T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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35.1 | huh | HYSTER::CLARK | Jane Fonda on the screen today.... | Fri Aug 08 1986 09:46 | 8 |
| ... um ... where to begin ...
How would a system like this be "adopted?"
Can you really plan your relationships like this, similar to how
you might plan your career, or some such thing?
Do human relationships really work like that?
|
35.2 | Brave New World | EUCLID::LEVASSEUR | Wherever You Go....There You Are! | Fri Aug 08 1986 09:46 | 22 |
| Well Bruce, your proposal doesn't really bother me but I'm sure
you'de have the Catholic church, Jerry Foulmouth, Pat Slobertson
andf a host of others on your case.
Since I'm not involved in a traditional heterosexual relation, I'm
asexual, how putchskas are raised is no concern of mine. Your idea
sounds like how the ancient Greeks brought young men into adulthood,
the pubescent men were understudies, intellectually and sexually
to older men, then went on to adulthood where they buggered younger
men, etc, etc.
I don't hold much hope for an idealistic human race, it has been
screwed up since time began and will remain screwed up, regardless
of what men propose. The Bible assures us that on the scond coming
of Christ, Jesus will set the record straight, hmmmmmm! I'll wait
and see.
Also your idea would wreak havoc on human emotions, "well dear,
our 15 years are up, it was nice knowing you, take care!" What
if the other party is deeply involved emotionally?
Later, Ray
|
35.3 | ahem | AKOV68::EATON | | Fri Aug 08 1986 09:58 | 10 |
| re: .0
Whether your plan has any scientific/theoretical value or not,
it fails to take into account human variables - premature or accidental
death, incompatibility, emotional instability - all of which I
doubt will ever leave us.
It doesn't get my vote...
Dan
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35.4 | My Pet Theory... | GENRAL::TAVARES | John-Mountain is hidden in fog | Fri Aug 08 1986 11:52 | 25 |
| Please remember, that what is proposed in .0 is the norm for this
society. All "rules", though they sound strange to us, would be
unquestioned, because they would lie at the absolute base level
as accepted as life itself. Against that background, the proposed
society is no stranger than any other society (I mean, humans have
formed some *strange* ones.
When judging something like this, one must see it in the context
of its contributions to the quality of the individual life. Its
like this, sort of a Darwinian view of society: humans band together,
and set up some rules, whatever, now there's an agreement that each
makes with the rules; if it brings quality to their lives, the society
prospers, grows and perpetuates itself. If the humans have no quality,
the society dies, and another springs up: in other words, if a social
arrangement doesn't work, it dies. All societies, give their people
certain things; they allow customs for the various rites of passage,
they have some form of allowing members to pass positive reinforcement
to one another, they allow protection for the whole by its members,
and so forth. How long a society lasts is a measure of how well
it does each of these things. It can even be argued ( and I was
once thrown out of a bar for doing it too loudly) that criminals
are necessary because they constantly test the laws, thereby forcing
either reinforcement of the societial values, or change, both of
which are good for the society.
|
35.5 | Ah, life like the Waltons! | PSGVAX::CICCOLINI | | Fri Aug 08 1986 12:19 | 18 |
| It sounds here as if the issues are being muddied. Passing on
"wisdom" from the elders to the youth need not be done only in the
context of a sexual/romantic relationship.
The fact that this point was missed is indicative of our modern,
alienated society. Long gone is the extended family where the grandys
lived under the same roof and helped raise and educate the young
and free up the younger, stronger parents for the work that helped
them all survive.
I like the idea of sexual initiation but it needn't take 15 years,
nor begin as late as 20, (personal, liberal view here!).
So I'm in agreement with the idea of more direct communication between
the wisest and the most innocent, I just wouldn't link it so closely
with romantic love.
Sandy
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35.6 | Does "age" denote "maturity?" | BARTOK::COCHRANE | Gee, this could be fun. | Fri Aug 08 1986 12:54 | 24 |
| Ahem, I have a couple of little problems with this thoery,
the major one being the use of chronological age as a sign
of "wisdom" and "maturity." I have known some men in my time,
while much older than I in term of pure chronological age, were
*younger* than I in terms of maturity and wisdom. And after
four or five years, one hasn't grown up yet (don't flame at
me, this isn't male slander, I'm sure there are plenty of
men out there who can say the same for older women they've
dated)! Some people are more mature at a given age than
others. You plan doesn't seem to take this into account.
Also, emotional ties that are formed over a period of time,
especially in instances where children are involved (I can't
*imagine* ever bearing the child of someone I didn't love
and care for very much) can't simply be broken after fifteen
years. The emotional havoc that would wreak in even the worst cases of
incompatibility is shown in the notes on divorce in this conference.
I don't think humans today could embrace such a society, whatever
the long term benefits might be. It just strikes me as being
far too emotionally cold.
Maybe after the nuclear war, however, we could think about
it as an option..... ;-)
Mary-Michael
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35.8 | This relationship will self-destruct in 15, 14 ... | MMO01::RESENDE | Life and love are all a dream | Sun Aug 10 1986 01:16 | 17 |
| RE: .0
When I was 20, I wasn't particularly interested in 35 year young people; more
like 18-22 year youngs. Now that I find myself at the other end of that scale
(how time flies), I'd sure consider a 35er, a 20er, or anything in between or
beyond each extreme! ;'}
Seriously (and I was previously), it's an interesting idea. My biggest problem
with it is that it's so hard losing a single VSR (very significant
relationship), I'd sure hate to have to go through it and know it was coming
each 15 years or so. Gee, that's not pleasant to look forward to.
Just chalk me up as a foolish believer in *FANTASY* (i.e. that there can be
such a thing as a LLR, life-long relationship of quality). Incurable romantic,
huh?
-steve-
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35.9 | Funny you should think of it... | JUNIPR::DMCLURE | Vaxnote your way to ubiquity | Sun Aug 10 1986 03:34 | 40 |
| My father once told me about an idea he once had about marriage:
that it might make sense to have (similarly) three basic "marriages"
in a lifetime. The first for love, the second for kids, and the third
for companionship. Or was it the first for kids? Something like that.
Anyway, he is still married to my mother (going on 30 some years now)
and I don't see any real signs of change. The point is, that marriage
doesn't have to be an end-all sort of destiny. Many people do live
their lives in a fashion very similar to that described in .0; mostly
"BIG-CITY" life, but still quite common.
I think that the ideas mentioned in .0 should be legitimized since
many (as mentioned) would still regard this sort of life-style as some-
what scandalous. Considering that such a large part of the world
already lives this way, I think it only reasonable that this behavior
be recognized and respected for what it is (might make a good Phil
Donohue segment).
I'm 28 now, but I have had three different relationships with women
"approaching" 15 years my senior in my life and I don't mean one night
stands. At one point, I was helping to raise 3 kids (a 10 yr. old,
a 5 yr. old, and a 3 yr. old), and enjoyed every minute of it. Unfor-
tunately for all three relationships, I (as well as most of my SO's)
was in much too of an unstable phase in life (either financially or
otherwise) to even hope that the relationship would last very long.
Thinking back on this, I suppose I should clarify that not all
three relationships were exactly "full-time" relationships. In fact,
none were very sexual, well...hmmmmm...maybe I shouldn't stick my neck
out reeeeeal far here, or I might have to delete this later in one of
my panic modes.
Suffice it to say: I think it's already fairly common, but has
absolutely no recognition by, nor approval of society in general.
Their is nothing more humiliating for a couple than to have someone
else whispering behind your backs about such things when they don't
have the decency to talk about it openly. Perhaps just a general
recognition would help (much less approval).
-DAV0
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35.10 | Children are our future | BOGART::KRAVITZ | Terrapin | Mon Aug 18 1986 21:50 | 24 |
| I've been sort of wondering about this after a few weeks of reading
SEXCETERA, and this seems like an appropriate place:
Many of the topics about society in SEXCETERA resulted in comments
which had the flavor of "Well, you and I know better, but the world
as a whole tends to be mean, so I don't want to have (m)any children."
I feel that this attitude is a cop-out, and should be supplanted
with one like "Well, you and I know better, so we should have a
whole bunch of kids and raise them to be sensitive human beings
and maybe things will get better."
Where I come from on this: I'm not ready for children yet -- only
22 and single -- but figure that my future wife and I owe (:-)
about three. One for her, one for me, and one more. This is based
a little bit on my desire to further propagate a minority religion
(Judaism) but also in the hopes of making this world a better place
to live.
I don't want to sound like my kids will be perfect, but having learned
from conferences like this one, maybe I'll be able to pass on to
them many of the positive attitudes seen here.
Dave
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35.11 | Line Marriage | VAXRT::CANNOY | The more you love, the more you can. | Mon Aug 25 1986 14:45 | 42 |
| This is an attempted recreation of a note that got lost in the mess of
last week.
_______________________________________________________________________
One of my all time favorite proposals for a marriage that would
work for everybody, comes from _The_Moon_Is_A_Harsh_Mistress, by
Robert Heinlein.
It's called a "Line Marriage" and has the potential of being an
eternal marriage.
It can either start with a 2-person or a group marriage. As the
partners get a little bit older (mid-late 30's), they "marry in" new
partners. These new members of the marriage should alternate by sex and
be younger than the original members of the marriage. As time passes, a
great stability is maintained by having older members, with the wisdom
they have gained from living, many middle-aged partners, some younger
members and lots of kids.
There is a great advantage for the children in this system. It is
very like the extended family that used to exist 200 years ago.
Older people to help take care of the children while the younger
adults work in their chosen field. A greater economic stability
is maintained. The family won't go on welfare if one member loses
a job. The kids have the example of all the different ages to look
up to and learn from.
To marry someone, everyone would have to know and approve of them.
Everyone would get an equal vote in marrying and other important family
business. This would really work because the older folks in the family
would have the experience of all those years of simply living with
people, and could handle things before they got out of hand. If you
wanted out, you could be divorced and given your share of current
assets.
I have always thought it sounded wonderful. I can see some problems
with the system, mostly die to today's society, but on the whole I'd
love to try it.
More interest? I strongly recommend the book.
Tamzen
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35.12 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Reality is frequently inaccurate | Mon Aug 25 1986 15:38 | 20 |
| Ah, yes - my all-time favorite book, for many reasons. Heinlein
described several types of group marriages, including the "clan",
also in "Moon" plus one I don't recall the name of in "Time Enough
For Love", and the "S-Group" in "Friday". Stability, preservation of
wealth and guaranteed care for children seemed to be a big plus in
Heinlein's eyes, and I'd tend to agree with him. Robert H. Rimmer,
author of "The Harrad Experiment", also wrote a book (whose name
I forget) espousing group marriages.
I can't help but think, however, that traditional romantic love
would find little place in such arrangements, and could in fact
lead to significant problems due to jealousy, etc, though I admit
that this bias may be a reflection of the society I'm used to.
I too think that the line marriage has a lot going for it, but I
wonder if it would work in real life with real people who aren't
as perfect as Heinlein's characters always seem to be. The line
marriage concept always seemed more like adoption to me than
marriage!
Steve
|
35.13 | Anthro 1A Anyone? | GENRAL::TAVARES | | Mon Aug 25 1986 17:31 | 2 |
| Ok anthropologists: which African tribe does this one ring a bell
with? It does sound familiar.
|
35.14 | good idea... | YODA::BARANSKI | Nothing to Need, Hide from, or Fear... | Wed Aug 27 1986 14:03 | 15 |
| RE: .11
Yes, a great book, and in my view, a great idea. The idea of the Line Marriage
definitely appeals to me. I don't think that jeolousy would play as big a part
in such a set up. At least for me, I am only jealous when I think I am
'unfairly' dumped for someone else. A fair reason would be that I am not
providing a needed ingredient for the other's life. I am not
dog_in_the_manger_ish. In a line marriage nobody is leaving anyone for anyone.
And I can be quite romantic without being jealous.
In SEXCETERA I had a note on communities. Before SEXCETERA passed away the note
was copied to HYDRA::HOLISTIC. Still have not found enough of the right people
to get things started yet, though...
Jim.
|
35.15 | | STUBBI::REINKE | | Tue Sep 02 1986 18:10 | 6 |
| I got the impression in Heinlein's TMiaHM that he was looking for
a way to produce stable marriages in a situation ( a prision colony)
where men way out numbered women. I think the most common marriage
on Luna was two men and one women, but those who practiced line
marriages found them more stable, better for the kids and property,
etc. as stated previously.
|
35.16 | Three in the set, of all different kinds... | BOVES::WALL | I see the middle kingdom... | Wed Sep 03 1986 12:15 | 15 |
|
Another variation on this theme appears in Samuel R. Delany's work.
In Dhalgren, there is a marriage (in concept, since in the setting
there is no authority to sanction marriage) of three people. Of
course, since things are coming apart in the story, people have
tended to lose a lot of their inhibitions, because the end of the
world is a bad time to be petty.
In Babel-17, three-person marriages grow out of both emotional
attachment and professional necessity. See, spaceships need three
of a lot of things (Navigators, in particular) and since you work
so closely and the hauls are long...
Dave W.
|
35.17 | Not in the specs | MINAR::BISHOP | | Thu Sep 04 1986 02:55 | 44 |
| Maybe a nice idea, but it doesn't seem to work. If you look at
the various human cultures around the world (past and present) what
you see is:
One or two don't seem to have a 'state' of publically-
recognized groupings of adults from different birth
families for cohabitiation and the possibility of
children--i.e., they do not have 'marriage'.
All the rest allow monogamy (one man, one woman).
Most (around 60%) allow polygyny (one man, several woman)
usually in the form of sororal marriage (a man marries
sisters) or sequential additions of new wives as a man's
wealth increases. Even where allowed, it is usually
not common (it costs too much).
A tiny fraction (3% or less) allow polyandry (many men,
one woman), most of those allow only fraternal polyandry
(a woman marries a group of brothers). Again, even if
allowed in a culture, it is not common in that culture.
'Group marriage', 'Line Marriage' and the like are very,
very, VERY rare. Mostly they are the kind of thing the
neighboring ethnic groups are said to practice, along
with canibalism, incest and bestiality. Where such
marriages actually exist (and thus are not mis-understood
extended families), they are rare even in their own societies,
much rarer than the other plural marriages are in their
cultures.
Historically and anthropologically, the only group situations which
are likely to last more than a few years and which involve the
sharing of finances and children are:
Extended families with clear power relations.
Celibate communities.
I suspect (and was taught) that the man-woman bond grows out of our
biological heritage, and is one-to-one by its nature (more strongly
so for women).
-John Bishop
|
35.18 | look around, things are different. | DAIRY::SHARP | Say something once, why say it again? | Fri Sep 05 1986 11:41 | 19 |
| I have to take issue with .-1 on a couple of points.
First, our culture accepts serial polygamy. By this I mean at least North
America and Europe, I'm not sure about Central and South America, the Middle
East, Asia or Africa. But where I live it's quite common for both men and
women to marry, divorce, and remarry, sometimes repeatedly. Of course, not
everybody thinks this is a good thing, but in most places people on their
second or third marriages are considered at most eccentric, not outcasts.
This gets to be very close to a line marriage in the cases when the divorce
is amicable, and one remains on good terms with one's former spouse. Often
there's a continuing connection, especially in the case of joint custody of
children, or other arrangements for continuing to share children, and
including new step-children.
The point about the one-one bond is debatable, to say the least. (If we
debate it, maybe we should move it to another note.)
Don.
|
35.19 | | ERIS::CALLAS | Le glaive vorpal fait pat-�-pan | Fri Sep 05 1986 14:25 | 6 |
| Re .18:
I thought that the practice of running through a string of partners
was called serial monogamy, not polygamy.
Jon
|
35.20 | Children in "line mariages" | RANI::HOFFMAN | | Sun Sep 14 1986 13:20 | 43 |
| RE: .11
> There is a great advantage for the children in this system...
> Older people to help take care of the children while the younger
> adults work in their chosen field... The kids have the example
> of all the different ages to look up to and learn from.
I've seen quite a few responses to this reply, but no one has
addressed this particular paragraph. As far as the kids are
concerned, this idea is reminiscent of the "Kibutz" settlement
system, which has been practiced in Israel since the twenties.
In many of these communal settlements, kids are brought up seperately
from their parents, by "professional" kid raisers, much in the same
way described above. The kids sleep together, eat together, spend
much of their time together and are generally, brought up together.
The advantages are seemingly obvious: parents see their kids after
work, in a leisurely, pleasant atmosphere. The pressures of "bringing
up" the kids are absent. The situation promotes child-parent "love
relationship" rather than "authority-relationshipe". Parents enjoy
their children much in the same way grandparents enjoy them, in our
non-commune society.
Additionally, in that enviroment, every adult sees himself/herself
as responsible for every kid in sight. The kids end up being cared
for by the whole community.
Much experience has been accumulated over the years in hundreds of
"kibutzim". This scheme produces a special breed. In Israel, when you
say someone is a "kibutznik", it doesn't simply mean that he lives in
a "kibutz". It also means that he's a member of that special breed.
Is it good or bad? I am not sure - wish I were more knowledgeable...
"Kibutznik" is generally considered a compliment, but there are some
facets to it that aren't all that complimentary. I believe some of
the "kibutzim" have reverted to the old, time honoured, way of raising
children.
-- Ron
|
35.21 | some information about kibbutz child-raising | MORIAH::ERIC | Eric Goldstein | Mon Sep 15 1986 03:54 | 44 |
| re .20
I have some knowledge of how kibbutzim (plural of kibbutz) raise children,
as this has been my brother's job on his kibbutz. The system has evolved
over a period of several decades, and there have been changes. Each kibbutz
makes its own rules, but it is possible to generalize about how most of them
do it.
First of all, on most kibbutzim, the children are cared for in a group only
during the day, while their parents are at work. Starting at a very early age,
like under a year, they spend their days in a kibbutz children's house (day-care
center). By the age of three or four, they are in kindergarten, and later in
primary school.
The parents drop them off on their way to work in the morning, and pick them up
late in the afternoon, so the children will be together for perhaps eight hours
during the day. (There is always supervision, with a low student:teacher
ratio.) The family then has dinner together, generally in the communal dining
hall, and the children spend the evening and night with their parents.
The idea of the children sleeping in the children's houses has been dropped by
most (though not all) kibbutzim. My brother told me that psychological studies
found that this practice adversely affects the parents' health, without helping
the kids all that much.
Overall, kibbutz children (and Israeli children in general) spend more time in
peer groups from an earlier age. A friend of mine, who worked in an Israeli
kindergarten for two-three year olds, told me that the kids were socially more
developed than her American university psychology courses had told her was usual
for children of that age.
On the other hand, kibbutz children may spend more time with their parents, as
well. Another friend told me that when she lived on kibbutz, she spent more
time with her young children than after she returned to the US. On kibbutz she
had all of the late afternoon and evening with them, whereas in the States, much
of that time was devoted to all the errands associated with running a household,
of which there are many fewer on a kibbutz.
It is true that kibbutz children have role models of all ages around them. One
of the most striking things that they see is that virtually every adult works.
Women who have given birth return to work (gradually) after a matter of months.
Older people tend to work fewer hours at physically less demanding tasks, but a
kibbutz will make great efforts to find some kind of productive job for anyone
who is capable of doing anything.
|
35.22 | | ELMAGO::RMOORE | | Wed Apr 03 1991 10:20 | 18 |
|
A good family tree is a useful object to climb into society with.
If we all said to people's faces what we say behind their backs,
society would be impossible.
Kindness is the golden chain by which society is bound together.
In today's society you have to be a little crazy to keep from going
insane.
Society judges you not by what you stand for, but what you fall
for.
RM
|
35.23 | | XCUSME::HOGGE | Dragon Slaying...No Waiting! | Wed Apr 03 1991 11:48 | 6 |
| > A good family tree is a useful object to climb into society with.
Bull! A golden tongue and knowing who to apply it too are.
Skip
|