Fair enough, women want to be respected for their minds, not
their sex. As it happens, men are not really respected for their minds or their
sex. They are respected for their status, prestige and wealth.
Being respected for your mind does not make you more like a
man. It’s a bad idea to draw specious analogies between men and women… but you
knew that already.
Anyway, respecting a human being means seeing him or her as
a social being. That means, clothed. Admittedly, we are all born naked and the absence of clothing tends to equalize us all. This merely tells us that the ideal of total and utter equality is unrealistic, counterproductive and anti-social. Besides, once everyone starts sharing pictures of their private parts human beings will instantly start judging... even making aspersions. Would you rather be judged by the appearance of your genitalia or your accomplishments. You have far more control over the latter than you do over the former.
Or, as we like to say, being a respected human being begins
with learning how to keep your pants on. You cannot be judged by the content
of your character if you are showing off
the contents under your pants.
This means, as a universal truth, that we do not identify
people by the appearance of their external genitalia. We identify them by their
faces, not their sex. I’m sure that you knew that already.
That is, we all have a sense of shame. A sense of shame
means that we do not publicize our private parts. We do not expose them to
public view and do not risk exposing them. We do not undress in front of open
windows in large cities, because we do not want to risk such exposure.
Until recently having a sense of shame was a good thing. It
was a sign of good character, of trustworthiness. It induces people to improve their character. If you cannot keep your
privates secret why should I expect that I can speak with you in confidence.
And yet, our therapy culture, in another spasm of incoherent
thinking, has decided that shame is bad. Why? Because it feels bad. Therefore,
that it must be abolished. You can see
the level of intellectual sophistication that goes into this thought. How can
we do away with shame? You guessed it: by encouraging people to be open and
honest about their sexuality, to put it on public display.
And yet, the anti-shamers insist, with some reason, that it
is bad to run around shaming people. It is bad to mock people for their defects
or deformities. It is bad to call them out for being overweight or for being
sexually promiscuous. Calling someone a slut is one thing. Choosing not to
associate with her is quite another.
Why is that so? Simply put, because it’s rude. It’s rude to
ridicule people in public. It shows that you do not have a sense of shame. If you do not have good character you cannot be inducing people to improve theirs.
Rudeness makes people angry and makes them want to
retaliate. This does not mean that said people ought not to be nudged in the
direction of recognizing their dereliction, based on their own moral sense. Keeping
your distance from someone who misbehaves or who is untrustworthy is not the
same thing as humiliating them in public.
Weaponizing shame only happens when people do not have a
sense of shame. When you systematically
humiliate government officials, as happened in the Chinese Cultural Revolution,
you are trying to diminish their self-respect of their victims, thus, to
undermine their sense of shame. And to make them more like you.
Anyway, nowadays young people have developed the habit of sending
pictures of their genitalia to their friends and lovers. Since they no longer
practice dating or courtship habits, they seem to want to invent new ways to
get to know each other and to demonstrate their commitment. The practice of
sexting is apparently ubiquitous. Everyone does it, so it must be alright. A
minimum level of adult reasoning will cause alarm bells to start ringing in
your mind. Today, however, we need research reports to prove the point.
A new article in PsyPost reports on a study conducted by
Michelle Drouin and colleagues. It you thought that America’s young generation
was in trouble, this study will confirm your suspicions:
Past
research has found that more than eight out of 10 people are
sexting. Now psychologists are investigating the positive and negative
consequences of using your phone to send sexually suggestive or nude images of
yourself.
The
study, published in the scientific journal Computers in Human Behavior, found that sexts sent
in casual relationships tend to have more negative outcomes — among other
findings.
The study attempts to quantify the positive and negative
effects of this activity. It bases its conclusions on a series of
questionnaires, so we will take it with a grain or two of salt. Besides, if you
thought that this activity could have a positive emotional outcome you need
plenty of help yourself.
The report continues:
“In
general, I am interested in the ways in which technology is affecting
individuals and relationships,” explained the study’s corresponding
author, Michelle
Drouin of Indiana University-Purdue University Fort Wayne.
Astonishingly, both male and female students indulge in this
activity. Some reported positive emotional outcomes, while many reported
negative outcomes:
Drouin
and her colleagues found that 58% of college students admitted to sending a
sext and 62% admitted to receiving one. Most began sexting as minors. Men were
more likely to report that their last sexting partner was a casual partner,
while women were more likely to report their last sexting partner was a
committed partner.
About
half of the participants who had sexted reported that it resulted in positive
sexual or emotional consequences, but a large number of participants also
reported negative consequences.
“People
may be motivated to send sexually-explicit picture or video messages to their
romantic partner because they think it is fun or flirtatious or they want to
please their partners. In fact, when we ask them, these are young adults’ most
commonly cited motivations for sexting,” Drouin explained to PsyPost.
One does not quite understand why these young people are
competing with porn stars, why they seem to assume that if their lovers do not
have pictures of them in all their naked glory they will be drawn to similar
images of porn stars. Is this the ultimate sign of true love-- allowing your lover to masturbate to your image. In one way sexting shows what happens when the therapy
culture declares war on shame. In another, it shows what happens when a culture
is pornified.
We must consider the fact that many of these pictures do not
remain safely ensconced in a single iPhone. Some of them are passed around the
locker room or the reading group. Many of those who sext began doing so when
they were in high school or even junior high school. Children who did not understand
what shame was and who are unable to deal it with found themselves overexposed,
humiliated and demeaned.
Does this mean that we have definitively destroyed the
feminine mystique? Does it mean that we must appear to each other without the
least pretense of having any self-respect at all? And what about the men who
seem to feel that they must show off their manly endowments to the world, lest
someone actually care about what they are making of their lives? Isn’t there
something demeaning about all this?
Drouin and her colleagues tried to measure the trauma factor
in this activity:
“However,
many people experience regret or worry about the pictures they have sent to
recent partners, and some even report discomfort and trauma at the time they
sent the pictures. Most importantly, women and those who send these sexual
images to casual sex partners report fewer relationship benefits (emotional or
sexual) and more relationship detriments associated with the sexting than those
who send them to committed partners.”
Of course, this is all traumatic. It diminishes people,
removes them from their social matrix and treats them like sexual objects.
You’ve come a long way, baby!
A facet of this. About two hundred years ago we came up with a way to send symbols (morse code) to each other by electricity. About a hundred years later we advanced to being able to talk to each other directly (telephone) by electricity. Another hundred years later we are now sending symbols (texting) to each other again. Love progress.
ReplyDeleteSexting has more or less been normalized. What lies beneath is truly weird and depraved.
ReplyDeleteThe problem is obviously that religious/moral philosophy created a social climate that did not reward male and female sexual license. So, we'll have several generations of men and women executing their liberties, treating unwanted babies/preexisting conditions, in rebellion to real and perceived archaic, post-conventional, norms.
This is [unqualified] progress or monotonic change similar to recurring economic resets (e.g. depression, recession), and sexual license follows a multidecadal anthropogenic amoral progression. We're due for another economic and sexual reset, where people discover religion, principles, and babies, too.
PsyPost: Past research has found that more than eight out of 10 people are sexting. Now psychologists are investigating the positive and negative consequences of using your phone to send sexually suggestive or nude images of yourself.
ReplyDeleteWhen I see the word sext I always assume this is like flirting with sexually explicit language using written words, like girly romance novels, but might lead to imminent action in real life.
This subject seems very confusing if we're assuming it means sexually explicit pictures of one's self.
Clearly we need a different word here. It might be a sexy-selfie. Perhaps we could call it a sexfie?
If people are being surveyed and don't know exactly what's be asked, we actually have no information here.