T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
26.3 | Separate/Together? | VORTEX::JOVAN | the Music kiss.... | Wed May 14 1986 14:19 | 29 |
| I agree with Marge about the financial independence and it feels
good, although I have had to make several hard sacrifices to do
so.
However the emotional needs are a bit more difficult. Currently
I am trying not to get totally involved in one relationship, but
rather have my needs met by different people at different times
on all different levels.
I have found tho, that many men do not relate to me having more than
one relationship. It's either be with them and no one else, or
not be with them. I have chosen the latter in such cases and feel
that it is their loss.
This is not to say, that at sometime in the future, I will not ever
have a 1-1 relationship including fidelity. But at this point in
my life, I want to share myself and my life with as many people
as possible and become richer with each relationship.
Women have always, and will always play a large part in my emotional
stability. Thank goodness I have never had to chose in these
situations.
I am not sure I answered your questions, Maggie - but it felt good
to write what I did. I am real interested in hearing from others
about this.
Angeline
|
26.4 | only men are insensitive??? | NAAD::GERMANN | | Wed May 14 1986 17:10 | 25 |
| I agree that men can be insensitive at times. However, after 40
years on this earth, I am finally learning alot about myself. And,
lo and behold, I discovered that I can be just as insensitive to
my special man's needs at times.
I have chosen to have a special relationship with one man. Neither
of us wants marriage right now, nor to live together.
I find myself very frustrated with Ray when he either doesn't respond
with sensitivity, or doesn't respond at all. Fortunately, I have
a wonderful female friend across the street and we share almost
everything. We are in the same situation (single parents with a
special man). However, I am able to talk with Ray about what I
perceive as his insensitivity. I have found that often he is not
even aware of the hurt he has caused. Also, I found that I am
insensitive to his needs. He really needs time alone, he really
must focus on only one thing at a time so that he can do the best
job (a perfectionist!!). These are his needs. They aren't wrong
because they are him and I fell in love with him. So I am just
as insensitive when I ignore these needs.
Thank heaven for my female friends and my kids.
Ellen
|
26.5 | | CYGNUS::LYONS | | Fri May 16 1986 14:18 | 19 |
| I have run across some very insensitive men one in particular here
at DEC. They frustrate me totally. I am very fortunate to have
found (after 7 years of being divorced) a very kind, loving and
sensitive man whom I will be marrying on August 2.
I agree that female friendships can provide a great deal of support
and I have some wonderful friends who have shared a great deal with
me throughout these last 7 trying years. However, there is no
substitute, in my mind for the relationship between man and woman.
I think some woman, either because they don't want to admit that
they need a man or for whatever the reason, fail to work at what
it takes to meet and sustain a lasting relationship with a man.
If God had meant for us to be alone, He wouldn't have created two
different sexes! (As difficult as it can be sometimes)
Donna
|
26.6 | don't worry...take your towel | CSMADM::SAWYER | | Fri May 30 1986 12:59 | 19 |
| I vote angeline for president!.....As Woody Allen, among others,
has said....life is a series of relationships of varying lengths
of time....take them as they come and enjoy them all as much as
possible. Noone can ever promise to stay with anyone for ever.
People are changing and growing constantly...things you liked 5
years ago may be things you've outgrown...what you like today you
may outgrow in 2 years...things and/or people....be flexible.
I'm a single parent with 2 daughters...have been for 11 years..
Since I split wit hthe other parent of my children I've had 3 great
relationships with members of the opposite sex and a hundred nice/
great relationships with people who became no more than good to
very good friends.....sometimes I go places alone and some times
I go with a date and sometimes I go with a friend or friends....
I have few regrets and lots of nice memories....I'll probably
continue on this hiway for a long time to come.....
just thinkink out loud.....
|
26.7 | A Vote for Plurality | VISHNU::ADEM | | Tue Jun 16 1987 14:47 | 27 |
| Well, better late than never...
RE: .5 It was mentioned in this note that "...there is no
substitute...for the relationship between man and woman. I think
some women, either because they don't want to admit that they need
a man or for whatever reason, fail to work at what it takes to meet
and sustain a lasting relationship with a man. If God had meant
for us to be alone, He wouldn't have created two different sexes!"
Thinking along the lines of valuing differences (as well as people!),
I would prefer to say that there is no substitute for the relationship
between two loving people. I believe most people would agree that
having a partner to share your life with in a loving and caring
way is something we all aspire to. That relationship, however,
cannot be judged by the sex of the partners--only by the quality
of the relationship; is it a good relationship? do the partners
get their needs met? etc.
It is a misnomer to assume that all women need a man. People need
to feel special--that someone cares for them. Men need to know
that they are loved just as much as women do. Both men and women
need a partner in their lives to help them deal with the problems
life throws our way. But nothing says that partner needs to be
a man or a woman or whether the partner even has to be a lover.
I also feel certain that God does not want us to be alone...that
is why there are many people on the earth and not just one.
|
26.8 | separatism isn't a bad thing | MOSAIC::IANNUZZO | Catherine T. | Thu Jun 18 1987 12:05 | 69 |
|
> I also feel certain that God does not want us to be alone...that
> is why there are many people on the earth and not just one.
I heartily agree!
Since this note has been revived, I'd like to add a few thoughts on the
subject of separatism, in the interest of even more plurality.
All human beings require intimate relationships with other human beings.
A human in complete isolation tends to be a very sad thing, generally.
However, the need for intimacy exists in tension with the need for
individuation, for a sense of one's personal identity apart from others.
Men are generally raised to emphasize the quest for individuation at the
expense of intimacy, and women are raised to value intimacy over the
need to be separate. Intimacy, when it is established from a strong
personal identity, is deeply enriching and can complement and re-inforce
one's own sense of self. When that central core isn't well-defined,
intimate relationships can overwhelm and swallow up a person's identity.
I think this is often the case for women. Like a tree that ends up
growing around a post or other obstruction, women often end up feeling
that a relationship with a man is just part of their shape, and can't
conceive of themselves otherwise. Even if they haven't got one, from
childhood they sort of reserve a blank "unfulfilled" spot in their life
that belongs to The Man That Will Make Them Happy. I think this
imagined need for a Man is a combination the natural needs for love and
intimacy, physical affection, and sex.
I would like to suggest that all three of these things can be separate,
and the needs met by different individuals in a person's life. I think
it is quite wonderful if you can get all three from a single person.
Even if you do, I still don't think that necessarily represents your
life quota. That is many women's expectation, I think, and it doesn't
give them room to grow apart from their main relationship.
That most women's main relationship is with a man introduces a
significant social/political element into the most mundane of personal
relationships. Because the society at present is defined by and for men,
male values, and male experiences, a woman ends up building her life in
a unconscious way around male-ness in every aspect of her life -- from
doing the dishes for him to voting for politicians obsessed with nuclear
phallic symbols. Because she loves her man, and see him as a human
being, she's often unwilling to engage in the harsh analysis of
patriarchy and male values.
A little separatism is a good thing for women, I think. It provides the
space to experience herself as a distinct individual, and it's
astonishing how one's vision clears when one steps outside the game.
I think it ought to be an alternative more available to women than it is
-- medieval convents, for all their shortcomings, a good example of such
an alternative in a society. It may not be a lifetime choice, but I
think there are times in most women's lives when it is needed.
Separatism doesn't necessarily involve man-hating. I am the mother of a
son and a daughter, and I do not wish to deny either of them their total
humanity. I have some very intimate male friends, and am unable to take
a position that men should be nuked or stored in sperm banks. If this
were not a patriarchal society there might not be any need for Amazons,
nuns, or Lesbians. [I use the latter term in it's original sense, to
describe Sappho's island community, which offered women the only
opportunity for freedom that could have in a society where they weren't
even considered fully human.] It IS a patriarchy, though, and that
gives urgency to the need for alternatives.
As far as there being nothing like that old man-woman magic, ahem,
I'd like to submit that not all of us feel that kind of magic. Sex is a
powerful and delightful force, but to equate it only with men is a tad
narrow-minded, no?
|
26.9 | Well put! | HPSCAD::TWEXLER | | Thu Jun 18 1987 12:51 | 5 |
| RE) -1
Hear! Hear!
Tamar
|
26.10 | A room of my own | BUFFER::LEEDBERG | Truth is Beauty, Beauty is Truth | Thu Jun 18 1987 13:24 | 16 |
| re. .8
Whenever I spend an extended period of time outside the system/society
with on women around and then return to the system/society I feel
as though my head is getting batter all the time.
If, on the other hand, I spend little bits of time with mostly women,
and few wonderful men, I just get a lot of "clicks" and a slight
headache.
BUT I do need the time away.
_peggy
(-)
| Why women need the Goddess
|
26.11 | | GCANYN::TATISTCHEFF | | Thu Jun 18 1987 15:48 | 10 |
| Yup, it is/would be nice to have a female refuge. Have any of you
read Suzannah Elgin's books, Native Toungue, and I forget the other
one? Reading about the female members of an extended and powerful
family (in the future) creating a woman's language. With this
language, they could communicate and express the feelings and issues
they thought most important. The married women looked forward to
the day when they could move in with the older women... Sounded
awfully tempting to me...
Lee
|
26.12 | ex | SKYLIT::SAWYER | i'll take 2 myths and 3 traditions...to go.. | Mon Jun 22 1987 17:51 | 48 |
|
re: adem
if qod had meant for us to be alone HE wouldn't created 2 sexes.
you are assuming that there is a god.
you are assuming that god is male.
there is no real basis for you to make either of these assumptions.
and, even if there is a god....and even if this god were "male"....
why would that prove that "he" made 2 sexes so as to avoid loneliness?
that doesn't make any sense...
from 21-25 i was with "my wife" (i hate possessive terms)
and from 25-27 i was with my first real lover (male? female? who
cares...!)
from 27-29 i was alone....poor me....poor poor me....
I LOVED IT!
not at first, of course, because of the brainwashing and conditioning
that society instilled in me...
"you're noone unless somebody loves you"
"everybody needs somebody"
...it took awhile to get used to...but i eventually
ended up enjoying that period of time and remember it quite fondly.
from 29-31 (these are all approximate ranges) i was with my second
lover....male?...female?....st bernard?....who cares!
from 31-33 i was alone....
again, i enjoyed it thoroughly!
from 33--?? now...i've been with my 3'rd lover.....
having a wonderful time, thank you....
i may end up having 99 loving relationships in my life...
or this could be my last, one way or the other...
i couldn't care less.
i've been very happy and feel quite confident that i can be happy
with .....lovers, friends, family, alone....whatever...
re: iannuzzo.....
excellent!
a wise person you are!!!!
|
26.13 | All you need is self-esteem | HULK::DJPL | Do you believe in magic? | Tue Jun 23 1987 12:31 | 26 |
| > < Note 26.12 by SKYLIT::SAWYER "i'll take 2 myths and 3 traditions...to go.." >
>
> from 27-29 i was alone....poor me....poor poor me....
>
> I LOVED IT!
> not at first, of course, because of the brainwashing and conditioning
> that society instilled in me...
> "you're noone unless somebody loves you"
> "everybody needs somebody"
DON'T I KNOW IT!!!! I was with the same person from ages 18-23
[married 2 1/2 years].
When we got divorced, I WAS MISERABLE! Why? Because I was
'trained' to grow up, get a job, get married.
When I finally learned to enjoy life for what it is, I found a new
woman and she found me. Kind of like "When the student is ready, the
teacher will come". Why? Because I was comfortable with myself. I
couldn't expect anyone to love me if I hated myself for the situation I was
in.
> from 29-31 (these are all approximate ranges) i was with my second
> lover....male?...female?....st bernard?....who cares!
Watch it, you may get a call from Bob Guccione :-)
|
26.14 | need both | CREDIT::RANDALL | I'm no lady | Tue Jun 23 1987 13:29 | 14 |
| As far as analyzing the necessity for contact with other women in
a patriarchal society, I could never hope to top Catherine's wonderful
explanation.
But I feel a need to state the obvious --
I don't want to cut myself off from roughly half the human race. If I
were a few years younger, that half I never knew would have been the
female half. Now some people (not necessarily anybody here) want me to
cut off the male half. Neither makes sense to me. We're all here,
we're all sharing the same planet, and we have to learn how to really
share it instead of bossing it around, before we destroy it.
--bonnie
|
26.15 | both sexes are necessary | YODA::BARANSKI | Thank You! Thank You! Thank You! | Tue Jun 30 1987 16:13 | 35 |
| RE: .8
"Sex is a powerful and delightful force, but to equate it only with men is a tad
narrow-minded, no?"
Last I knew, Sex involved women as well as men...
RE: .12
"if qod [sic] had meant for us to be alone HE wouldn't created 2 sexes.
you are assuming that there is a god.
you are assuming that god is male."
Not necessarily, the same statement could be just as validly expressed as:
If <favorite creation theory> had meant for us to be alone it wouldn't created 2
sexes.
In other words, there has to be two sexes because there are two sexes...
Now this can't be applied universally, since there are creatures that do not
have two distinct sexes. Last I knew there were no sexed, two sexed, and double
sexed, and changable sex creatures; I haven't heard of creatures of more then
two sexes.
But, the human race is a two sexed race, and I feel that it's a good bet that
both sexes are necessary in more or less the current forms; otherwise
evolutionary pressure would not have evolved two such sexes.
In short, the universe needs to be the way it is because it more or less
works the way it is. That doesn't mean that it can't be improved, but it's
dammned hard to make *sure* that changes are unmixed improvements.
Jim.
|
26.16 | a fish without a pink flamingo | COLORS::IANNUZZO | Catherine T. | Tue Jun 30 1987 17:05 | 21 |
|
>But, the human race is a two sexed race, and I feel that it's a good bet that
>both sexes are necessary in more or less the current forms; otherwise
>evolutionary pressure would not have evolved two such sexes.
The two sexes are necessary for reproduction. Reproduction and sex are
NOT the same thing, and to assume so is not only heterosexist, but
forms the "moral" basis that certain rather powerful churches use
to deny an over-populated world the right to contraception.
Reproduction also has nothing to do with whether one should be "alone"
or not, and whether "aloneness" can be measured in terms of whether
one has a lifetime reproductive partner or not. The existence of two
sexes imposes no particular social requirement on anyone, any more than
the existence of galapagos turtles imposes a social requirement.
The argument that "everything is the way it is because it's supposed to
be that way" is the sort of thing that historically has been used to
justify all kinds of exploitive social arrangements: slavery, medieval
serfdom, marriage. What nature has given us and what we've made of it
are two very different things.
|
26.17 | Warning: Rathole | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Tue Jun 30 1987 18:22 | 7 |
| Jim, there are creatures (tiny, simple ones) on this planet with
as many as seven sexes. It's probably just that two is the most
complexity that "we" can handle consistantly.
Ann B.
(Where "we" is macroscopic animals.)
|
26.18 | getting slightly off the subject | GVAADG::DONALDSON | the green frog leaps... | Wed Jul 01 1987 05:11 | 13 |
| Re. 15:
One should of course bear in mind that the theory of
evolution is just that - a theory. One could as well
explain the known facts by positing some malignant
deity who created two human sexes just to cause a
lot of trouble. (Although personally I'm with the
evolutionists).
Re. 18:
I'm curious about seven sexed creatures. Any more info?
Do all seven sexes have to be together to reproduce?
John.
|
26.19 | Branching rathole | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Wed Jul 01 1987 10:45 | 7 |
| As Stephen Jay Gould has drummed into me and his other readers:
Evolution is a fact. Darwin's idea about natural selection as
the/a cause of it is the theory.
No, I don't know anything else about those critters. Sorry.
Ann B.
|
26.20 | fofa | BANDIT::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Wed Jul 01 1987 20:10 | 16 |
| re tangent:
I don't believe you. Where had you heard of these creatures?
I think it is much the same source as the kitty-in-the-microwave
story.(aka "urban legends")
/
( ___
) ///
/
I had hoped you would mention the species of fish that is normally
female when there is at least one male in the school, but if he
should die, then one of them will sex-change.
|
26.21 | Closing off this rathole. | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Thu Jul 02 1987 15:00 | 14 |
| Well, I had to wait for my favorite microbe watcher to become
available, but he knew what I was talking about. The ciliads
are one group with multiple sexes; their best known members are
the paramecia. (Yes, we are talking one-celled animals here.
It is a rathole, you know.) Now, at this level, "sex" is a very
fuzzy concept, and biologists prefer the term "breeding strain".
By either name, a paramecium of category <A> cannot conjugate with
another paramecium of category <A>, but can with a paramecium of
any (?) other category.
The number I used (seven) was an old one, and is indeed wrong.
There are as many as twelve.
Ann B. :-)
|
26.22 | some kinda life! | PARITY::TILLSON | box of rain | Thu Jul 02 1987 16:00 | 19 |
| >I had hoped you would mention the species of fish that is normally
>female when there is at least one male in the school, but if he
>should die, then one of them will sex-change.
Not quite. The fish you are refering to is the anemone fish, several
different varieties. They're saltwater fish, common ones for salt
hobbyists to keep. You can see them in any well-stocked aquarium
shop. Although there is variation among the subspecies, they are
for the most part red or orange with white stripe(s). They are
the ones that live in anemones (those seacritters that look kinda
like plants with tendrils). There is always one female. If the
female dies, the dominant male in the school undergoes sexual
differentiation (I'm not sure of the explicit mechanism here, could
find out if you're _really_ dying to know the gory details) and
becomes the school's female.
Rita
|
26.23 | Salamanders | CSC32::JOHNS | My chocolate, all mine! | Thu Jul 02 1987 20:17 | 7 |
| Personally, I always liked the lesbian lizards (actually salamanders)
who only needed one sex to reproduce, being stimulated to do so
by one of her sisters. What angers me when I think of them, is
the male biologists who have decided there should be two sexes and
are trying to create a male of the species.
Carol
|
26.24 | a little biology here | YAZOO::B_REINKE | hdn laughter of children in trees | Thu Jul 02 1987 23:03 | 54 |
| The lesbian lizards are triploid and are able to produce half
of their eggs with a full set of chromosomes - which will go
on to produce normal diploid offspring. I think - tho I am not
up on this - that they need to be fertilized by a male occasionally
to keep up the line.
In birds and moths and butterflies the sex chromosomes are reversed
from what we consider the norm in mammals....in mammals the females
are XX and the male is XY. The Y chromosome has almost *no* genes
on it (one for ear bristles as I recall, and another for the presence
or absence of a skin disease), so the male is determined by having
one fewer chromosome than the female (which has led some more radical
individuals to say that the male is a mutation :->).
But in the birds and moths and butterflies the male (perhaps because
of the more elaborate coloring or different behavior patterns -
who knows?) is XX and the female is XY, and if a female chicken
has her single ovary and egg duct removed before she becomes mature..
she will turn into a rooster.
Nature to put it simply is *weird* and we can find odd things to
support almost any point of view.
Freud was apparently not aware of the fact that bisexuallity permeates
most of the plant and animal kingdom - down to the lowest bacteria.
Even the paramecia that Ann talked about still conjugate and produce
new forms in pairs - they do not need all 7 or 12 to reproduce...
in fact I do not recall any organism that needs more than one or
two to reproduce....
The basic dichotomy has been one resting and storing food, and one
active, invading the other, without storing food and the exchange
of genetic material between the two to produce new genetic varieties.
As an evolutionary scheme, it is excellant. (Imagine the evolutionary
selection pressures against any organism that need to have more
than two types to produce an offspring - it would be worse than
placental mammals vs the marsupials in Austrialia.)
Finally it has been interesting to see the reaction to the broader
understanding of human embryology. Until the 2nd or 3rd month all
babies look the same with regard to the structure of the external
genital organs ( and the internal organs start out in the same place
up above the kidneys ). Then in the males the organs descend and
the folds close over and become the male organ with the female organ
incorporated at the tip.....the seam where the folds joined is of
course visible in the male. It is not unreasonable to state that
the female form is the base state and the male form is a variation
on that. But to make value judgements on either is - to my mind
anyway - pretty silly/
Bonnie
|
26.25 | no, ma'am, we're beauticians | 3D::CHABOT | May these events not involve Thy servant | Mon Jul 06 1987 12:18 | 20 |
| Re: .24
It wouldn't have served Freud's purpose to consider cases from nature
which conflicted with his goal. For that matter, citing examples
from nature doesn't provide much support for anyone's theses of
What is Right for Humans, except to show that what is claimed to
be natural may actually be more societally determined than natural.
Re: .11
I shouldn't do this, I'm always coming down hard on people who report
on books that they haven't read. I will anyway, of course.
_Native_Tongue_ came up in a discussion elsewhere, and was criticized
for being too cheap in its showing the successes of separatism and
for having only feminine good guys. Since I come close to worshipping
the dramatic sensibilities of the person who was criticizing, and
furthermore, for once, I didn't want to appear a total fool, I didn't
say "Well, we get to read stories all the time that have only men
as active agents"; bad art is no defense for other bad art.
|
26.26 | Suzannah Haden Elgin | GCANYN::TATISTCHEFF | | Wed Jul 08 1987 21:42 | 6 |
| <== re .25
I loved the book and the sequel. Wanna borrow it? [If I don't get
it back, you're dead meat, Lisa...].
Lee
|