Fifty years ago parents
wrung their hands wondering what to do with their
daughter who was ‘going steady’ with
her high school sweetheart. Back then, parents encouraged
their daughters to see many boys, correctly believing
that this would provide experience with a wide array
of relationship styles, promoting better choices
of a life mate. Behind that rationale, however,
lurked a hopeful belief that seeing many casual
suitors would keep their daughters chaste. The practical
goal of society’s dating strategy was to get
Susie to the altar, if not as a virgin then at least
not as a mother-to-be.
The sixties’
sexual revolution, and the widespread availability
of the birth control pill, changed all that. Now
that girls could say ‘yes’ as well as
‘no’ to sex without the threat of unintended
and often unwanted pregnancies, parents squirmed
realizing their little princess could be experimenting
sexually with several boyfriends, none of whom she
may marry. The face of dating changed.
Today, parents are
relieved if their daughters hook up with only one
partner. In the effort to keep our girls safe, we
settle for fidelity if not virginity. Sadly, the
double standard still informs our decisions about
sex and dating—boys get a free pass (if not
a wink and a nudge) about early sexual activity
while girls juggle labels of ‘slut’
(those who put out) and ‘bitch’ (those
who do not). Saddest perhaps is the trend for very
young girls to provide sexual favours (usually oral
sex) for multiple boys while receiving no sexual
pleasure themselves.
Dating seems to have
disappeared from our cultural landscape. People
now define as single or partnered/married. Rarely
do we hear that someone is playing the field or
dating several people. The sex-negative message
from half a century ago trumpets a different answer
to the question of mate acquisition, but it is no
less damaging. We hear routinely of new couples
assuming sexual exclusivity after they have had
sex but before they know much else about each other—an
‘all your eggs in one basket’ approach.
Not surprisingly, most of those couples emerge some
months later disillusioned and believing they will
find true love in another lover, not in another
system.
The opposite of single
is married, not dating. Dating and marriage should
feel different from each other. Why are we so quick
to abandon the freedom of choice dating offers,
replacing it instead with Polaroid-quick courtships
and instant sexual exclusivity? Do we still believe
that sex is so potent, so dangerous, that we dare
not play with it? Haven’t we grown beyond
the ‘kisses are contracts’ stage? Have
we been so silenced about negotiation and communication
that we settle for any relationship that affords
us sexual gratification? Moreover, if that is true,
how much talking could be going on within that relationship
regarding how sex can best be expressed and enjoyed?
Surely we can do better
if we define dating as an enjoyable process in which
we learn about potential partners by trying them
on for a good fit. We need not limit ourselves to
exclusivity with each one to whom we are sexually
attracted. We are willing to shop endlessly for
a new car or home, yet couple far too quickly once
we establish a sexual liaison. Responsible, compassionate
sex should be an adjunct to the process of coupling,
not the prime reason for doing so.
There
is an old saying: “You have to kiss a lot
of frogs before you meet the handsome prince (or
princess).” How much happier we would be if
we used sex as but one of the many criteria upon
which we base our coupling decisions.
© 2005. Pega Ren,
Ed.D. All Rights Reserved.