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Volume 4, Issue 6, June 2005
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Hot Topic:
The Lost State of Dating |
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.
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Articles
of the Month
Interesting
facts
about childbirth and mothering in
the US from babycenter.com.
This
article
is a tribute to thoughtful, caring
parents and the value of sexuality
education. This family stands as a
model for those children who struggle
with gender issues.
An article
posted to AVN Online Magazine looks
at Ohio State's new restrictive laws
regarding "adult businesses".
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Research
of the Month
A new
StatsCan study
finds that more than one in ten Canadian
kids have had sex by the age of 14
or 15.
In an
article
published by the Globeandmail.com,
new research asks what factors cause
some pedophiles to move beyond voyeuristic
activity into violence.
The
Vancouver Sun recently published an
article
about a Simon Fraser University study
that suggests that the poor memory
suffered by some pregnant women may
be connected to the sex of the child
they are carrying.
This
long, though worthwhile article
discusses what we've suspected for
some time now: that women's bodies
are different in many ways from men's.
The research is divided into sections....read
as long as you're interested for each
section stands alone.
This
article
published in the Boston Globe suggests
that just as in heterosexual relationships,
women in homosexual relationships
want to get married more than men
do.
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Sites
of the Month
Sex
sells, and this
site features some of the best examples
of this tenet in advertising images.
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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.
© Pega Ren. 2005.
All Rights Reserved.
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Upcoming Appearances:
Hot off the press!
Dr Ren is the featured sexologist in the August
issue of Chatelaine,
where she'll be discussing body language. Find
this intriguing article on the Sex and Relationship
page and learn what it means when that fellow
you're talking to stands with his hands in his
pockets or fiddles with his glass. When it is
available, Smart Sex Talk will provide a link
directly to the article. Check back for details!
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Call to Action: Kraft
Foods
The right wing faction at the American Family
Association want to punish Kraft for supporting
the Gay Games. Please take a few seconds and click
here if you would like to thank Kraft for their
support of the Games.
Be aware that you will have to fill in a name
and some contact information to submit your comments
via the online form. When I sent in my comments,
I received an email response that included the
following other options for contacting Kraft:
Phone:
1-800-323-0768
(Consumer Relations Center is open weekdays from
9am to 9pm, Eastern Standard Time)
Mail:
Kraft Foods Global, Inc.
Consumer Relations
1 Kraft Court
Glenview, IL 60025
~ Editor
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Case Study: Creative Resolutions
I know that therapy is progressing
well when I hear clients say, “I’ve
never thought of it that way before.” Indeed,
exploring different perspectives is one of the
goals and benefits of therapeutic intervention.
When couples come in, each is generally hoping
the other will recognize the error of their ways
and change. Sometimes, however, therapy catalyzes
changes that neither anticipated. Such was the
case with Matthew and Shirley.
This couple presented with serious
sexual issues. They had known each other since
high school, dated through their university years,
and married shortly after each had established
their careers. This should, they believed, have
guaranteed security and happiness. They had added
two children, reasonably spaced, and carried a
manageable mortgage. They had followed all the
rules, yet they were miserable. They had not had
sex for months, and their intimacy had dwindled
to occasional cuddles on the couch.
Shirley bore the scars of an
original family plagued by a parent addicted to
alcohol. Matt’s family was less chaotic,
but distant nonetheless. The cocoon they built
around their nuclear family buffeted the impact
of the outside world, but failed to protect them
from the boredom that infects relationships not
carefully tended. Each wished for an end to their
stalemate, but neither knew how to accomplish
this goal.
During therapy, the legacy of
Shirley’s original family stalled their
progress. Unable to trust her own father, she
now distrusted the father of her children. She
saw the flaw in this, but was unable or unwilling
to overcome it. She was intractably resistant
to facing her demons and, despite my encouragement
for her to attend a few ACoA meetings, she did
not want to be “one of those pathetic people”.
Matt deflated when Shirley decided she did not
want to attend any more counselling sessions either.
She decided she just wanted to be left alone;
therapy was far too much work for her. She got
a prescription for SSRI anti-depressants from
her family doctor and retreated into a world bound
by her domestic duties. She and Matt became ever
more sexually estranged.
After a hiatus of some months,
Matthew called for another appointment. He had
done an experiment: he did not initiate sex to
see how long it would be before Shirley would.
Not only did Shirley not approach Matt, she failed
even to mention the change. Matt painfully watched
his dreams collapse.
Matt came in looking for options.
I suggested he must discuss this impasse with
his wife and listen carefully to her responses.
Shirley admitted that she was quite content living
in a celibate marriage and suggested that if Matt
wanted sex, he should have it with others. She
had some conditions: complete discretion and privacy.
She did not want to experience any embarrassment
from his affairs nor did she want them to affect
her family.
This was not the outcome Matthew
wanted, but he had learned over the months of
therapy that Shirley did not share his goal of
marital intimacy. Though she abdicated her role
as sex partner, she did not want to disrupt her
family.
Shirley’s disclosure set
in motion Matt’s re-assessment of their
marriage. He set about to accommodate the choices
that would preserve their relationship with as
little disruption as possible, but also began
putting in place outlets that provided him with
social interaction. Because of his unique situation
(happily married but non-sexual with his wife)
most single women were uninterested in him. He
explored polyamory brunches and found folks who
understood and honoured his commitment to his
family. The last time I saw Matthew, he was happily
dating a woman who understood that Matt was not
going to leave his wife any more than she would
forsake her own intimate network. Without Matthew’s
amorous intentions pressuring her, Shirley became
happier and more relaxed. Everybody won with this
unique and creative solution to a stalemated problem.
Might this couple have resolved
their issues differently? Of course! Shirley could
have sorted out her own issues and worked together
with Matthew to re-ignite their mutual desire.
Matthew could have cheated. They may have decided
to separate, as most would do under these circumstances.
None of these options worked for this couple,
however. They absolutely did not want to disrupt
their family, and, aside from their sexual incompatibility,
got along famously. Bolstered by books and supportive
websites addressing alternative household arrangements,
Matthew managed to preserve his marriage and family
while exercising his freedom to find love and
companionship.
Quite often, we just do not know
where therapy will lead. So many variables comprise
the mix that each situation must be explored individually.
The point is that solutions can be found that
minimize heartache and disappointment. Matthew
and Shirley represent an uncommon resolution,
but theirs works for them. With their family now
intact and each of them individually happier,
who’s to say this was not the best of the
possible answers?
© Pega Ren. 2005. All Rights
Reserved. |
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Book Review
The BIG Book of Masturbation:
From Angst to Zeal
by Martha Cornog
(San Francisco: Down There Press, 2003, 335 pages)
The BIG Book of Masturbation is described by the
publishers as a “Multi-disciplinary compendium
of source material and commentary…from law,
medicine, sociology, linguistics, anthropology,
psychology, psychiatry, religion, and history,”
as well as literature and humour.” Certainly
a full course menu, and this book lives up to
its promise.
The book is organized
into six sections (Basics; Nature: People, Animals,
and Evolution; Cultural Authorities; Knowledge
and Advice from Sexuality Experts; Talking about
It; and Masturbation Onward), allowing the reader
to compartmentalize the abundance of information.
This is truly a BIG book, in terms of physical
size, number of pages, and generosity of information.
It’s a sort of Everything You Want to Know
about Masturbation but were Afraid to Ask.
The book addresses
important questions: “When did you begin
to masturbate? How, specifically, do you do it?
Do you have orgasms? When do you find yourself
masturbating most? When is masturbation least
on your mind? Why do you think that is? Do you
enjoy masturbating? What role do you think it
plays in your mental and physical health and your
appreciation of sex?” (page 227).
Dr. Cornog addresses
the sensitive topic of sex with critical perspective,
permitting even a timid reader to trust that the
information is accurate. She treats masturbation
specifically as important, valuable, and worth
discussing and is refreshing in her lack of judgment.
After reading this book, the reader fully understands
that guilt is optional (…or at least another
discussion entirely).
What a relief this
book will be for the early adolescent—or
parent wanting to talk to one! In fact, I can
think of no one who wouldn’t benefit from
the information in this book. Not bad for a brave,
new, BIG book of masturbation!
Click here
to purchase The BIG Book of Masturbation:
From Angst to Zeal from our affiliate, Little
Sister's Book and Art Emporium.
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Toy of the Month:
Way
to Her Heart Gift Pack
Flowers
and candy aren't the only way to win her: the
Way to Her Heart gift pack provides an alternate
route for him to take, with Nina Hartley's Advanced
Guide to Oral Sex DVD, deliciously flavored Midnight
Fire Gel and the ever popular Classic G vibrator.
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Humour
For those of you who are tickled by animals
with decidedly human prerogatives, some funny advertising
from DHL Couriers. You will need to be able to play
.mpegs (download the free Windows Media Player here.)
Vendetta
1
Vendetta
2
~
Ratzinger not first choice
for Pope
As I understand it, Ratzinger
was not the Cardinals' first choice. That was, interestingly,
Cardinal Hans Grapje.
Grapje was raised in a Catholic school in The Hague
and, as a young man, aspired to become a priest, but
was drafted into the Army during WWII and spent two
years co-piloting bombers until his aircraft was shot
down in 1943 and he lost his left arm. Captain Grapje
spent the rest of the war as a chaplain, giving spiritual
aid to soldiers, both Allied and enemy, after finally
becoming a priest.
After the war, he became a Monsignor, serving as a missionary
in Africa, piloting his own plane (in spite of his handicap)
to villages across the continent. In 1997, now an Archbishop,
Grapje was serving in Zimbabwe when an explosion in
a silver mine caused a cave-in. Archbishop Grapje went
down into the mine to administer last rights to those
too severely injured to move. Another shaft collapsed,
and he was buried for three days, suffering multiple
injuries, including the loss of his right eye. The high
silver content in the mine's air gave him purpura, a
lifelong condition characterized by purplish skin blotches.
Today,
even though Cardinal Grapje has devoted his life to
the service of God as a scholar, mentor, and holy man,
church leaders felt that he should not ascend to the
Papacy.
They felt that the Church would never accept a one-eyed,
one-armed, flying purple Papal leader.
Quotes
of the Month
If people are talking
about you behind your back, you're going the right way.
~ Janice Taylor
Life is a great big canvas,
and you should throw all the paint on it you can.
~ Danny Kaye
To hurt someone you know
will forgive you is the unkindest thing of all.
~ Robert Brault
Anger is one letter away
from danger.
~ Eleanor Roosevelt
Remember not only to say
the right thing in the right place, but far more difficult
still, to leave unsaid the wrong thing at the tempting
moment.
~ Ben Franklin
Marriage: A community
consisting of a master, a mistress, and two slaves,
making in all, two.
~ Ambrose Bierce
Expecting the world to
treat you fairly because you are a good person is a
little like expecting the bull not to attack you because
you are a vegetarian.
~ Dennis Wholey |