I think we need to normalize the idea of marrying friends. I donāt mean in a āthe best romantic relationships come from the best friendshipsā type way, though I do believe thatās true. I mean in a āI have zero romantic feelings for you, but I would totally spend the rest of my life committed to a future where you are my primary partner and maybe even raise a family togetherā type way.
Like, I donāt think it should be an aromantic-exclusive option, or a plan B when you and your best friend are still single at 40 and want to take yourselves out of the dating market.
Iāve heard it mostly as that backup plan, that āif I donāt find anyone, Iāll just marry Trish hahaā, and I donāt think thatās even what Iām talking about normalizing. Thatās a secondary outcome, seen as āgiving upā on finding āreal loveā, and even if a pair of friends go for it, itās plagued with this general feeling of āsub parā.
What I mean is that marrying a best friend (or having a committed intimate or emotional platonic relationship) should be seen as just as worth doing as marrying someone youāre in love with. It should be normal for teenagers to try as many committed friendships as they do romantic relationships. It should be normal for someone to say āthis is my best friend and if everything works out, maybe weāll move in together laterā or āTrish and I have been roommates for two years now. Weāre considering adopting soon, or Trish might carry a child!ā
And as an aromantic person, it shouldnāt be strange for me to say āI prefer friendship to romanceā. People should hear that and nod their heads like āthatās understandable. John feels the same.ā
Hell, I see so many people expressing that they prefer their friendsā company to their romantic partnerās. āMy friends understand me better and I think treat me betterā and theyāre expected to go home to this person, to marry and have kids with this person. Itās bizarre to me. Your platonic feelings for your friend arenāt inferior to your romantic feelings for your boyfriend, and if one of them treats you better than the other, I think you should probably rethink which one is your primary partner.
I also find it strange that itās not more common in poly spaces for a friend to be considered a legitimate āpartnerā. In a world where friendships were just as likely to bloom into life partnerships as romantic relationships, I think polyamory would be much more commonplace. āI committed to Josephine about a year ago and now we own a home, but I fell in love with Joe about six months ago and weāre all trying to make it work.ā Josephine shouldnāt have to worry about her partner leaving her for Joe just because their bond is romantic and therefore the āsensibleā relationship to choose over the other.
Iām just ranting at this point, but I reiterate: committed friendships should not be seen as strange and āsadā, but as a legitimate option for a lifetime commitment. Not just for aromantics like myself, but for everyone. It should just be normal.
And not to be presumptuous, but I donāt think Iām alone in this thinking