. It can even be disorienting -- you start to imagine that person as different from what you know them to be, because their writing just seems different from the way they talk and relate face-to-face. You may even think they've changed, or become distant, because text in the absence of context (voice or visual clues) is terribly ambiguous.

As David Wong points out, text is poor communication (easily misunderstood) and less communication (lacking sensory clues to meaning and nuance). But it has its advantages. It gives the inarticulate time to think about a response, which generally makes them sound smarter. It allows for mystery, through deliberate ambiguity -- which can be alluring. It is easier to archive and re-read later than voice conversation. And it allows people to role-play, which is (a) fun and (b) safe -- you can more easily create and sustain an identity significantly different from your 'real' one when you only use text and self-created avatars. I can absolutely understand why some people vow never to 'confuse' or 'cross over' from an online identity to a more 'real' (what Mich calls 'meatspace') identity. Each identity is kept completely separate from the others, with no online clues anywhere that might allow someone to track them from one identity or another, and no overlap between the communities and networks they are a part of in each identity. This can be a major juggling act, and necessarily makes you a bit schizophrenic.

The issue of moving from one medium and/or identity to another gets even more complex when the relationship, the community, or the conversation has multiple conversants. What do you do when you're in a four-way IM conversation and two of the people decide it should jump to voice-to-voice? What if the other two are uncomfortable with this? What if some of the conversants want to go to a whiteboard to sketch out their idea collaboratively, or webcams so they can 'see' what each other 'mean', and others either refuse or can't muster the technology to make the transition? Important relationships are built on trust, and trust can be lost easily when one person wants to 'change' the relationship suddenly (by moving to a different medium and, by implication, to a different persona or identity). But sometimes the advantages of changing media (and the frustrations of more limited media) are such that the desire to force such a change can be overwhelming.

Add love into the mix and things really get interesting. When two people who have never met in 'real' life fall in love, and one of them wants to change media, the challenge to the relationship can be gut-wrenching.

When I first went into Second Life, I was perfectly content to keep my 'Second Life' and 'Real Life' identities strictly separate. I didn't want to know who any of my new SL friends were in the 'real' world and didn't want them to know about my 'real' identity either. And I didn't want to use voice-to-voice -- as a writer I'm just more comfortable using text than speech to convey what I think is important. But when Mia agreed to help me build a model Intentional Community in Second Life, she quickly persuaded me that clear, fast, candid communication demanded voice-to-voice contact. I was terrified (of what each of us would think of each other) but she was absolutely right, and now I nudge those with whom I share virtual community to talk voice-to-voice as much as possible. I really love the new social media (like GMail/GTalk) that allow you to jump from one medium to another (e.g. IM to v2v) with a single click.

Is it possible to get too caught up in the 'game' to the point you begin to take your online identities (and others' online identities) too seriously, to the point you starve your 'real' identity and end up with a stunted social life, neglected 'real' world friends and family, and an inability to function properly in the 'real' world?

My answer to this question, perhaps surprisingly, is no. Stephen Downes' brilliant speech on the elusive nature of reality has persuaded me that what we think of as 'real' life is just as much a figment of our imaginations as any virtual place we could inhabit. people in 'real' life fall in love with fictions, people they just imagine others to be, as readily as if the object of their affection were an invention. And David Wong's explanation of why virtual worlds are just as healthy places to live in as the 'real' world is very compelling. You can learn as much, experience as much, love as much in virtual worlds, interacting with 'real' people, as in the real world. You arguably do less damage to the environment through such virtual entertainments than you would driving long distances to consume and then discard crap in the real world.

It's been argued that it's irresponsible to 'hide' in virtual worlds when so much work needs to be done in the 'real' world. I have some sympathy with this argument, for the very few who don't spend their 'real' world waking hours merely reading unactionable information, engaging in impotent debate, and consuming violent, desensitizing video and music 'entertainment' that is surely far more escapist than many of the intense virtual world discussions I've experienced.

That's why I've been adamant about how I spend my online time, purposefully, in Second Life, and in my IMs (and e-mails when I can't persuade friends to move to real-time media) with friends I've met through my blogs, real-life contacts and other social networks and communities I am a part of. I don't engage in fantasy, or small-talk, or echo-chamber mutual reassurance conversations, or debates. Every conversation has a purpose -- which may be to give attention to learn something new, to understand something better, to convey an important idea or an imagined possibility, to express love and appreciation, to collaborate, or to build community through consensus or exchange. I am a model-builder, and about as far from a cult leader or cult member as you could imagine -- I'm neither a leader or a follower by nature: Everything meaningful in my life has come through Letting Myself Change, and tossing out possibilities that I hope will be useful to others, when they are ready, and adapted to their own use as part of their Let-Self-Change process. That's all I could ever ask for.

In a world that permits of infinitely many personas and identities, I am increasingly presenting to the world just one -- my authentic self, to the extent my slow learning process has allowed me to understand and represent it. I finally know myself, this one identity, as well as I could ever hope to. I haven't time to go inventing others, and my one self has too much to do as it is.

More coming up about my relationship with Mia, and our plans for Intentional Community in Second Life. Let us know if you're a SL denizen and would like to meet us inworld, or if you're just interested and want to know more. Cheers for now,

Cal

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Love as Play

Posted on Jan 17th, 2008 by asecondlifediary : A Second Life Diary asecondlifediary
The Chemistry of Love


I spent a couple of hours after work recently with a sweet friend I hadn't seen in a couple of months. We talked mostly, as is my wont these days, about love, conversation and community. Since she is polyamorous, I had the rare luxury of bouncing some of the criticisms and doubts about the lifestyle of loving many people, off someone who supports that lifestyle -- usually I'm the one defending it against skeptics.

While many of these criticisms and doubts are, I think, borne of misunderstanding (or even fear), there are two that, from my perspective, have some validity. So I asked Lea (not her real name):
How do I know that my passion for simultaneously loving a lot of people isn't a rationalization of either:
  1.  An insecurity about losing love, such that I want to have some other loves 'in reserve' to 'fall back on' (the 'safety in numbers' doubt), or
  2. An addiction to the hormonal rush of phenylethylamine, dopamine, neopinephrine and oxytocin that accompanies 'falling in love', overwhelms us during the first stages of new love, and which, in any one relationship, mellows over time and is replaced with the more contented but less ecstatic feeling from endorphins (the 'addicted to love' doubt)?

I was willing to confess both insecurity and addiction, but Lea's answer was What difference does it make? Why does it matter why polyamorous people are driven to love many others instead of just one? So what if it reflects insecurity, or addiction, or both?

She's right. What was making me defensive, I think, is that I've known people who have kept lovers 'in reserve' because they're deeply neurotic, perhaps as a result of devastating pain after loss of a love so severe that they swore they would never allow themselves to suffer that way again. And, I've known people whose addiction to love (not the same thing as sex addiction, although some people can have both) has been very hurtful to the people they 'drop' as soon as the euphoria of the early-love hormonal cocktail starts to wear off.

But I know myself well enough to know I'm not neurotic, or even particularly insecure (I think we all have insecurities, but my big ego tends to overcome my insecurities most of the time). And I think I'm sensitive enough that I would not knowingly or deliberately hurt or abandon anyone in the ebb and flow of my passion for them. I believe in complete honesty in relationships, and not making promises or commitments without being positive of being able to live up to them. I believe we are capable of loving many without, in the process, diminishing our love for any one.

Most of all, though, my passion for polyamorism is because it's just fun. Most of us get too little fun in our lives. For so many, everything we do is serious (even games, for so many, are such a terribly serious endeavour!), and for so many, everything we do is work, struggle, effort. Perhaps I'm lazy, but at this point in my life, and believing what I do, I don't want to work that hard. Love is conversation (from the Latin meaning turning with) and I love moving with, exploring with, other people. Love is play, and I love to play.

Just to be clear, my love for Lea, and hers for me, are not erotic. She's too young for me and my 'paternal' feelings for her would make any kind of relationship of that kind just feel entirely wrong. She's an amazing young woman who has accomplished a remarkable amount in her life strictly by her own wits, talents and character and I am immensely proud of her. And she is remarkably courageous in her exploration of love and her openness to it, and in that sense she is a great inspiration to me and a sounding board for my thoughts and feelings. She will forever have a place in my heart.

Lea's words, and her own life experiences, have persuaded me even more that polyamourism is a possible way to live, one that need not be that difficult, and a joyful and healthy way to live.

If you could see my smile, the one I show all the time, and which some people recognize and others are blind to, you would know that I'm not crazy, or dangerous, or wasting time that should be spent on more serious, urgent pursuits. I've found my better way to live. Love, conversation, community. Easy, responsive and responsible, sustainable, and fun. The way life should be. You don't like that model, that's fine, show me another that works better. I'm listening, I'm paying attention, I'm open to suggestion. Help me imagine the possibilities you see, and I'll help you imagine mine. Playfully.

Cal

(Coming up next week -- what I love most about Mia)
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Concept of Polyamourism Challenged

Posted on Jan 22nd, 2008 by asecondlifediary : A Second Life Diary asecondlifediary
Mia

DESPITE US TALKING about polyamourism at our first meeting, and my delight in discovering just how open and loving and trusting Cal was, his steadfast holding up of polyamourism as the ideal relationship model was sometimes an issue for me.

His conclusion that exclusive, monogamous love wasn't the answer, and his desire to share and experience love with others, niggled at my self-confidence.   While I appreciated polyamourism as an 'ideal' - an ever-expanding, loving, secure circle - I wasn't entirely sure I could embrace it on a personal level.   

A lot of my hesitation and anxiety came from my own ego and need to feel 'special' and "the one and only" to him.    What if he preferred one of his 'newer' partners to me?   Wasn't it just asking for trouble, to continue to look for 'more' love when we already had it with one another?   Could I really trust Cal to treasure me?

I knew that what I loved most about him was his willingness to love - to give completely, without any holding back.   That's how I love and it's so rare to find it in a man.     I wanted to completely abandon myself to these delicious feelings of TOTAL giving.   

I had two thoughts running through my mind.   (1)   "We'll fall in love and he won't need that polyamoury" and (2) "What happens if I totally fall in love with him, and next month he finds someone 'better' than me?"   

IF polyamoury IS the ideal way to love, why hadn't the world embraced it?   If it was so good, why weren't we all living that way already?

Naturally, those people I confided in about this new, developing relationship and Cal's desire to have it as a polyamorous relationship, all expressed concern that in the end, I would be the one who would get hurt by it.   

One has to wonder about a relationship model that is held up as an ideal by men!   They are not normally acknowledged as responsible custodians of relationships.

Ironically, I sometimes found myself defending the concept because, despite my own hesitations and insecurities, I do believe, in theory, it COULD BE the ideal way to have relationships.     

Typical is this conversation with a female friend who is determinedly anti-polyamorous.   I had been showing her around the island that Cal and I have bought (for ourselves and eventually for the establishment of the Polyamorous / Intentional community):

HER: So is all this land just for the two of you?
ME: Well, yes.   Although eventually, we will be establishing a community here.
HER: What sort of community?
ME: A Polyamorous / Intentional Community
HER: I noticed from his profile he says he is available and doesn't believe in exclusive relationships.   Is that what you mean?
ME: For the time being though, we just want to focus on our relationship.
HER: But how will it feel when you see him have other relationships?
ME: I think it's easy for people to misinterpret ... everyone just thinks "sex" when they hear the word polyamourism.
HER: Well, it sounds like someone I know, so I think I understand.
ME: It's not a matter of him having other relationships, but the two of us including others in OUR relationship ...  so it belongs to all of us.
HER: But if it's how he describes it.   That each of us should be able to love a number of people.   Each of those relationships would be special.
ME: Him loving someone else doesn't take anything away from me.
HER: Then why is one more special than the others?
ME: It expands love.   All bringing something different to the whole person.
HER: But surely all the relationships are equal?    The other women are just as important to him as you.   If that's the case, why do you call it "including people in YOUR relationship"?
ME: Well, the concept of polyamoury is new to me ... it's just that ... a concept.   I see it as a social experiment.
HER: I've known people with this view.   And one relationship isn't more important than the others.   I wonder how that will feel to you?
ME: It may not be possible for me to embrace it .... but I want to see if I can.   Emotionally, I know, I will always need to feel that I am the woman be began this with.   I like the fact that we are starting this up and building it together.
HER: Well, he will have begun it with other women.    He's building this with you on Second Life, but he will have been living like this.   The others will have other things that they share with him in other ways.   I can't embrace it.   I'm going through this myself at the moment with a man who believes in multiple relationships, so I'm curious about how you think you will feel.
ME: I believe Cal's motives are loved-based, not just getting all the sex he can get.
HER: So is the guy I'm talking about.   He loves them all.
ME: All I know is that I have to feel important to him.   As long as he can maintain that special bond with me, I feel I will be able to accept other attachments.   But he has to also accept me having other close attachments to others as well.
HER: It feels strange to talk to somebody else about this, as the guy I know has been saying exactly the same things too.   And doing exactly the same things.
ME: Well, we have made an agreement not to proceed with this until we both feel comfortable with it, which I guess, translates as me feeling good about it.   He has been theorising about this for a long time.    I'm only new to it.   But I've always felt that love should be ever-expanding.   I think it's only our egos and self-esteem that prevent it.
HER: All I know is that I find it too upsetting.    I've known people like that, who have the same views as Cal's.   It's always upsetting for the woman, when you love one man and he feels the same way about a number of other women as he does about you.
It depends on if you feel you can have love relationships with a number of men too.
ME: Well, I have in the past.    When I first came to SL I had four lovers who all knew that I had other loving relationships, and it was fine.     I'm still friendly with them all.   But when I met someone I formed a deeper bond and he asked me to his partner in Second Life (the same official recognition as a marriage really in SL), I thought I could continue with the other relationships, but I couldn't.   It seems that I am monogamous in Second Life, as well as First Life.
HER: But what happens is that these men who want a polyamorous relationship, they just say, "Love doesn't have to be possessive, so we shouldn't get upset."
ME: But why do we need to feel as though we 'possess' that love though?
HER: I don't.   But if I love very deeply, it just happens naturally that I don't need anyone else in that way.
ME: I don't expect that I will satisfy every aspect of him.
HER: Yes, I suppose in that case ... if I don't love someone enough ...   But if it's really love, being with someone else is so much worse that there's no point.
ME: It's not a case of "not loving him enough". My definition of love is:   "If you love someone, you want them to be happy.   If they love you, they want you to be happy.   You each want the other person to be happy."
HER: Yeah, that's what my guy said to me.    "If you love someone you should want them to be happy and if having another relationship makes them happy, you should go along with that."
ME: Not if they know you are not happy about it.    I trust him to cherish me and want my happiness.
HER: But if polyamoury is his philsophy ...   I know one thing - when men like that fall in love, suddenly they're happy with just one woman!
ME: This concept of a Polyamorous Community has been something Cal has been thinking about for quite awhile.    I think it's a good concept - the spreading and sharing of love - but whether the reality is possible, I don't know.
HER: Men with that idea often have a reason.    A need.   Sometimes they can't take the risk of putting all their eggs in one basket.   They like to know they have more relationships to fall back on, if one person leaves them.
ME: At this stage, we are so wrapped up in one another, that's all we are thinking of ... just the two of us.
HER: Maybe YOU are focusing on the relationship, but it sounds as if he's focusing on a future with multiple relationships.
ME: Maybe I shouldn't have pre-empted what our future plans might be.   As I keep saying, it's just new to me ... but I want to give him the opportunity of at least taking it from a theoretical concept to a reality, if that is going to be possible.
HER: I'm not joking about the eggs in one basket philsophy.   One man I know did this for that reason - he said it was scary to depend on just one woman.    That he could get hurt and be left alone.   Polyamoury is a very 1970's concept.   I suppose that's why some of the me in their 50's here, still follow it.    We were all trying it then.   But this is really interesting and I'll be curious to hear from you how it works out.

My friend and I were then joined by others and ended our conversation, but I thought she had made several valid points, which I passed on to Cal.   (He will address these himself in a later posting).

These were:

1. The suggestion that polyamoury was a safety buffer for men who want to make sure they always have a woman in reserve in case things don't work out.

2. That polyamoury is a 1970's concept that some ageing hippies (mostly males), were still clinging to.    

3. Polyamoury could be the refuge of men who just wanted to get as much sex as they could get.

I'd be curious to know how many Polyamoury Communities have been started by women.   

Why is it that men have such a need for polyamoury?

I'd be very interested to hear from others on this.   Have you tried it?   What were the issues for you, and your partner?    What do others think of the concept?








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Self Indulgence

Posted on Jan 29th, 2008 by asecondlifediary : A Second Life Diary asecondlifediary
Harem

I AM GOING TO BE completely self-indulgent in this post and just talk about myself.

One of the things I have discovered in Second Life is that now that I am equipped with a beautiful-looking avatar, I just love attention!   Not that I haven't always liked being the centre of attention in First Life, but that has come about mostly because of my personality, not my looks.

This afternoon I had just changed into a rather exotic 'harem' costume when an academic friend invited me over to see their new property in SL.    I teleported over and was gratified by their enthusiastic greeting of, "Wow!   You look hottttttttt!"   It gave me pleasure to imagine their sexual arousal while we strolled about his land 'innocently' looking at the view, his boat etc. 

Not that I am a particularly sexual person, but it's something I've discovered about myself since I have 'created' a sexual persona in SL.   Being regarded as 'hot' isn't something I've really experienced before in First Life - not as an ongoing thing anyway.   I've certainly been told I look good, but 'hot' is something new for me.   I've always been a little shy when it comes to 'flaunting' my body, because even though I've always been small, I've always had a pot belly and consequently have been rather self-conscious.

Some time ago I had the revelation that I took much greater care of my avatar than I did of my First Life body.   After all, it's a simple matter to flatten my stomach, make myself taller, buy an alluring new outfit, blonde my hair etc., and have sexual appeal just by the click of a mouse.   My poor 'First Life' body has to satisfy itself with a hastily prepared meal (if any) and a quick shower and dress before it slaves away in front of the computer, bringing pleasure to my Second Life avatar.

It's absolutely fascinating how there is a cross over between the two worlds of First Life (where I do live) and Second Life (where I WANT to live).   When Cal and I met in SL, the relationship quickly brought a calmness and serenity to my First Life.    I had a feeling of 'belonging', that we were right together.   We spoke every day (both via the voice option in SL and telephoned Skype conversations) and I especially loved it when we fell asleep together - he on one side of the planet, and me on the other.

Having experienced a couple of other cyber relationships, I know there is a disparity between the 'imagined' relationship you create in your heart and mind, and the reality of actually meeting and facing the flesh and blood person.   It's easy to say and do whatever is easy, timely, convenient if you don't have to back it up with any real effort.

It wasn't until Christmas when Cal organised an international delivery of beautiful roses to my First Life home that our relationship REALLY became 'real' to me.   (He says it's always been real to him - but he tells me all the time that he has a really rich and vivid imagination).   And just recently he sent me a parcel he had wrapped himself and once again, he became 'real' to me as I clutched the wrapping paper to my breast, imagining his hands which had taken such great care to pack it securely.     

Second Life gives you the opportunity of a Second Chance - to do things without being restricted by what nature dealt out to you in a completely random, or genetic, throw of the dice.   The one thing you can't fudge IS your personality.   If you are a dope in First Life, you're a dope in SL as well!   If you're superficial in First Life, you are ABSOLUTELY superficial in Second.

Conversation is the key to me.   I can tell within a couple of sentences whether I am intellectually interested in the other person or not.   Those of you who have read the transcript of my first conversation with Cal (scroll down to the second post), will know that we had an instant rapport and absolutely no lull in the conversation at all.

You want instant gratification?   You pretty much got it in SL!   

It's as simple as going to the Search facility and typing in Philosophy, Sex, Education, Dancing, Cards, Business, Fetish, Horse Riding, Time Travel, Art, Gardening, Knitting - WHATEVER you desire, you can find it here.   (I went searching for an opium den one night and found two).

One thing that amazed me (and still does) was reading about a woman in SL who could only get sexual satisfaction from sexual penetration while she was wearing a urine-soaked nappy.   (Apparently her partner just eased aside the wet nappy and went for it!)   Not only that - but there was a WHOLE GROUP of people who had the same fetish!!!    I still can't believe it!    That you could have a really unusual desire, and still find others who share your interest.

BUT ... I do want to stress ... SL is NOT, NOT, NOT just all about sex.   It's just usually the first port of call for a lot of people.   Like kids being let loose in a sweet shop, it seems that most people, given ultimate freedom, just naturally seek out sexual freedom first.

I think of myself as probably a sexually moderate person - liberated, but moderate.   I've lived as a hippy on a nude beach and indulged in some pretty promiscuous sex, but I am pretty... I was going to say pedestrian, but that's not quite the right word, in my sexual tastes.   Normal is probably closer to the mark.   (Probably at the high end of normal and the very low end of REALLY adventurous!)

My first sexual experience in SL was a threesome with a man I hardly knew (but later became very good friends with) and a courtesan.   To be truthful, it was technically challenging - so many things to think about as far as positioning the body, noticing what the other two were doing, come up with text that matched the action, anticipate the flow of 'energy' etc.   That was 10 months ago and I haven't felt inspired to repeat the experience.

THE BEST PART OF SL is the opportunity to be expressive and creative in so many different ways.   I love decorating myself - clothes, hair, tattoos, a lovely new skin, exotic head dress, exotic costumes - in fact, anything exotic.   It's an ongoing process and an evolutionary process.   I am constantly stimulated by what I see around me.   

And I love gardening.   So easy to do in SL - just 'rez' your plants and move them about with your pointer.   I can make mountains, lakes, valleys with grand sweeps of my mouse.   It's like being mother nature.

Friendship is another important component of the SL experience.   Those of you who have read my first post know that I met Cal when I teleported into Midnight Reflections and found him sitting on a mushroom, lost in his own thoughts, innocently admiring the view.   

My first friend, Kara, I met when I was wandering in a forest; my second, Alt, when I needed some technical advice and he was called in to help; Lucinda is a great designer who came to my aid when I needed some 'image' adjusting.   Others have been people I have met through work in SL, when I've just been out exploring, or have been introduced to.   One, a well-known literary figure in SL, I met during a writers' event where we quickly establish a kinship through a shared sense of humour.

You can go into SL and spend all your time in solitary existence - just wandering and exploring and playing.   You can interact on a deep and meaningful level with so many different personality types.   You can deal with others strictly on a business level - buying and selling, investing, speculating.   

One of the things I do find hard to understand, given the absolute freedom we have in SL to create ANYTHING we want - lifestyle, looks, relationships, homes, persona - that so many people just recreate what they already have in their 'real' lives.   One avatar I know even wears his underpants in SL!   lol   I laugh because I just find it so constrained, that they don't ALLOW themselves the freedom to do just what they WANT to do, rather than what they are used to doing, or think they should do!

What we do in SL tells us so much about who we are.   I think there are so many people who are so used to being confined, that they don't comprehend what freedom they do have.   Like an elephant, its leg tied with rope since infancy, never ever considers breaking free ...

So many people seek to have the life in SL that they aspire to in First Life.   One person I know, when I asked what their 'ultimate fantasy' was, said it was to go to some well known American yacht club in SL.    THAT is your ultimate fantasy?????   There are flying carpets here, dragons, elves, BDSM, vampires, magnificent architectural constructions, Arabian nights and all you want to do is go to a yacht club?    

I know someone else who has a refrigerator stocked full of food.   Why?   We can't eat in SL.    One neighbourhood I visited, I fully expected to hear the sound of bloody lawnmowers!   I've seen fully-stocked bars and grocery shelves and even a marble toilet.  Why on earth would you have a toilet?    Who would WANT to recreate the tedium of pissing!

But that's the fascinating part about it all - why we do what we do.    What we get out of it.   How it makes us feel.

While I can't say that establishing an Intentional Community was my ultimate fantasy, meeting someone like Cal was a hope I'd long had.   That I would meet  someone who stimulated me and loved me and wanted to share, if not their whole life with, at least a substantial part of it.

It's a journey I'm enjoying.   





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