T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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39.1 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Traveling twice the speed of sound | Fri Mar 05 1993 07:09 | 2 |
| The way I value women cannot be rationalized with the economic model
proposed. Too many intangibles defy quantification.
|
39.2 | | SMURF::BINDER | Homo unus sum, non homines omnes. | Fri Mar 05 1993 09:22 | 22 |
| The economic model proposed is in my view one of the principal reasons
for prenuptial agreements. The future marriage is quantified in terms
of things so that it can be dissolved as would a company be. Bluntly,
the future marrieds are less concerned with forging a successful union
than they are with protecting themselves when, not if, things fail. I
see this for validation of what the Curmudgeon's Dictionary says about
marriage:
marriage, n. Formerly, a lifelong contract for love,
companionship, and mutual benefit between two parties of opposite
sexes. Presently, a socially acceptable agreement between two
parties to share bed and board until they tire of each other's
company.
I shall marry in haste, and repeat at leisure.
- James Branch Cabell, "Jurgen"
And I find this whole attitude extremely distasteful; I do not think it
values people, of either sex, at all.
-dick
|
39.3 | | DELNI::JIMC | Messy but muzzled | Fri Mar 05 1993 09:53 | 19 |
|
I have a number of problems with that model. In addition to the dehumanization
and comditization of the people and the relationship, it seems to presume
that the male will work and earn the major income (not a necessarily
innacurate presumption unfortunately) and that the female partner will not
work outside the home. I assume this from:
> For example X number of years marriage would return a one time
> payment of Y dollars plus a retraining allowance to allow the women
> to return to the workforce
I dunno, this seems seriously sexist and unbalanced to me.
I don't plan to get into another longterm relationship unless there is a very
clear understanding of equality and balance (course I thought that was what I
was doing in this last marriage, but ...).
just some thots
jimc
|
39.4 | | HANNAH::OSMAN | see HANNAH::IGLOO$:[OSMAN]ERIC.VT240 | Fri Mar 05 1993 11:00 | 9 |
|
I tend not to answer questions where the poser doesn't offer his personal
answer first. It makes it sound like a survey.
|
39.5 | | SCHOOL::BOBBITT | an insurmountable opportunity? | Sun Mar 07 1993 15:05 | 7 |
|
too tough to quantify....
And besides, my daddy told me I was invaluable.
-Jody
|
39.6 | what a subject | JGODCL::NOORDIJK | nanoo nanoo | Mon Mar 08 1993 07:49 | 2 |
|
By asking yourself is she worth it? ;-)
|
39.7 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Mon Mar 08 1993 08:09 | 8 |
| One problem with this model is that is seems to imply that the
man has no worth to the woman.
The whole idea though devalues women. And men. And the idea of a
relationship based on love and other things not easily, if at all,
quantifiable.
Alfred
|
39.8 | | DSSDEV::RUST | | Mon Mar 08 1993 09:06 | 18 |
| I don't know if the basenoter had this in mind, but - there have been
attempts, in recent years, to place economic value on the household
tasks usually performed by women [not, please note, on the women
themselves!], since historically it would seem that most economic
studies have excluded all such work. [I don't know whether paid
domestic service is included in, say, the gross national product; if it
is, it seems that one might make an attempt at putting an equivalent
value on "spousal" domestic service, even if the spouse in question
might not be willing to perform those chores for anyone else.]
The point behind such an exercise is to give tangible economic value to
tasks often considered insignificant by society ("just a housewife");
however, since most domestic-service jobs aren't considered very
high-status anyway, I don't know that it's much better for people who
_want_ to be homemakers to think of themselves as contributing to the
economy vs. undertaking a labor of love...
-b
|
39.9 | It looks like a rathole, it smells like a rathole, is it a rathole ? | GYMAC::PNEAL | | Mon Mar 08 1993 10:22 | 51 |
| The model I proposed in the base note was a provocation inspired by what was
said in two previous notes.
Note 13.25
"Boys are taught leadership skills and girls are taught domestic
skills that will never be truly appreciated, in any way, by the
society they live in."
Note 13.31
"..society does not pay people who are good at domestic skills..
anywhere near the amount that men who become good leaders..
are paid. If value is equated to dollars then the typical chores
that women are traditionally taught are not valued anywhere near as
much as the leadership skills that are encouraged in boys."
It was also based on some work I'd read some time ago which dealt with the
economic value placed on domestic tasks normally carried out by women. I didn't
mean women themselves and although I rushed the note before leaving for home
on Friday I thought that did come across.
Re.5 Eric.
I was only asking for other views and perspectives of how other men value
the work their wifes do (and demonstrate it) - or to stretch the point - balance
the needs of both partners ?
For example...
My wife is a Journalist with a University degree and to this point in her life
hasn't wanted children. One of the reasons is that she studied for many years,
she fought hard to find a good job and - at last ! - she earns good money. She
says she FEELS that she's contributing to our lives in a way that cleaning the
bathroom, for example, doesn't make her feel. She also says that she wants to
make something of herself before having a child and that she doesn't want her
father to feel that all those years of supporting her through college and Uni
were a waste.
Around the home I value and truly appreciate what my wife does for me and I
demonstrate that with my love and affection. But I'm asking myself is that
enough ? There are days for example when I don't feel very loving or very
affectionate which means pay-day doesn't happen.
A friend of mine is in a slightly different situation. She stays at home
looking after her 1 year old child. She works 18 hour days and for the most
part finds it repetitive, boring and unrewarding. It's a labour of love and
as such unpaid. But what happens in situations like that when the love runs
out ?. I know what happens - I've been there - so is there a better way ?
- Paul.
|
39.10 | different values I guess | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Mon Mar 08 1993 10:34 | 30 |
| >She also says that she wants to
>make something of herself before having a child and that she doesn't want her
Of all I've done and will do, if I'm remembered only as being my son's
father I will consider that I have made something of myself.
>A friend of mine is in a slightly different situation. She stays at home
>looking after her 1 year old child. She works 18 hour days and for the most
>part finds it repetitive, boring and unrewarding. It's a labour of love and
>as such unpaid. But what happens in situations like that when the love runs
>out ?. I know what happens - I've been there - so is there a better way ?
A cousin of mine stays home looking after his almost 1 year old child.
He works 18 hour days and for the most part finds it very rewarding. He
realizes that he's taking a hit career wise but believes it's in the
best interests of his daughter that one of her parents stays home. The
mother makes a lot better money so he won and gets to stay home.
I don't think the idea of repayment for the spouse that stays home
should be discussed in terms of valuing women. Sure it's still mostly
women who do the staying home but that's not universally the case.
Also framing this issue in terms of women staying home perpetuates the
stereotype and makes it harder for men to be the one to stay home.
Besides I personally believe that the person who gets to stay home has
the advantageous position. If a marriage breaks up after children have
been raised the person who got to stay home should repay the person who
supported them if anyone is the be rewarded at all.
Alfred
|
39.11 | economics and other opinions | CSSE::NEILSEN | Wally Neilsen-Steinhardt | Mon Mar 08 1993 13:25 | 43 |
| Valuing people in economic terms is at best, a misleading academic exercise
and at worst pernicious nonsense.
If the topic here is giving a dollar value to work done, there are other, only
slightly less troublesome issues. Do we mean the maximum amount an employer
would willingly pay to have the work done? Or the minimum an employee
would work for? Or the amount some third party decides is "just"? Or the
amount society would pay to ensure that it is done? Is it the market price
of the work? What if the market is not completely free? What if there are
significant differences in market power?
Economists have struggled with these questions for many years, without
producing answers which satisfy me or them.
re 9 and 10:
If A and B do the same job, and A enjoys it and B does not, should they
be paid differently? Who should be paid more and why?
My answer (given as requested by .4): pay them the same; B will seek a new
career and the field will be left to those who enjoy it.
.8>I don't know whether paid domestic service is included in, say,
> the gross national product
It is, and you are right about why some academic folks want to estimate
the value of spousal domestic service.
.9> so is there a better way ?
I don't know, but I suspect that economics is not the answer.
Since my wife and I have common finances (among our friends some do and some
don't), it would be meaningless for me to pay her anything.
One alternative to the economic model is a self-respect model: I do what I do
because that is who I am and who I want to be, not because I am rewarded
for it. I think this is a more stable model for parenthood, since whatever
the rewards, the day will come when the rewards are not there. My idea of who
I am is much more stable.
Of course, I am not a parent, by choice, so you can take my opinions with
a grain of salt.
|
39.12 | | SCHOOL::BOBBITT | an insurmountable opportunity? | Mon Mar 08 1993 13:43 | 18 |
|
For me, I feel I get a great deal of personal satisfaction, and feel
valued at my career here at work. I doubt I could get this feeling
complete out of child-rearing, so I doubt that whatever money you paid
me to do child-rearing or homemaking would not give me the same
internal rewards as a career.
The fact remains that I will probably eventually have children, and I
will love and nurture them, and their father and I will share the
responsibility and nurturing and caretaking probably fairly equally (he
may do a bit more, not sure yet).
As for economic values, I pay someone $15 an hour to clean certain
parts of my house that I find loathsome to clean. That's quite a bit
of money. I'm sure live-in au-paires earn quite a bit also.
-Jody
|
39.13 | my two cents | EARRTH::MACKINNON | | Tue Mar 09 1993 08:03 | 21 |
|
How do men value women? Wow I was initially glad to see this.
Yet after reading the replies, it seems that it really isnt
what I wanted to see. My interpretation of the question is
not linked to monetary or economic benefits. Its more how
are the women valued by the men in the non-tangible ways.
What do the women in your life make you feel like? What
have the women in your life taught you? What would your
life be like if these women had never touched your life?
As far as pay for domestic chores, I believe the most important
job a person can be is a parent. Just a personal belief, but
I hold it rather high. So to me, the "pay" for raising my kids
would be the knowledge that I got to take an active role in my
kids lives. No amount of money could equal that feeling.
Of course, I have yet to actually be a parent so my feelings on
that may change once reality hits.
Michele
|
39.14 | | LIMPID::BINNS | | Tue Mar 09 1993 08:57 | 31 |
| Add my voice to say that this strictly monetary accounting is
meaningless.
Yes, work traditionally done by women pays less than traditional men's
work. Beyond that, thinking of how much money certain work is "worth"
is goofy. Aside from any social or moral values associated with the
work by a particular society, the value of work in economic terms
cannot be rationally explained either. An excellent first grade
teacher will likely contribute more to the economic future of the
nation than will an excellent computer engineer, but only in the long
run, in ways that cannot be tracked as easily, and at the short term
expense of the public which would likely not pay comparably to the
engineer even if it understood those benefits. (Conversely,
a poor first grade teacher will have a larger negative economic effect
than a poor engineer).
Hence the teacher will never make what the engineer does.
As for child-rearing, I can tell you from the experience of one who is
the main parent for 3 little ones that the issue is more complicated
than whether the work is boring or interesting. In a nutshell,
housekeeping is repetitious and mindless, while working for a computer
company can be intellectually challenging. On the other hand, running a
household is like being self-employed -- you're on call all the time
but you run the show, and, with some skill you can find lots of
interstices of rest and diversion in the long days. More to the point,
the thrill of raising kids, in my view, far outweighs the disadvantages
of housekeeping.
Kit
like being self-employed
|
39.15 | answering Michele's questions | CSSE::NEILSEN | Wally Neilsen-Steinhardt | Tue Mar 09 1993 12:51 | 25 |
| .13> How do men value women?
Very high, as I value myself and men. Not too specific, I'll admit, but
it's the best I can do.
> What do the women in your life make you feel like?
Everything from heaven to hell. The happiest and most miserable feelings I
have had have been associated with women.
I'm glad to have these feelings, all of them.
And I'm glad that the present woman in my life can accept and support
me in all of them.
> What have the women in your life taught you?
What life is like when I have feelings. Some ways that I can relate to
my feelings. Ways I can value myself and others that don't depend on thinking
or doing. Different ways of looking at the world.
> What would your life be like if these women had never touched your life?
I'd probably be a recluse somewhere, bathing once a month and doing all
my work over the Internet.
|
39.16 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Wed Mar 10 1993 10:18 | 4 |
| When I visited Morocco with my family I got a lot of offers for my
elder daughter ranging from a bicycle to 10,000 camels. I was tempted
by that offer until my younger daughter pointed out that we couldn't
fit them into the garden. I think she was just jealous.
|
39.17 | | COMET::DYBEN | Grey area is found by not looking | Wed Mar 10 1993 12:13 | 7 |
|
>10,000 camels
Hey that's alot of money, you got any phone numbers:-)
David
|
39.18 | | MEOC02::CASEY | VAXphone=MEO78B::CASEY | Wed Mar 10 1993 13:55 | 15 |
| How do I value my wife??
I can't ..my wife is priceless.
After all...
..just look at the bloke she has to put up with!!
hehehe.. TRUE!!
Don
*8-)
|
39.19 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Wed Mar 10 1993 14:41 | 9 |
|
A good wife is more valuable than rubies and gold--Proverbs.
Commonly attributed to Solomon. He should have known 8^).
Having had one of the worst and one of the best myself, I can
tell you he was right on.
fred();
|
39.20 | In the end I decided it wasn't a bargain. | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Thu Mar 11 1993 10:48 | 16 |
| re: .17
>>10,000 camels
>
> Hey that's alot of money, you got any phone numbers:-)
First you have to have a beautiful daughter. Then just think of
having to muck out 10,000 camels every morning before going to work!
I didn't notice a 'phone number, but if you take your daughter and
stand outside the spice shop on the square in Marrakesh (they also sell
aphrodisiacs) you will probably get an offer. Just pretend you are
sightseeing.
Even if you have the garden space I doubt if you could persuade the
airline to exchange your daughter's return ticket for one for 10,000
camels, though.
|
39.21 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Thu Mar 11 1993 11:32 | 3 |
| You could sell the camels. I think though that "10,000" was just an
arbitrary large number. If you had started bargaining, you would have
found out. ["10,000!?" I can't possibly take less than 20,000!"]
|
39.22 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Thu Mar 11 1993 13:20 | 6 |
| Hummmmm..... Have you thought in trading in smaller animals? Like
razorbacks, jackalopes, and mux's?:) You might pay less in frieght. And
spend less time figuring how your going to get 10,000 camels in you
garage.:)
|
39.23 | | GOLLY::SWALKER | | Thu Mar 11 1993 13:53 | 3 |
| Actually, 10,000 camels sounds like good starter stock for a fertilizer
business. If you know people who run organic farms, you should be all
set.
|
39.24 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Thu Mar 11 1993 14:03 | 5 |
| Fertilizer and making punks. Remember those things? :) The look like
incence minus the lovely colors and fragrences.:)
But then again we have enough fertilizer from some of the replys in
this string. Like mine:)
|
39.25 | culture shock | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Thu Mar 11 1993 14:16 | 12 |
| I remember walking around in the Middle East (Israel) and being
regularly offered camels and sheep for the women in our group. It
was kind of a shock. A part of me just couldn't believe these were
serious offers. Easier to believe it was a sort of "let's tease the
tourist" sort of thing.
The really interesting thing though was the looks and stares that the
tall women (6 foot plus) in the group drew. A little more women than
most there were used to. :-)
Alfred
Alfred
|
39.26 | | TENAYA::RAH | garlic is a good idea | Thu Mar 11 1993 15:57 | 2 |
|
they were on offer for two camels then eh?
|
39.27 | .26 | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Thu Mar 11 1993 16:32 | 2 |
| two camels, one sheep, sixteen mux's, and a partridge in a jitter pear
tree.:)
|
39.28 | haggle | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Thu Mar 11 1993 16:58 | 6 |
| re .25
Shoulda told them that for five camels you could maybe work
somthing 8^).
fred();
|
39.29 | | COMET::DYBEN | Grey area is found by not looking | Thu Mar 11 1993 16:58 | 6 |
|
Dang all I have is a son. Anybody want to trade:-)
David
|
39.30 | | DSSDEV::RUST | | Thu Mar 11 1993 17:24 | 4 |
| Re .29: Uh, in some parts of the world, you might get offered more
camels for _him_...
-b
|
39.31 | | COMET::BRONCO::TANGUY | Armchair Rocket Scientist | Thu Mar 11 1993 18:48 | 1 |
| Okay, I'll bite. . . What's a "mux?"
|
39.32 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Fri Mar 12 1993 08:35 | 2 |
| Its a dho-dha that connects to a mux server.:) Not to be confused with
a snipe, or Siberian water roller skis.:_]
|
39.33 | | HANNAH::OSMAN | see HANNAH::IGLOO$:[OSMAN]ERIC.VT240 | Fri Mar 12 1993 13:54 | 22 |
|
================================================================================
Note 39.31 How do Men Value Women ? 31 of 32
COMET::BRONCO::TANGUY "Armchair Rocket Scientist" 1 line 11-MAR-1993 18:48
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Okay, I'll bite. . . What's a "mux?"
I think he means this (from AHD):
lum-mox n.
An oaf; lout. [Orig. unknown.]
|
39.34 | | NOVA::FISHER | DEC Rdb/Dinosaur | Fri Mar 12 1993 15:06 | 4 |
| and if you don't go broke transporting 10000 camels home, the
cost of the vet exam and quarantine will get you.
ed
|
39.35 | How much? No Way! | MYOSPY::CLARK | | Fri Mar 19 1993 04:58 | 7 |
| >.0 basenote
Why bother with all this dollar value assessments? Although it would be
interesting for a few laughs to see how much value women would put on
their housecleaning time and sexual performance and THEN to see how
much the husbands would figure it was worth. Why go through all that?
Better, and easier, to just hire a part-time maid and/or hooker. At
least you would have the option of variety if paying for sexual favors.
|
39.36 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Fri Mar 19 1993 08:44 | 8 |
| .35
Or how do women value their men? Besides changing their oil in the car,
doing the manual labor of lifting heavy things at the job, and for many
women who are home. Sending their husbands out to prostitute themselves
at their daily jobs. Not all jobs are wonderful carriers as some
women might have some disillusion about.
|
39.37 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Simply Resistible | Fri Mar 19 1993 09:27 | 46 |
| I'd like to depart from the previous three dozen replies (and the basenote)
but explore the topic contained in the title. We seem to have reached a
consensus that trying to calculate a monetary equivalence for the various things
that women do for us is a fruitless and in many ways pointless exercise.
But the idea of how you as a man value women bears interest for me.
==
I value women in many different ways and for many different reasons.
There are certain attributes that I value in my mother, certain things about
my wife that I value, certain things about my daughters that I value and
certain ways I value the rest of the women in the world.
How I value women often depends on what relationship I have with them (if
any.)
I may value a female painter that I don't know strictly in terms of her art.
Another female painter who is a family friend is seen differently; both as
an artist and a friend.
Some women are valued in terms of what they do. Some women are valued in terms
of what they are. Some women are valued in terms of what I imagine them to
be.
There are a great many things I value about my wife. I appreciate the things
she does to keep the house running: domestic chores such as washing the clothes
and ironing, cleaning the house, etc, paying the bills, and stuff like that.
I value the way she is raising my children, and just for bearing children in
the first place. I value her female perspective on things- it adds dimension
to my life. I value our sexuality.
Curiously enough, I tend to make a subconscious evaluation of women in
terms of their suitability as a sex partner/mate even though I am married.
I've done this as long as I can remember. When I see a new woman, an
analysis takes place that seems to go roughly as follows. I look at her face
and hair and then her body. Unless she is significantly unpleasant looking,
particularly unclean in appearance, or otherwise off putting, I will probably
try to get a reading of her mind. That is to say, just because a particular
woman may not "pass the test" of generating "mating" interest, she still
may be pleasant enough or intellectually stimulating enough to spend time with.
That the initial background process seems to check sexual attractiveness
first to me indicates why we call it a basic instinct. It is a very low level
check.
Anybody else notice this sort of thing?
|
39.38 | | BLUMON::QUAYLE | fries *my* clams | Fri Mar 19 1993 10:58 | 7 |
| I believe that Agatha Christie, in her autobiography, wrote that a male
friend of hers said that it had been his experience that women tend
to evaluate a man as a potential husband, and that men tend to
evaluate women by two criteria: how would she be in bed? is she
likely to go to bed with me?
|
39.39 | | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | i'll always be a dreamin man | Fri Mar 19 1993 11:10 | 6 |
| re .35, .36, I always thought people were supposed to be together, as
couples, for love and companionship. There are some things you can't
get from hired help.
Lorna
|
39.40 | | SMURF::BINDER | Vox turbae uox Dei | Fri Mar 19 1993 11:53 | 19 |
| Re .37
Much of what you say, Doctah, rings true for me. I find myself in a
continual battle with my nature, telling it that women are not bed
partners; like me, they are people who have choices, of whom one has
chosen to be a bed partner and some others have chosen to be friends
and acquaintances.
Re .39
Lorna,
Your thoughts may make sense to you, and they may even make sense to
many others, but other cultures feel differently. For the men of
ancient Athens, a wife was for the purpose of getting children and
managing her husband's household. Hetaerae were for sex and female
companionship, and homosexual partners were for love.
-dick
|
39.41 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Fri Mar 19 1993 12:11 | 3 |
| re:.38
Sounds about right.
|
39.42 | that basic reaction | CSSE::NEILSEN | Wally Neilsen-Steinhardt | Mon Mar 22 1993 12:40 | 33 |
| .37> Anybody else notice this sort of thing?
Yes, indeed.
My basic reaction to women seems to put them on a scale, one end of which gets
adjectives like: attractive, warm, young, well-dressed, healthy, well-groomed...
Women at this end of the scale are the ones I first prefer to talk with,
listen to, be around and so forth. As I get to know a woman, her own
personality usually drowns out this first basic reaction. But not entirely.
I suppose if I were more highly evolved, I would not have this reaction. But
I'm not, and I do. So I work to get past this basic reaction, especially
at work, where behaving on this basis is both unfair and illegal.
I don't think this is sexual, although it may have started out that way. For
one thing, I still feel the reaction, although I am now quite monagamous.
Also, I have this positive reaction to some women I know, even though I am
fully aware that I do not match their sexual preferences at all. Finally,
I have known women who were sexually available and attractive that I did not
have a positive reaction to.
By what I read and observe, a lot of men react just the way I do.
One contrary opinion: somebody did one of those psychology experiments,
flashing pictures for milliseconds and then asking questions about them.
They found that men and women shown pictures of fully dressed men and
women generally noticed the same thing first: the social class of the
person in the picture.
I have a similar basic reaction to men, although it is much less strong, and
the positive end of the scale gets adjectives like: direct, well-groomed,
intelligent...
|
39.43 | | SMURF::BINDER | Vox turbae uox Dei | Mon Mar 22 1993 13:02 | 11 |
| Re .42
Wally, you say you still have that basic reaction even though you're
quite monogamous. In .40 I said much the same thing.
Do you think your (or anyone else's) monogamy is an instinctual thing
as opposed to a conscious decision? If monogamy is only a conscious
decision, then that basic reaction may well be one that cannot be
suppressed despite one's most sincere efforts.
-dick
|
39.44 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Simply Resistible | Mon Mar 22 1993 13:45 | 5 |
| >If monogamy is only a conscious
> decision, then that basic reaction may well be one that cannot be
> suppressed despite one's most sincere efforts.
It's gotta be a conscious decision. ;-)
|
39.45 | more conscious for some, than others | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | you've been a great audience | Mon Mar 22 1993 15:22 | 7 |
| re .44, yeah, but, I think there are some people who really aren't
interested in having sex with anybody other than their SO, and other
people who are interested, but don't because they know it might ruin
the relationship.
Lorna
|
39.46 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Tue Mar 23 1993 01:42 | 6 |
| Well I've only had sex with one person (married for more than 20
years now). I wouldn't say I wasn't *interested* in sex with another
woman, but it's more an intellectual curiosity about what it would be
like.
Dave
|
39.47 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Tue Mar 23 1993 03:07 | 2 |
| All this talk about c.c.c.c.c.committment is giving me a terrible case
of the hives. ;')
|
39.48 | | SOLVIT::JOHNSTON | the White Raven ...raving? | Tue Mar 23 1993 08:06 | 11 |
| c.c.c.c.c.committment?
silly me, and I thought it was mere health-consciousness for the 90s
... 8^}
in other news, I'm purely confused about why someone would even _try_
to short-circuit a healthy attraction. I enjoy a healthy attraction
for itself and follow-through [or lack thereof] is generally confined
to the personal limits I've set for my behaviour.
Annie
|
39.49 | ! | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | you've been a great audience | Tue Mar 23 1993 09:19 | 5 |
| re .46, if I were you I'd be curious, too. There's a lot of variety in
the world!
Lorna
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39.50 | "Nature is what we were put here to rise above." | CSSE::NEILSEN | Wally Neilsen-Steinhardt | Tue Mar 23 1993 12:10 | 23 |
| I think monogamy is a conscious choice for me. I suspect my polygamous
tendencies are due more to culture than instinct, but I have not got
any convincing evidence or reasoning to support that statement.
.48> I'm purely confused about why someone would even _try_
> to short-circuit a healthy attraction.
Annie,
If your first name is a reliable guide, your position in our common culture
is different from mine. Here are a few reasons why I resist my basic
reaction, reasons which may apply to many men
women I know expect to be treated as thinking, feeling human beings
(I also want to relate to them in these ways) and the basic
reaction can get in the way
letting my basic reaction show in my behavior at work could lead to
some very unpleasant discussions with personnel
letting my basic reaction show in my social behavior could mislead
women into believing I have intentions that I don't have, which
could lead to complicated scenes I would rather avoid.
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39.51 | | SOLVIT::JOHNSTON | the White Raven ...raving? | Tue Mar 23 1993 14:18 | 37 |
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re.50, Wally
Interesting, but I'm still missing a few vital pieces of the puzzle. My
question in .48 was more focused on why some men apparently desire to not
even _have_ these reactions; while your response indicates why you find
it wise not to act upon them.
> women I know expect to be treated as thinking, feeling human beings
I could say the same about most of the men that I know ... at least the
thinking part. By the same token most of the women I know want to be
perceived as physically attractive.
> and the basic reaction can get in the way
how so? is the basic reaction consistently overwhelming enough to
inhibit discourse?
> letting my basic reaction show in my behavior at work could lead to
> some very unpleasant discussions with personnel
that would depend upon how one let it show, wouldn't it?
> letting my basic reaction show in my social behavior could mislead
> women into believing I have intentions that I don't have, which
> could lead to complicated scenes I would rather avoid.
is it your experience of women that if you find them attractive they
expect you to put out? or that they expect you to intend that they do?
[I suppose that I can understand that, as I found that many men feel
that if I find them attractive I will have sex with them ... I still
think they're missing a few fashion steps, but it's common enough that
I can draw the parallel]
Annie
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39.52 | | HANNAH::OSMAN | see HANNAH::IGLOO$:[OSMAN]ERIC.VT240 | Tue Mar 23 1993 16:35 | 40 |
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I think as I get older (I'm 491 months old), my sexual desires have changed.
When I was younger, the thought process went something like this:
Gee, I'm attracted to her.
Hey, maybe I'll find reasons to talk with her, so we can start something
up so we can have sex together.
Of the times that this plan worked, all too often I'd end up deciding later
that now that we've had sex together, I'm not really interested in continuing
to see her. But she still wanted to see me. Not only that, she wanted a real
relationship. I'd back off. She'd be pissed. I'd feel bad that I "broke
her heart".
These days my thinking goes a bit further:
Gee, I'm attracted.
Hey, maybe I'll find reasons to talk with her so we can start something
and have sex.
Hmmm, do I see the possibility of a relationship here ?
Naaa, but sex sure sounds nice.
Am I willing to risk the upset ?
Naaa, forget it.
But hey, how can you know whether there could be a relationship, you
don't even know her.
I dunno, I just don't think I'd want one. I think I'll just back off
for now.
/Eric
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39.53 | I like a more romantic setting... | GYMAC::PNEAL | | Wed Mar 24 1993 06:52 | 26 |
| Each to their own. I like to get to know a woman first and then making love, if
it's going to happen within that relationship, will.
I like a woman who's personality shines through her eyes and her smile. Eyes
are important - I like a woman who's eyes sparkle. How a woman laughs is
important too - does it come from deep down inside or is it on the
surface, without substance. And I love how a woman smells. The right perfume
can turn me on like a light bulb.
I like a woman who's got something to say for herself, somebody who makes me
laugh and I feel comfortable with. Physical qualities are less important. I
don't have the physique of Arnie S. or the looks of Errol F. so why should she
look like Michelle P. or Kathy I. I mean, let's be real here.
Then comes dinner. A nice restaurant, comfortable ambience and a good wine. Not
exaggerated, not too heavy, but enjoyable. A good conversation - about her,
about me, about her dreams, about mine. Dinner has to last - I hate it in
America when the waiter brings the check and I haven't even finished - "Hi I'm
Don, would you like to pay now or ..." - urgh. Drop dead Don.
After dinner it's important if she allows me to help her with her coat. If she
does then is she tense and rigid or relaxed and comfortable with me so close.
If all things feel right so far then the timing of the first kiss - crunch
time - has to be chosen with care. The kiss will tell you - both of you -
exactly how love making will be. Tender, passionate, aggressive or just wet and
warm.
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39.54 | more on the basic reaction | CSSE::NEILSEN | Wally Neilsen-Steinhardt | Thu Mar 25 1993 12:37 | 37 |
| .51> question in .48 was more focused on why some men apparently desire to not
> even _have_ these reactions
I may have missed something, but I don't think any guy here has said he would
not want to have (as opposed to act on) this basic reaction. I did say that
if I were more highly evolved, I would probably not have this reaction, but
I don't know that I would want to be that evolved. That was said with tongue
partly in cheek anyway.
> is the basic reaction consistently overwhelming enough to
> inhibit discourse?
Not consistently, but occasionally. There have been attractive women in
my life that I never had a coherent conversation with, because of the
basic reaction. As I get older, the reaction is less overwhelming, so
I can now talk seriously with women that would have left me nothing but
a tongue-tied glandular reaction years ago.
> that would depend upon how one let it show, wouldn't it?
My impression of the law and the culture is that there is currently no
reasonably safe way of letting it show at work. That I am married
is a factor here.
> is it your experience of women that if you find them attractive they
> expect you to put out? or that they expect you to intend that they do?
My experience is that if I show a woman I think she is attractive she will
believe I am making a pass at her. Most likely she will be amused, annoyed
or angry. If she responds positively, she will probably be angry, annoyed
or amused when I try to clarify the situation.
All of which reflects the fact that I am a little short of savoir-faire,
and so are the people I hang out with. I've been told that there are
parts of our culture where people can communicate the message "I find
you attractive, but I don't expect anything from you and I don't intend
to do anything about it" without misunderstanding.
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39.55 | | SMURF::BINDER | Vox turbae uox Dei | Fri Mar 26 1993 08:59 | 5 |
| Re .54
There are ways of letting a woman know you think she is attractive
without her thinking you are making a pass at her. After some bad
experiences of the sort you suggest, I have perforce learned a couple.
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