T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
642.1 | From what I've experienced lately | DECSIM::TOTO | Colleen | Mon Dec 19 1988 16:53 | 35 |
|
Tough subject. I am recently seperated and soon to be divorced. It wasn't by
my choice but it's reality and I have to deal with it. I can say that I was
the one who was devistated and wanted to work things out way back when it
happened but now, I am a stronger person for it and I"m actually glad it
happened. I don't know much about men and how it effects them as I try not to
talk to or see my ex at all. I haven't been exposed much to too many divorced
men but the ones I have been exposed to (who I've become friends with) seem to
be taking (or took) the seperation quite as bad as I did and in some cases
even worse. Men (this is only my opinion) do not show their feelings as
easily and as often as we women but they do hurt as badly - they just react
differently. Women tend to be able to show their emotions that they feel from
their heart, men (from my observation) don't show their emotions but still
feel all the pain that we women do. I think that in every case I've talked
to that everyone seems to loose their self-estime and if men (which I do not
know) go out and have a sexual encounter right away, it may be to let them
know that they are still attractive and still have the right stuff. Women I
think (in my circumstances) tend to "stay away" or remain shy of a sexual
encounter right away because I think they are too hurt from the initial
seperation and afraid of "getting hurt" right away again. Do women heal
quicker? Hard to say - I've healed amazingly fast and I had an 12 year
relationship but when one is stabbed so many times in the back a person (woman
or man) can and will only take so much - it makes it easier to "fall out of
love" with the person doing the stabbing. Some men do talk about their
breakups however I have noticed that most of them don't want a relationship
with anyone - I think (again just observing here guys) that they were too hurt
and are afraid of the same thing we are so YES I'd say there are scars for
future relationships just like us women. I think the "usual routine" is
affected by both men and women. Ending a relationship no matter how long it
was or how loving it was always hurts both men and women unless one of the two
is totally an uncareing individual. It may not effect one or the other right
away but it will eventually and both people will shed tears. Again, this is
only my observation and opinion so I hope no one takes offense.
/c
|
642.2 | Same Hurt-Different People | SLOVAX::HASLAM | Creativity Unlimited | Mon Dec 19 1988 18:31 | 22 |
| Purely speculating as to how men feel, I think a breakup may well
threaten their ideas of manhood. I think they may actually take
things harder in some ways, so to remain looking strong, they bury
their feelings deeper. I agree with Colleen that they may "jump
into bed" with another woman to prove that they still really are
men. Yet, because their wounds go deep, they do shy away from
permanent relationships while still hoping to find one, leaving
them both questioning and questing at the same time.
As a woman, I find that while being devastated, life goes on. I
talk it out because it helps me to work it out. I'm NOT prone to
"bed hop" because I am the one who could end up getting hurt (i.e.
pregnant, or emotionally devastated) since "making love" is more
than just sex. I need to have "feelings" for the man I go to bed
with--it has to "mean" something to me. I too question, but if
I think the relationship will work, I am willing to at least give
it a try because I like being in a relationship.
I'm interested in what others have to say on this issue. Any more
comments?
Barb
|
642.3 | | TOOK::HEFFERNAN | Dawn after dawn - the sun! | Mon Dec 19 1988 18:33 | 8 |
| After a breakup, I am not interested in anyone for a while and hurt
very deeply so my experience as a man has not been as .0 suggests. I
do talk about it to with friends whom I feel close to.
john
|
642.4 | Not quite so gender-specific as all that | SKYLRK::OLSON | green chile crusader! | Mon Dec 19 1988 18:51 | 51 |
| My experiences are quite a bit different from yours.
> It's safe to say that both parties are suffering emotionally, but the
> man seems to handle it better. Basic differences are:
Your examples are so far from my experience that I felt like I must
be another species or something. "has sexual encounters frequently"
is never true (for me), and especially not after an emotionally
traumatic breakup (3 in the last 10 years). I just don't function
that way.
> ...I think these are standard differences found in most breakups.
Again, I don't recognize this as "standard" at all (your mileage
may vary! I'm not challenging your feelings, but I don't see it
the way you do either).
> How does the fact that they can immediately take part in sex with
> someone else reflect on their ex-partner? Does it show a lack of
> respect and/or caring?
Lets get something straight first: a person's actions reflect on
themselves, not on their ex's. Thats what personal responsibility
is all about.
I will reverse the question and tell you why I *don't* immediately
engage in casual sex on the rebound, though. Its because casual sex
has damn little attraction for me. I've been *in love* and making
love with your loved one far outshines a casual encounter. I flipped
the first time I heard the song "Romeo and Juliet" by Dire Straights,
when Mark Knopfler sang the line, "when we made love, you used to
cry", because I know firsthand the intensity of that experience.
After that, for me, why bother with casual sex? It holds no
attraction. This is not a putdown of anybody else, I'm just sharing
my personal take on it.
> Why don't men talk about their breakups? Are they refusing to feel
> their emotions, therefore staying in control of the situation?
> Can denial cause emotional scars in future relationships.
Thats probably a good description, but I'd apply it to anybody who
fails to learn from their mistakes, and internalizes it all; women
make that mistake, too. Our society doesn't permit men the space
to show their emotions, and thats also part of it. But your
conclusion, about emotional scarring, is right on the mark. I'm
honest enough with myself to try to work out my scars, and talking
to friends is part of it. "Refusing to feel one's emotions" and
"staying in control" are the road to a barren emotional landscape.
Its a bleak place to live, and I'm trying to leave it behind.
DougO
|
642.5 | | NEXUS::CONLON | | Mon Dec 19 1988 20:56 | 24 |
| RE: .0
Your evaluation of the gender-specific differences in
the way people handle breakups is vastly different from
my experience, too.
I've known men and women that could fit either one of
your scenerios (as well as plenty who had their feet
planted firmly on parts of *both* lists.)
It might be interesting to know why some people keep their
pain to themselves, but if you ask 'Why do men do it and
women don't,' I don't think it's possible to categorize
the behavior of men and women into distinctly separate
lists that way.
If you've seen only one distinct pattern of behavior in
the people with whom you have been romatically involved,
perhaps it's because you tend to seek out partners with
certain distinct manners of behavior.
Other people (with different tastes in partners) will tend
to see other sorts of patterns (which may or may not appear
to be as tied to gender as your experiences have been.)
|
642.6 | What he said! | QUARK::LIONEL | Ad Astra | Mon Dec 19 1988 22:51 | 6 |
| Re: .4
Doug, I couldn't have said it better myself. Your sentiments echo
mine exactly.
Steve
|
642.7 | | BUSY::KLEINBERGER | Most of an angel is in the inside | Tue Dec 20 1988 08:05 | 12 |
| RE: .0
I disagree... I know of one man in my department that separated,
and he could not function for months... it was awful attempting
to do our job and his too...
I think when you generalize, you fall into a trap... all people
are different, and react differently... Some men are stronger than
women, some women are stronger than men...
Each person goes through their own "working through it"...
what-ever-that-may-be...
|
642.8 | One man's opinion | SALEM::JWILSON | Just A Natural Man | Tue Dec 20 1988 10:30 | 50 |
| RE: .0 (S_Smith) I think this is an excellent topic to get out in
the open, and thank you for bringing it up. I hope things are going
well for you.
Frm my own perspective, and from my observations with the Over-35
crowd, I believe that there ARE some generalizations that can be
made. But the problem with generalizations is that they are not
specific (obviously), and cannot speak for everyone.
I believe that many woman have been brought up to believe that they
are defined by their relationships with other people. They "should
be" wives, mothers, etc. This is a very unfortunate belief (which
is not to in any way diminish these very important roles). But
a woman is a Person, with many dimensions to her personality and
her life. But because of this cultural belief, a woman is made
"less than whole" when her relationship/marriage ends, or when the
children "leave the nest."
A man, on the other hand, is defined by things like career, sports
participation, outside interests, etc. as well as in his role as
a Father, husband, lover. So less of his life is disrupted when
his marriage/relationship ends. The way a man deals with this loss
is quite different, also. Men are taught to hide sorrow, sadness,
as signs of "weakness." Much of the loss he feels (and he DOES
feel it!) is hidden. As far as sex is concerned, he can more easily
get into a sexual situation (not necessarily "Frequent Sexual
Encounters," but light relationships).
Again, speaking for myself, I was pretty devastated by the loss
of a SO after a very short, but intense, relationship. My way of
countering it was to immediately go out and date and get involved
with a series of women for whom I couldn't develop deep feelings.
This was not a conscious thing, but through a lot of self-analysis,
I realized that this was happening. I was not doing this to in
any way diminish what I felt for the woman whose love I had lost,
but simply as a means of self-protection.
Regarding sex, I believe that men have a stronger physical need
than do women. This is why we tend to desire sex in a relationship
before our woman partner. Also, women have been brought up to believe
that they Should be in love with whoever they have sex with. For
that reason, I believe that when they DO get sexually involved in
a new relationship, they "try to fall in love" with the person,
in order to "justify" the sex.
I hope this response help you see another possible side. I'm sure
that many people disagree with my assumptions, but this is how I
see it.
Jack
|
642.9 | | BANZAI::M_DAVIS | Beyond the ridiculous to the sublime... | Tue Dec 20 1988 10:40 | 8 |
| The people whom I've known who have been hardest hit by a breakup
were men. I've also known those as described in .0... "more fish
in the ocean". Women I've known generally get it all out and move
on. We are a fairly vocal group while getting it all out, agreed.
Marge
|
642.10 | | TOLKIN::DINAN | | Tue Dec 20 1988 10:56 | 27 |
|
RE.4
i disagree with your point about conduct only reflecting on the
particular individual. People should take responsibility for
their actions, but unless you live in an isolation tank, others
are always influencing your behaviour, and i should think if an
individual is in an intimate relationship with someone then that
someone is most likely going to have more influence than most
others. This not a way to excuse a person's conduct, we are at
all times responsible for our actions, but it is important in
understanding a person's conduct.
About men "bed hopping" after a break up, well they way i see
it (speaking generally - and probably getting into trouble),
its the way the system is set up. Women can have sex anytime they
choose and men have to try and get the women into bed.
Women can proposition a man and are generally going to be
successful. A man could approach a hundred women with the same
proposition and spend the whole night being slapped.
so, i'd say, perhaps women aren't as likely to jump into bed
right away because they know they can always have sex if they
want, where as men know that they have to go out and work on
it.
I know this is a broad generalization, but i'd say its in keeping
with the generalizations in the base note.
|
642.11 | 'Luv It :-) | FDCV16::ROSS | | Tue Dec 20 1988 11:11 | 8 |
| Re: .10
> I know this is a broad generalization,
^^^^^
Quite an adjective, when talking about women in this context. :-)
Alan
|
642.12 | | TOLKIN::DINAN | | Tue Dec 20 1988 11:24 | 7 |
|
Alan
*thanks* for the spotlight on my poor wording. :-)
Bob
|
642.14 | one person's view | NOETIC::KOLBE | The dilettante debutante | Tue Dec 20 1988 16:00 | 19 |
|
I believe there is SOME truth in the statement that men may go
out and have (or try to have) numerous sexual encounters after a
breakup. I believe women are less likely to do this because (by
virtue of anatomy) sex is a much more invasive process. The woman
must accept the man into her body to become part of her. At a
time when you are feeling hurt and closed it is hard to open up
and risk yourself again. I find the thought of doing this with
someone I was not very fond of distasteful (if not impossible).
For a man sex is exterior to himself (again somewhat by virtue of
anatomy). He may use it as a means of trying to prove he is
"still a man" regardless of how little it may prove in this
case. Obviously, I'm generalising, as have we all, and the set of
"normal" behavior for men and women overlaps as does the set of
"abnormal" behavior. I think that at the time of an emotional
breakup most of us are in a period of somewhat abnormal behavior
as it relates to what our life was like before things crumbled
before our eyes. liesl
|
642.15 | Proceed with caution and care | PRYDE::HUTCHINS | | Tue Dec 20 1988 16:21 | 25 |
| re .13
Temporary affairs "matter", because it involves 2 people. If it
is understood that it is just temporary by _both_ individuals, fine.
If there is a gap in communication and a difference in expectations,
then one person is going to get hurt.
It's easy to be logical and analytical about the situation, until
the emotions kick in and you're swept up by the moment...only to
kick yourself afterwards for not seeing the writing on the wall.
No...temporary affairs tend to do more harm then good. There is
much pain to work through after a split, but to do it "through"
another person only displaces the pain, and it will boomerang back
at you faster than you realize. Let the healing occur within, rather
than looking to another for a solution. (Sort of like putting a
leg in a cast...some injuries heal faster than others...go carefully
until you're on solid ground.)
Writing is a good catharsis...you can keep your thoughts private,
or show them to others, as you choose. And you can also look back
on your thoughts.
Judi
|
642.16 | couple of thoughts | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | remember to live & let live | Tue Dec 20 1988 16:52 | 47 |
| Re .10, I don't understand what you mean by "Women can have sex
anytime they choose" Talk about a sweeping generalization!!! Do
you honestly believe that *any* woman can have sex whenever she
wants to?? I have never felt that I could. I'm not an ugly woman
but I've never felt that there wasn't a man out there who wouldn't
hop into bed with me given the opportunity! It's silly to think
that way! Sure, maybe I could find *somebody* at any given time
but I shudder to think who it might be!!! Sure, at any given time
there might be *some man* - some horrible looking, perverted creep
- who would be willing to have sex with me. But, do I feel that
just because I am a woman that any man whom *I would be interested
in* would be willing to have sex with me at any given moment? No!
He might be happily involved with someone else in a monogamous
relationship, he might not find me attractive, he might be afraid
I'd be looking for more than he had to offer, he might be afraid
of some of the radical views I've written in notesfiles :-) - he
might think I was too old, who *knows*! But, I can't understand
why some men think that women can always find somebody to have sex
with. As has been discussed previously in some notesfile somewhere
(forgot which one or when) men say No, too, so I don't think it's
necessarily any easier for women to find *desirable* sex partners
than it is for men. The key word is *desirable*.
Re .8, I agree with some things you had to say, and disagree strongly
with one other.
First, I agree that in the past women have been more defined by
relationships than men. In the past, men were brought up to be
defined more by jobs, sports, hobbies, interests, etc. Women were
taught that the most important aspect of life was falling in love,
getting married, and having babies. Therefore, I think that in
the over 35 crowd, women, in general, often do seem to have a harder
time dealing with the end of a relationship because they were taught
that having a successful, long term relationship was the most important
part of life. A man, in this age group, might be more likely to
fall apart if he lost his job, or lost all of his money, since men
were taught to measure themselves by this type of success.
Re .8, I do not believe that men have a stronger physical need for
sex than women, in general. Baloney! That was the excuse for the
old double standard - men can't help themselves! Huh! This is
almost 1989 where most of us hopefully realize that while most men
and women do have a physical need for sex, we also realize that
*both* men and women can control their little urges, too. :-)
Lorna
|
642.17 | | TOLKIN::DINAN | | Tue Dec 20 1988 17:44 | 19 |
|
RE.16
Yes, the key word is desirable. i meant just the desire for
sex, i didn't mean the desire to have sex with any particular
person.
i thought my example was pretty good.
You really think a man going around propositioning women is
going to have just as much luck as a woman doing the same thing?
(these are generic people with generic appearances -- i know
that in specific cases it wouldn't hold true)
"Sure, maybe i could find *somebody* at any given time"
isn't this agreeing with what i said??
(i'm not sure if you were angry or not, but i'm just throwing
out what i think --- it'll probably change tommorow)
Bob
|
642.19 | Further reflections, for Bob and Liesl | SKYLRK::OLSON | Construction Zone: Watch This Space! | Wed Dec 21 1988 00:35 | 50 |
| re .10, Bob-
> i disagree with your point about conduct only reflecting on the
> particular individual...
The question I was answering said something like: How does it reflect
on the ex-partner if one immediately goes out screwing around?
My point holds in general, one's conduct reflects only upon themselves
(and the responsibility they bear for their own actions), but
*especially* in the specific case I was addressing: conduct of
one's own intimate affairs.
> This not a way to excuse a person's conduct, we are at all times
> responsible for our actions,[...]
Oh, you agree? I'm teasing you just a bit, Bob, but I see your two
statements as contradictory. But (oooh!) this next paragraph...
> Women can have sex anytime they choose and men have to try and get
> the women into bed.
No, we don't. Many of us don't try that. That's buying into and
endorsing all of the old stereotypes and cultural conditioning that
have screwed up and alienated us within this culture in the first
place. Many of us, men and women, reject this game. Bed is *not*
the goal, though its a nice place to visit eventually.
re .14, Liesl-
I won't presume to comment on your feeling that sex is invasive
for a woman, if thats the way you view it I wouldn't dream of
contradicting you. But when you extended your feeling to this...
> For a man sex is exterior to himself (again somewhat by virtue of
> anatomy). He may use it as a means of trying to prove he is
> "still a man" regardless of how little it may prove in this case.
you have crossed into the realm of opinion and I will inform you
that as a man I do not in any way feel that my sexuality is exterior
(read "separable", "detached", or "alienable") to my identity, to
my humanity, to my personhood.
It may be true for some men but certainly not for all, as implied
by your first sentance (of this extract). Perhaps you didn't intend
for me to take the statement so strongly but, its hard enough for
men within this culture to get in touch with their feelings: being
told that a very core part of our identity is "exterior" to us is
a psychological castration perhaps more obvious to me than to you.
DougO
|
642.20 | | NEXUS::GORTMAKER | Whatsa Gort? | Wed Dec 21 1988 06:28 | 16 |
| It took me about a year before I was interested in dating again
and even now 3 years later I find myself using "protection tactics"
in relationships that I never used before. I had lots of supportive
friends and talked out every detail it dident make it that much
easier. Sex I forgot what it was during the first year of divorce.
I believe the list of men's reactions and womens reactions were
from a womans view point no problems because I as a man remember
thinking the exact things but it was a mans view with much the same
content. I guess I wanted/hoped she felt worse than I did...
It hurts like hell on both sides it's just that one side usually
displays or hides it better than the other.
just my $0.02, -j
|
642.21 | | BUSY::KLEINBERGER | Most of an angel is in the inside | Wed Dec 21 1988 07:54 | 6 |
| Re: Protection Tactics....
You've got that right... Even after 4 years, I have more of them
than Carter probably has liver pills...
I don't think anyone will ever be able to break through all of them...
|
642.22 | don't add judgements to a viewpoint | TOLKIN::DINAN | | Wed Dec 21 1988 09:36 | 10 |
|
Re.19
wanted to say, that my statement about women can have sex
whenever they want and men have to work on it is not an
endorsement of this, it is just a viewpoint.
i see it as if i had said, "people are starving in Ethiopia"
and someone comes back and says i'm endorsing people starving
in Ethiopia.
|
642.23 | Some basic arithmetic | RUTLND::GIRARD | | Wed Dec 21 1988 11:31 | 10 |
| Forgive me for asking this question but there is something bugging
me...
If the men are having casual sex after a split more than women,
then who with? Some logic tells me that it take two to tango.
Or would one answer require the conversation to be moved to another
restricted file...
...maybe its better not to apply logic when dealing with stereotyping...
|
642.24 | Busy Bodies?? | SALEM::JWILSON | Just A Natural Man | Wed Dec 21 1988 12:38 | 16 |
| RE: .23
Forgetting the logistics problems, these men could all be having
sex with the *same* woman. (She could be the [happiest, most
exhausted, richest, *insert other adjectives*] woman in the World!
;^)
But there could easily be a smaller group of woman, each of whom
having sex with a greater number of men. No mathematical/logical
problem!
Hope that answers your question. (Now, for a fee, I'll provide
you with the name of the woman in Paragraph 1! ;'}
Jack
|
642.25 | The Wilson Theory Of Relativity | RUTLND::GIRARD | | Wed Dec 21 1988 13:16 | 8 |
| Thanks Jack,
But I don't see a lot of exhausted.* women around... More likely
the probability men and women are really much more alike than
.0 supposes. The difference being that one sex is more open about
than the other.
|
642.26 | | HANNAH::MODICA | | Wed Dec 21 1988 14:12 | 5 |
| Re: .25
That makes the most sense to me.
Hank
|
642.27 | decided this a long time ago | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | remember to live & let live | Wed Dec 21 1988 14:23 | 10 |
| Re .23, I think men and women have both always lied as to how often
they've had casual sex. Men (except those who write in Digital
notesfiles - ha-ha- because I've never seen a guy in a DEC file
admit to casual sex) usually claim to have more sex than they actually
have, and women (wanting to keep a good rep in the old double standard
tradition) usually claim less than they've actually had. In reality
they've both done the same amount of screwing around! :-)
Lorna
|
642.28 | A MAtter of Perception | RUTLND::GIRARD | | Wed Dec 21 1988 14:32 | 7 |
| Just to make things feel better. Casual can mean happening by
chance...
Now THAT is more interesting than superficial!
Uh ooh I think this may pull this notesfile back to its predecessor...
But wasn't that more fun?
|
642.29 | how separation has been for me (undetailed) | HANNAH::OSMAN | type hannah::hogan$:[osman]eric.vt240 | Wed Dec 21 1988 15:36 | 26 |
| I separated from my wife on Sep. 1 this year (1988).
Since then, it's been hard for me to make new friends. I find it harder
to just "say hello".
Most of my socializing since my separation has been with old friends, such
as old girlfriends with whom I've remained friends.
I would have thought that getting back into the social scene would have
been easier but it's not.
As far as your question about sexual activity, when I first started
dating my ex-wife, there wasn't as much of an aids scare.
So now, I find sex a bit of a fear, so if I'm with someone and we get
physical, we tend to keep it to non-all-the-way (which supposedly avoids
aids but who knows?)
Your question about talking to other people about the separation? I talk
to some people. But with others it's not comfortable.
Interesting questions though!
Thanks.
/Eric
|
642.30 | I don't think I meant what you thought | NOETIC::KOLBE | The dilettante debutante | Wed Dec 21 1988 18:59 | 32 |
| Doug, you're right that I was painting with a wide brush but I
was aware that certainly not all men fit my generalization. I was
responding more at a 'gut' level than an intellectual one. Let me
elaborate a bit. First off my use of the word invasive was in
reference to sex with casual partners (though I did not specify
that) and it was a reference to how I feel about sex in that
context.
From the other viewpoint (sex with someone I cared about) words
like envelop, embrace, and accept come to mind. It just occurred
to me that the words I have chosen in this context are action
words describing the female role while the word I used in the
casual sex context imply the action on the part of the male. For
whatever that is worth.
< you have crossed into the realm of opinion and I will inform you
< that as a man I do not in any way feel that my sexuality is
< exterior (read "separable", "detached", or "alienable") to my
< identity, to my humanity, to my personhood.
Doug, you are correct that I did not mean this to deny your
wholeness of being (god, that's awkward but I can't think of how
else to say it). However, I still believe that sex is different
in a fundamental way for men and women due to our differing
anatomy. The closest thing I can think of for males would be
homosexual sex (Please, I am making no value judgment here about
the actions of consenting adults). A man does not have to accept
a woman INTO his body the way a woman accepts a man, and I
believe this colors our (female) view of the experience. I'd
better quit now before I dig myself in so deep I can't get out.
Perhaps this says more about my psyche than it does about
anything else but it's the only place I can speak from. liesl
|
642.31 | Strike that, and reverse it.... | MCIS2::AKINS | My BRAIN hurtz!!! | Tue Dec 27 1988 23:55 | 9 |
| RE: .0
After my fiance and I broke up, I experienced the opposite of what
you said. I was all those everything on the woman's side and she
was everthing on the men's side. It all depends on each person.
It doesn't matter what sex you are, people handle things in different
ways.
Bill
|
642.32 | come on will ya. | TPVAX1::WHITEWAY | | Thu Jan 05 1989 08:59 | 21 |
|
RE.0
I have to say something after reading this base note. I have
been holding back, not wanting to offend anyone, but,................
I resent the insinuations of the base note. I must be abnormal,
because i never fit into any of the catagories you listed. As a
matter of fact I never came close.
Now I have sat here reading all the replies.........and I am
even more confused.....
Perhaps the reason for so many breakups and not so good relations
are these type stereotypes. How can people even go into relations
thinking so d___ negatively?
I feel it is insane to put all people into one group and think
they are all clones. If what was stated in the base note were true,
I wonder why there are any relationships at all, nomind marriages.
oh well, just my two cents. (which is probably not worth one penny)
curt
|
642.33 | | BUSY::KLEINBERGER | U R not real, til u r loved | Mon Jan 09 1989 21:01 | 19 |
| I posted this in another conference.... thought I'd post it here,
as its how I recently dealt with a separation from what I thought
was a good friendship.
MY LIST
Today I crossed
Your name off
My list
That left one --
Mine.
I think I'll
Cross off mine
And throw
The un-list away
As a celebration
Of our separation
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642.34 | perspective vs. "truth" | ZONULE::WEBB | | Wed Jan 18 1989 17:59 | 10 |
| I think this ( .0) may be more a question of perspective than objective
reality....
Assuming each hurts, and neither wants to show it to the other,
then it is bound to look like you hurt more than he/she does,
regardless of gender.
Which is not to say that men and women don't tend to have some
differences in how they handle things.
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