Quote:
Originally Posted by lostforkate
I appreciate your position on staying neutral and applaud you Nina, I am not quite at your level.
|
Oh gosh, I wish I was at "my level" 24/7 ... (twinkle twinkle...)
Quote:
Originally Posted by lostforkate
The cheating husband has had unprotected sex routinely with their SO, and so it is habit forming.
|
Maybe, I am sure that is a great point. But, on the other hand, so do non-monogamous people. Usually they have safe - sex agreements based on certain standards, and primary partners hardly ever have protected sex. Aside from the pleasure based selfishness I sometimes see in men, not so much in women, so to speak ..... there is also something else to be seen as an interesting aspect for discussion in the mix. I assume you could put in place some kind of self punishment or revenge on the partner also subconsciousness-wise as a valid point in a hypothetical discussion. You tend to engage in behaviour of Self punishment with the idea, that if you catch an STD while doing so, you get the punishment you deserve - being the true evil that you are, even desiring what you desire in the first place (based on sex negativity).
This is based on the puritan Idea of sex being only acceptable in some ways - as a loving ground between two openly involved people.
Then, also the Idea of revenge on a partner that might possibly be acting cold at periods of time and "forcing" the cheater to act the way he does to establish an emotional and satisfactory balance. It`s also a catholic influenced Idea of "oh if you get AIDS, it`s because god punishes you for your promiscuity". The Idea of self humiliating and punishing partners (wife and the lover or mistress) is indeed an interesting one.
In many cheating cultures it is seen as worse if you are - for example - a woman affiliated with a married man, then if you are a married man that betrays his wife. So, the idea is, that the innocent married man would not engage in this behaviour, had the oh so evil snake of a mistress not let it happen or seduced him. So, the humiliation part considering a lack of transparency on STDs and carefulness serves also as a psychological way to punish the mistress by intentionally doing harm to her.
Another Idea is of course the patriarchal aspect of men always wanting to have unprotected sex, because hardly ever are they forced to act responsible since centuries. If a woman gets pregnant, who cares? It`s the Idea that a "good woman" does not engage in sex with many men, which pushes the idea that a married man is not at risk of STDs.
Interesting would be on aspects why monogamous women engage in unprotected sex with more than one person and do not tell. Female Submissiveness? The puritan ideal of being a good woman and also , once you ask for protection you might admit to not "doing it" with only this person, even if he`s married? I assume this could be one of many aspects. I`d be curious to discuss that.
An aspect that comes into my mind is the Idea of birth control: Many women take the pill or whatever (I don`t anymore thank god, I solely use condoms ... lol) to wave the men of any responsibility to even remotely think before they use their precious alter ego (cock) to pleasure women..
(I always get angry when I enter a long term relationship and someone indeed asks me why I can`t take the pill. I always answer that the side effects of the pill are way worse than the side effects of a little rubber glove on a private part
)......aside from the notion that men can get sterilized as well)
Openly discussin these things might be tricky, since because people want to have a certain impression on people, they (women as well as men) might not easily admit to engage in unprotected sex and then discuss it openly. Specially monogamous people at some point tend to engage in such a behaviour. But again, also non-monogamous people are not free of flaws.
I certainly in my (private) life had way more "monogamous" or even "monogamously married people" thinking it was ok to try to bargain about the rubber thingie on or off than I had non-monogamous people, who most often did not even ask or complain in the first place.