Polygamy in Modern-Day Marriages

Interestingly, polygamy has not yet entered my consulting room in any significant way. What I am more likely to encounter are the consequences of relationships that exist outside of marriage, a topic I plan to explore in a future blog.

Historically, the acquisition of an additional wife was often viewed as a sign of affluence, status, and social standing. In many African communities, polygamy was culturally accepted and woven into the fabric of society long before the arrival of Christianity, which introduced a different set of values and expectations around marriage.

The recent Netflix series The Polygamist has reignited conversations around the subject, bringing a traditionally private arrangement into public discourse and inviting viewers to examine their own assumptions and beliefs.

There are, of course, many perspectives from which polygamy can be viewed. A feminist lens may raise questions around equality, autonomy, and power. A religious perspective may challenge or support the practice depending on the faith tradition. A cultural perspective may see it as part of heritage and identity, while a humanistic perspective may focus on individual choice, consent, and wellbeing.

As a psychotherapist, I am less interested in determining whether polygamy is right or wrong and more interested in understanding what human needs it seeks to meet.

Historically, economic necessity may have played a significant role. For some women, becoming part of a polygamous family may have offered security, stability, and access to resources that may otherwise have been unavailable. Today, however, the conversation appears more complex. As society evolves and women increasingly achieve educational and financial independence, the reasons individuals choose polygamous relationships may be less about survival and more about personal values, lifestyle, companionship, family structure, or belonging.

The desire for companionship, attachment, commitment, and family remains as relevant today as it has ever been. For some, the idea of sharing a partner may feel less threatening than the prospect of loneliness or the absence of meaningful connection. Others may find fulfilment in a family structure that offers support, shared responsibilities, and community. While modern relationships often place immense pressure on one partner to fulfil every emotional, practical, financial, and sexual need, polygamous families may distribute some of these demands across a wider network.

Of course, this does not mean the arrangement is without complexity. Questions around jealousy, fairness, power, emotional security, and hierarchy inevitably arise. Does it matter whether you are the first wife, second wife, or third? How are needs negotiated? How is emotional equity maintained? These are not insignificant considerations.

What strikes me is that many of the motivations people may attribute to polygamy are not entirely different from those that underpin monogamous relationships. Whether we choose one partner or several, we are often searching for the same things: to feel loved, to belong, to be chosen, to feel safe, and to know that we matter.

The difference may lie not in the need itself, but in the structure through which that need is expressed.

The modern-day man is also worthy of consideration. What motivates a man to pursue a polygamous relationship structure in a society where monogamy remains the dominant ideal? Is it about status, desire, companionship, legacy, family, or something else entirely? Is he seeking more connection, or is he avoiding the depth and vulnerability that one intimate relationship can demand?

There are no simple answers.

What is clear, however, is that conversations around polygamy often evoke strong emotional responses. Judgement, shame, curiosity, admiration, criticism, and even envy can emerge depending on our own experiences and beliefs about relationships. Perhaps this is why the topic remains so difficult to discuss openly. It asks us to examine not only the choices of others, but our own assumptions about love, commitment, fidelity, and what constitutes a successful relationship.

In the consulting room, I am reminded daily that regardless of how relationships are structured, people are often seeking the same things: love, security, belonging, acceptance, and connection. Whether those needs are pursued through monogamy or polygamy, the emotional questions remain remarkably similar.

Perhaps the conversation is not ultimately about polygamy at all, but about the many ways human beings attempt to meet their need for connection and create meaningful lives with one another.

Warmly

Jules

Leave a comment