Decolonizing Love

Decolonizing Love

10 Practices for Healthy Hinge Relationships

And the monogamous habits you need to break if you want your polyamorous dynamics to thrive.

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Decolonizing Love
May 18, 2026
∙ Paid

In polyamory, the hinge is the person who connects two or more partners who are not themselves romantically involved with each other, as such the hinge holds a position unlike any other. They are not simply a link in a chain. They are a culture-setter, a conduit, and in many ways, the emotional blueprint for the entire polycule. The choices a hinge makes on a daily basis either reproduce compulsory monogamy patterns or actively dismantle them.

The hinge connects two or more partners who are not themselves dating each other. The moment your partners start dating others, they become hinges too.

It is not easy to be a good hinge. Most of us transition to polyamory carrying a heavy cultural baggage, a colonial inheritance that shapes our models of love. We’ve been taught to see relationships through possessiveness, the absolute primacy of the couple, codependency, and the scarcity myth that affection is a finite resource. If one partner receives romantic love, the other must be losing it.

A good hinge has to unlearn all of that in real time. They must examine these models, challenge them, and practice a different way of loving.

What follows are ten essential practices for becoming a healthier hinge.

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