Radical Love: An interview with Natty Seidenverg

http://www.opednews.com/articles/Radical-Love-An-interview-by-Mickey-Z-090223-825.html

2/23/09
by Mickey Z.

Natty Seidenverg is a writer and an activist from the high desert 
region of Cascadia. She's been giving radical love workshops for 
about three years and was kind enough share her thoughts with me, via 
e-mail. Here's the result:

Mickey Z.: What do you mean by the term "radical love"? Does it 
automatically imply polyamory? Does it automatically exclude monogamy?

Natty Seidenverg: Radical love does not have a concrete definition, 
and that is purposeful. I came to my understandings of radical love 
and radical environmentalism at the same time, so for me, radical 
love is literally against concrete. Rather than offering a single, 
universal definition for "radical love," I think we need to pay more 
attention to the heterogeneity of love in varying circumstances, and 
we need to become attuned to the fact that just as most living things 
change across time and from one bioregion and one person to another, 
so do ideas about love. Love is not manufactured, and it defies 
stasis or universality. That said, radical love as a term does have 
some broad and important currents. Unlike monogamy or polyamory, 
radical love is about quality, not quantity. For me, radical love 
simply means applying my politics to my way of loving.

MZ: I'll assume you're talking about something deeper and more 
venerable than a 1960s "love the one you're with" philosophy- 
something more rooted in social activism. Can you offer a little 
historical context for radical love?

NS: The stereotype about the 1960's free love movement has to do with 
the patriarchal appropriation of freedom and sexuality­the idea that 
the only place for a woman in a movement is prone, or that women are 
not "radical" enough if they do not succumb to the desires of their 
male comrades.    But the 1960's/1970's free love movement was rooted 
in an earlier free love movement of the late 1800's. The first wave 
was basically an overlap of the anarchist movement (which was male 
dominated) and the women's rights movement (which was mostly 
statist). At that intersection, free love as a philosophy was born. 
At the heart of free love at that time was not only women's right to 
say yes to sex outside of the traditional strictures, but also their 
ability to say no. Marital rape was not condemned back then. The 
early free love movement was about the right of everyone to say yes 
to love and sex, as well as to say no. That is the fundamental 
difference between the 1960's stereotypes and the root of the free 
love movement. My understanding of radical love is informed much more 
by the earlier movement.

MZ: Wow...this sounds like yet another example of our (sic) history 
books failing us miserably. All right, with a flexible definition and 
some historical background as foundation, let's bring radical love 
into present day perspective. As you well know, human society and 
culture are dominated by hierarchies, profit margins, and a dangerous 
disconnect between humans and their natural habitat. How does one 
love ethically in such a corrupted environment?

NS: Well, first of all I want to say that we live in a dominator 
culture that is globalizing and everyday making the existence of 
healthy, land based communities more impossible.    In this 
particular culture, imbalance and exploitation are so common that 
many people fail to perceive them. We have imbalances in power 
between people­or what bell hooks calls a "white supremacist 
capitalist patriarchy." We have devastating imbalances between humans 
and the more-than-human world. How can we expect to have healthy 
relationships when our most basic relationship of survival­our 
relationship to the natural world­ is based on exploitation and 
alienation? And finally, we have imbalances in human values. In a 
capitalist society, greed, control, and ownership are privileged 
values and even necessary to survival. Rather than the values of 
generosity, community, communication, and consensus, it is the former 
values that gain "freedom" in this society.    So how do we love and 
live in a balanced, ethical way when we are surrounded by this world 
of imbalance? I would say the first step is to name the 
disconnections, exploitations, and power imbalances, as I have 
briefly done here. Secondly, we need to consider how each of these 
imbalances are "normalized" through the institution of compulsory 
monogamy. And finally, radical or ethical love relationships requires 
challenging ourselves at each level of imbalance­between humans, 
humans and the natural world, and human values. Only when we begin to 
think of our relationships as deeply entwined with these other 
processes will we begin to live in full, healthy, empowering, free, 
and abundant communion with others.

MZ: I can just imagine the extreme reactions you get to the phrase 
"institution of compulsory monogamy." Like any deep-seated 
institution (e.g. meat-based diet, religions, capitalism, etc.) 
monogamy sometimes seems as "natural" as breathing. Obviously, you're 
not condemning any two humans who willingly choose a one-on-one 
relationship so talk to me a little about the institution of monogamy 
(with a capital M, as you often say).

NS: Institutions are "mechanisms of social order and cooperation 
governing the behavior of a set of individuals." As an institution, 
monogamy is enforced via state, church, and social coercion. 
Monogamy, similar to heterosexuality, intra-racial dating, and 
conforming to gender binaries, is compulsory. Most people don't know 
they have other options. Monogamy is reinforced at every level of 
society, whether through jokes at the family dinner table, sneers at 
the strange neighbors, legal mandates enforced by state and federal 
governance, codes of conduct in employment contracts, or morals 
preached at the local church. Monogamy is culturally and 
institutionally enforced as the only, the natural, and the moral way 
to live. I like to talk about "Monogamy with a capital M" to 
differentiate this pattern of social coercion from the individual act 
of two people choosing to be in a loving relationship without other 
sexual partners. Such a choice is no less beautiful than any other 
loving formation. Once a person starts thinking outside the Monogamy 
"box," a one-on-one relationship becomes freer, and one begins to see 
all her partner's relationships as valuable, nuanced, and meaningful. 
It feels very powerful to understand oneself as a single thread in 
the web of a lover's relationships, and to want to support that web 
rather than wanting to dominate it.

MZ: What seems most interesting and perhaps daunting in a way is how 
radical love (or polyamory) differs from other non-traditional 
choices. If someone swears off the animal-based diet and becomes 
vegan, it's clear: you will not see them eating a Big Mac. If another 
person renounces, say, Catholicism and becomes an atheist, well, 
you're not gonna run into them receiving Communion at Sunday Mass. 
Defining radical love, on the other hand, appears to be more like 
trying to define "art." You know, the whole eye of the beholder 
deal.    How would you counsel someone seeking to break free of 
compulsory Monogamy and instead embark on a personal journey of ethical loving?

NS: You are absolutely right. Radical love is a different way of 
thinking about the world that defies easy categories. It involves 
being perceptive, nuanced, and communicative to no end. It involves 
having the self-awareness to know when we might be making assumptions 
or following pre-conceived narratives. It involves creativity, 
clarity, care, consent, and confidence. It involves having a sense of 
security in ones' self, so much so that the integrity of a lover is 
more important than the stability of any particular form the 
relationship might take. Most of all, it involves a very wonderful 
word, "compersion," which poly writers describe as the opposite of 
jealousy. It is the feeling of being happy, even elated, for your 
lover when s/he embraces other relationships, sexual and nonsexual 
alike. It takes a strong heart to love deeply and freely at the same 
time. That strength does not come overnight, but it is a small form 
of liberation which informs and shapes a foundation for all our 
political and social struggles.

To read more about Natty Seidenverg and radical love, you can visit: 
http://loveradical.wordpress.com
http://polywog.wordpress.com

Mickey Z. can be found on the Web at http://www.mickeyz.net

.


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