T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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210.1 | | RANCHO::HOLT | Never speak to Strangers... | Sat Jan 30 1988 01:45 | 16 |
|
It would help if you define what you mean by multiple.
One a week or once a year?
Politicians looking for an edge have made sex an issue.
Sex is the latest weapon for the media to destroy
candidates, such as Nina Totenburg of PBS did when she
exposed Gary Hart. It didn't hurt her career either.
A man might well feel it dishonorable to stab a fellow
like that.
Never faithful...? Isn't necessarily so. There is
always the chance of meeting someone who makes a deep
impression, and remaining faithful. I think that is a
generalization.
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210.3 | what is 'cheating' | MPGS::MCCLURE | Why Me??? | Thu Feb 11 1988 08:46 | 23 |
| Re "attracted to many, ever faithful to one"
I like that! My first marriage lasted 18Yrs. I was attracted to
many during that time, but remained faithful. Like Jimmy C, I
only lusted in my heart. But then, I actually tried to set up
a situation where I could lust with my body. Didn't happen, but
it got me thinking along the 'what's missing?' line. I got a
divorce before I commited adultery in a weak moment. Strange mix
of old-fashioned and new-fashioned attitudes toward marriage.
I'm in my second marriage and dearly hope that it lasts as long
as I do.
Re Hart
My dad played around for years and my mom was the loyal wife.
Hart's re-entry into the campaign with his wife's support, is
similar in my mind. "Look, I messed around a little before. But
if you support me, I promise I'll never do it again." Sort of
like a speeder promising the cop that he'll never speed again
as long as the the cop doesn't give him a ticket.
Bob Mc
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210.4 | National Enquirer? | SERPNT::SONTAKKE | Vikas Sontakke | Thu Feb 11 1988 08:57 | 8 |
| > Sex is the latest weapon for the media to destroy
> candidates, such as Nina Totenburg of PBS did when she
> exposed Gary Hart. It didn't hurt her career either.
Huh? When did Nina Totenberg started working for Miami Herald?
Where did you get the above new item?
- Vikas
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210.5 | further thoughts | STUBBI::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Fri Feb 12 1988 21:34 | 13 |
| The answers so far have kind of missed the point here. I was
specifically talking about the kind of man who appears to
be a complusive womanizer. and as to what is my definition of
promiscuous? well for a start how about counting 'partners'
in the middle double digits?
Twice in my life I have known men who boasted of counting 'partners'
in three digits. Both of them were really amoral people,
who proved, once you got to know them at all well, to be very
selfish and unreliable...who could not be counted on unless they
felt they would gain.
Do you think that such behavior is always a sign of an inability
to commit to something more than personal success/goals etc.?
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210.6 | "Don't remember his name, but he was number 12" | BSS::BLAZEK | Dancing with My Self | Sat Feb 13 1988 10:20 | 8 |
| I think there's a difference between counting partners and
being promiscuous in the same way there's a difference be-
tween counting partners for your own internal records and
broadcasting said numbers to friends, strangers, family,
dates, SO's, etc.
Carla
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210.7 | not the point | STUBBI::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Sat Feb 13 1988 20:49 | 4 |
| Carla, that is still a red herring off my original topic. I am
not aking about men or women who count partners...I used that as an example
because I was challenged earlier as to what I meant by promiscuous.
Bonnie
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210.8 | Whoops! | BSS::BLAZEK | Dancing with My Self | Sun Feb 14 1988 16:24 | 5 |
|
Sorry about that, Bonnie.
Carla
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210.9 | Ludic Love | CAPVAX::PAPISON | Namaskar | Mon Feb 15 1988 12:36 | 12 |
|
Bonnie,
Can we open this up a little by not limiting the discussion to men
alone. I'm sure alot of men have been exposed to the same personality
quirks in women as well. Maybe the discussion should be about
personality traits in general, not just in men.
george
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210.10 | what ever... | STUBBI::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Mon Feb 15 1988 12:50 | 3 |
| No problem, the original broadcast that got me thinking on the topic
was referring to male politicians (such as the Kennedy family) which
was why I entered my original note here...
|
210.11 | | QUARK::LIONEL | We all live in a yellow subroutine | Mon Feb 15 1988 14:02 | 5 |
| Well, this conference IS MENNOTES, and thus it seems reasonable to
have discussions here about men. I would have no objection to
someone bringing up this topic in QUARK::HUMAN_RELATIONS without
regard to sex.
Steve
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210.12 | eanie,meanie, minney, moe.... | CAPVAX::PAPISON | Namaskar | Mon Feb 15 1988 15:10 | 23 |
|
Alright, so much for jabbing and jabbering....to the point!
The behavior mentioned, made famous by the Kennedy brothers and
infamous by Gary Hart is a character flaw, and I believe just the
tip of the iceberg. Not only does this behavior make ones morals
suspect it opens the door to blackmail, extortion and a few other
goodies.
As far as the trick itself, my personal opinion is that someone
who needs to persue relationships outside of a marriage, or similiar
relationship should get divorced, or seperated, and get one with
killing himself/herself. I guess I'm just an old fashioned guy,
I just don't my the multiple partner trip, seen too much B.S.
associated with "open relationships." And to answer the question
stated in .0 I wouldn't trust someone with that character trait
as far as I could throw them, in a relationship, or any other way!
George
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210.13 | Past Sleeping Around Is Not Necessarily Indicator | FDCV03::ROSS | | Mon Feb 15 1988 15:57 | 24 |
| RE: .0
Bonnie, I'll try, more or less, to get back to your basenote question:
"...do you think that a man who has established an adult pattern
of being promiscuous , i.e., having multiple women partners can
make a permanent commitment to only one woman?
I think I'd have to qualify my response based upon the type of
"promiscuous" behavior the man has exhibited. If he has previously
just slept around with any woman who attracted him, but he has
made no commitments or promises, and he has been honest with
her about this, then I think his past behavior is no indicator
of how he'll behave in a "committed relationship". Once he's in
a committed relationship, he may - or may not - mess around.
However, a man who finds himself in a series of committed relat-
ionships, but still, is unable to ever be faithful to the woman
he's with, falls into a different category. I don't think he'll
ever be able to be monogamous, so long as his deeper-rooted
psychological problems are not addressed. This man may truly
want to be faithful. I just don't think he'll be able to be.
Alan
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210.14 | stilted response | AKOV04::WILLIAMS | | Tue Feb 16 1988 14:24 | 20 |
| Bonnie:
Just what is meant by "commitment to one woman"? Is it possible
for a man to be promiscuous and still keep a commitment to one woman?
Yes, if the commitment does not exclude sexual daliances. I don't
believe all women or all men demand their partners not have sex
with other people. I think most in this country make this demand.
There are people who have no interest in the sexual acts. The
partners of these people, if they have average libidos (sp?), must
find sexual expression outside their primary relationship.
There are males and females who, for whatever reasons, need
to experience multiple sexual partners. It is quite possible people
of this ilk have little or no feeling for the people with whom they
engage in extra-marital sex save for pure sexual feelings. These
people could be, and some probably are, good people (loving partners,
parents, etc.) who don't have multiple heads or minds full of lies.
Douglas
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210.15 | counterexample | OPHION::HAYNES | Charles Haynes | Tue Feb 16 1988 22:05 | 80 |
| Hi Bonnie!
Good topic, think I'll take a swing at it. :-)
I thought about it for a while, and the more I thought about it
them more upset at the basic unquestioned underlying assumptions
I became. What is "promiscuous"? Is it simply the sex act? Is it
shared intimacy? Which is more important? Everyone SAYS that sex
without intimacy is cheap and unrewarding, but would you be more
hurt if your spouse spent an intimate evening with someone else,
sharing their hearts, or would them having anonymous sex with someone
be more upsetting? Why? What's so important about marital "fidelity"?
Granted if you've promised to "forsake all others and cleave to
one only" then you've made a promise, a commitment. What makes this
particular promise of such paramount importance? If it's just
commitments we're talking about, then why isn't the question
"Can a man who's repeatedly broken his promises be eternally
faithful to one person?"
I saw a survey in the last year or so that asked people to define
what they meant by "faithful". It asked whether or not a person
was unfaithful if they did various things like had an intimate dinner
with someone, held hands, kissed, stayed late at the office together,
went on a trip together, had sex together, and so on. I was shocked
and amazed at the differences people expressed. There are people
out there who would expect me to stop hugging my friends if I married
them! Otherwise I was being "unfaithful"! Ye gads!
I really get the sense of a not-so hidden agenda here. What I keep
hearing (not necessarily from you Bonnie) is "Promiscuity is bad,
fidelity is good. Promiscuity is sex with lots of people, fidelity is
just sex with your spouse. Promiscuous people are untrustworthy
liars, faithful people are trustworthy and admirable." I don't buy
it. I don't buy the premise, I don't buy the definitions, and I
don't buy the conclusions.
You've tried to clear this up by saying what you meant by "unfaithful",
but I'm still not happy. I think it *is* possible for people to
make a "permanent" commitment to one other person, a deep, lasting,
committed relationship, without making it *exclusive*. I didn't
stop loving my mother when I married my wife, I didn't stop loving
my old lovers when I married my wife. I do love her more, and love
her better, and I will love her forever, and I want to spend the
rest of my life with her.
But neither of us promised to never look sexually on anyone else. We
have an "open" relationship, and it works for US. If you (not you
Bonnie, but second person plural "you") want to judge our worth as
people or the depth of our commitment by that fact... what can I say,
there are small minded bigots everywhere.
I *KNOW* I'm never going to find someone I love as much as Janice,
because I'm never going to spend enough time getting to know anyone
else as well as I do her. Likewise I *KNOW* she's never going to love
anyone as much as me, because we spend so much of our lives together,
and have shared so much of our lives. I don't need the promise, if the
love isn't there, the promise is hollow. At worst it will bind us into
a relationship we both would be better out of. It's the love that
causes you to work things out, not fear or promises.
If you can't deal with your partner sleeping with someone else,
or you DON'T have the kind of secure relationship Janice and I have,
perhaps you are just starting out, perhaps you haven't worked things
out, then yes extra"marital" sex can be an extremely corrosive and
destructive force, but it doesn't HAVE to be.
I find it very difficult to categorically condemn people's sexual
habits, especially if they are different from mine. Mores change. There
was a time, not too long ago when promiscuity (it was "fornication"
then) was sex with ANYONE who wasn't your spouse. (Still means that in
some places.) Fidelity meant sex with your spouse (whether you wanted
it or not) and NO divorce. Masturbation was immoral! Times change.
Definitions change. People change.
"Love, and do what you will."
St. Augustine [In Ioann. VIII. 7]
-- Charles
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210.16 | Philanderes, single bachelors, married husbands, etc | BETA::EARLY | Bob_the_hiker | Thu Feb 18 1988 12:36 | 34 |
| re: .0
Very quickly a thought occurred to me on this topic, considering
if we want to extend it to be "a person with multiple partners",
rather than "just men".
I can think of "at least" one person who admittedly has had many
sexual partners, but only "one, true love". And that one, true love
chooses to overlook their partners "messing around" with other people
(sexually).
Looking backwards upon all the people I've met and known under a
variety-sets of circumstances ..... it is very vague if "playing around"
has any resemblance to a person being committed to another person,
for the similiar reason that persons who are alchoholics do so by
choice or by chance ?
In one of her columns, a noted columnist replied (to the question:
will this 40 year old playboy ever settle down ?) .. she said
(as best as I can recall: If he's evaded marriage for this long,
why should he settle down now ?).
In another reality, I had the chance to meet a clergyman who was
45 when he finally got married ... about 30 years ago ... and continued
to be so when we lost track of each other 5 years (or so ) ago.
I think that philanderers, like alchoholics and druggies, will tend
to continue to be so, until someone makes them an offer they can't
refuse. :^)
Just my opinion.
Bob
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210.17 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Question reality | Wed Feb 24 1988 16:59 | 28 |
| Hope I'm not too late.
I knew a man who had a wife (and kids), a steady girl friend, and
regularly picked up 'one night stands'. Do I think he could be faithful
to one woman? No. In fact I don't think he could ever be faithful
to any commitment to anyone. I think the bed hopping was symptomatic
of a basic character flaw. I think that the politicians who bed hop,
many using their office, fame and power to pick up women, are showing
the same flaws. It's more then just sleeping around.
> I really get the sense of a not-so hidden agenda here. What I keep
> hearing (not necessarily from you Bonnie) is "Promiscuity is bad,
> fidelity is good. Promiscuity is sex with lots of people, fidelity is
> just sex with your spouse. Promiscuous people are untrustworthy
> liars, faithful people are trustworthy and admirable." I don't buy
> it. I don't buy the premise, I don't buy the definitions, and I
> don't buy the conclusions.
While I don't believe that promiscuous people are totally
untrustworthy liars I do believe they are doing something very
wrong. I *do* buy those definitions of promiscuity and fidelity
though. I also don't believe that faithful people are trustworthy
and admirable by reason of being faithful. I do believe that fidelity
is and admirable trait though and that sex with anyone not ones
spouse is wrong. Doesn't mean I don't like those people just that
I don't approve of something they do. I believe I have that right.
Alfred
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210.18 | Gotta have values, and live by them | EJMVII::GERMAIN | Down to the Sea in Ships | Thu May 19 1988 12:21 | 48 |
| I just got into mennotes, so this topic has quieted down by now.
But, of course, I do have an opinion. It seems to me that all through
the ages, people have had different yardsticks by which to measure
their behavior. I don't feel that I have any more right to make
you change your measuring rules, than you have to make me change
mine.
There are excepions, of course - Hitler's yardstick had a crook
in it.......
Now, what I try to look for when I am trying to decide if I can
trust a person is not how many people he/she sleeps with, but how
honest he/she is. If your partner has an agenda (hidden or not)
that does not include you sleeping with someone else, and you have
agreed with that agenda (explicitly or implicitly), then I would
count you as not trustworthy if you slept with other people.
Harems still exist, but we do not reject Arab leaders on that basis.
The real issue is the unspoken agendas, broken trusts, etc.
If you can stand tall and not hide your actions; if you don't have
to sneak around; if you don't do something that you would NEVER
tell your partner about; then I can begin to feel like I can trust
you.
So.....
If Mrs. Hart knew that Gary slept around, and if it was ok with
her, then both Hart's should have said so. I realize that the public
wouldn't really accept him, then, as presidentail material. But,
at least, they would have been honest, and if they they were rejected,
it really would be the voters fault - not theirs.
It's a funny thing, when Garfield was running for president, the
media leaked the news that he had gotten one of his servants pregnant
just recently. During the next rally, the pressure was on Garfield
to make a statement.
He did.
He said it was true, now lets get on with the election. Which they
did, and Garfield went on to win! He was honest! And we like to
think that we are more open minded than the people of that time.
I will trust you if I think you have a consistent, thought out set
of values and do your best to live with them.
Gregg
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