Maybe we have slightly different definitions of attraction. As I've said, I've seen/met my share of people I thought were attractive after I got married. I wasn't interested in them. I didn't consider pursuing any kind of relationship with them. I don't flirt. I didn't have to fight any urges. I just thought they were attractive. Finding various people attractive, whether committed or not, is a biological instinct.
Words have meaning, they are similar but vastly different:
- Being / finding someone attractive -> judging the person 'virtues', the ability to assess the other gender's qualities (or same gender too, we can usually judge attractiveness)
- Being attracted -> feeling a sexual pull towards the person. Wanting to mate, instinctively.
IN my family we are lucky with appearance, I have 2 female cousins, one is very beautiful.
I can tell she is attractive (she built her livelihood around that). I am NOT attracted to her (that would be messed up).
I have some attractive male family members too. I am NOT attracted to any of them.
That is the difference and the true meaning of the definitions.
More than a biological instinct is a biological skill, the instinct is the one promoting the pull towards mating (in this case).
Biologically and evolutionarily, humans are not meant to be monogamous. We are meant to procreate with as many different people as possible in order to pass on our genes and (I can't think of the word for making something the most likely) ensure survival. For the most part, we can't just turn that off.
It is not entirely true: is true that we are physically wired for genetic biodiversity, that is a successful evolutionary trait. It's not true we are polygamous or monogamous, we are neither:
- Monogamy is the most reliable survival strategy for your genes, it raises the chances of the offspring to survive as they are taken care and create the potentially most solid unit in human society (family). It's not a curse, it's a blessing.
- Polygamy gives a chance of survival when you do not have a family unit, so for isolated individuals is a advantageous tactic (think singles ) to A) audit and find a reliable life partner [most successful survival strategy - family] like job interviewing or B) try anyway to pass on your genes if the option A) failed. [better than nothing] - by the way, dopamine honeymoon high lasts from few weeks to about 2 years, it's a chemical "love feeling" that fades, nature scripted it for us to procreate even if we do not match with the partner, so you get a child or 2 then you split to search for someone else.
Both strategies have also their "drawbacks"
- Monogamy carries the risk of losing your life partner, that's why we feel family as an extension of ourselves and loss of beloved ones is tragic
- Polygamy carries the risks to health and survival (diseases chance skyrockets), and often challenges the area of other people (think betrayal and cheating), which for our ancestors meant often being killed or hunted down (think how many societies punished adultery brutally, often by death). In fact except some leaders in some societies and cultures, polygamy was never seen as "good". It was the losers' only option to try to procreate, and usually polygamous people end up alone (even today) because nobody wants to trust them in a monogamous relationship.
I think I get what you're saying. Once you are committed, you're not interested in other people, regardless of their attractiveness. That's pretty much the same thing I'm saying. I, too, don't think M is necessary for that kind of commitment. I didn't want to get married when I was dating my H. He insisted because of his catholic upbringing. Whatever. There are some positive legal reasons for marriage, but I didn't need the formality to know that I was committed.
Exactly, I don't commit easily. I was one of the worst example of "polygamous losers" around. Plenty of girls, not one I felt to commit with. It's paradoxically pretty lonely, sure you may argue variety is fun... only in the short term, gets old pretty fast, you feel the need for something more fulfilling, a person you can share true intimacy.
So when I found a girl that met my needs, I lost attraction for all other women, no matter how attractive they might be, interest drops to zero. There is no temptation not even when the other person really tries to just "get you", it is no longer exciting it becomes awkward.
You may argue that my choice in matter of women is poor, since 3 out of 3 girlfriends cheated on me. And you'd be right. Still no matter what they did my loyalty was absolute, I just don't feel the need for another woman when I am committed. I "marry" without the ceremony, for me as well is just a formality.
Feeling attraction for other women is a clear sign that my relationship with my partner is broken, that something is terribly wrong or that love is gone.
[This message edited by BackfromtheStorm at 10:25 PM, Monday, February 2nd]