The word ‘virgin’ is sometimes used in a figurative sense, such
as when referring to untrodden snow or a soldier’s first experience of combat.
That’s OK. What bugs me is the modern habit of calling a man’s first experience
of sex ‘losing his virginity.’ That, too, can be seen in a figurative sense,
but it bugs me because it fudges an important issue. It’s another piece of
silly political correctness, this time courtesy of the old-style feminist
movement who wanted the world to believe that men and women are the same. They’re
not. Equal, yes, but not the same. (Don’t I just hate what isms do to the feeble
minded.)
The losing of virginity is not about having sex for the
first time, it’s about the breaking of a seal. Men don’t have a seal. We’re not
made that way and we don’t function that way. We don’t have that privilege and
so we don’t have the means to bestow the honour.
As I see it, the important issue should be obvious. The seal
is a woman’s most precious jewel; it is her only true dowry. It’s one area in
which women have the edge, balancing the man’s greater physical power. In that
case, wouldn’t it be reasonable to expect that women be extremely discerning in
their choice of the man to whom they give their greatest gift? It is, after all, non-returnable.
And can I say yet again, just to waylay the predictable
reaction: this is not about old fashioned attitudes, religious edict, or
morality. I left those behind a long time ago. It’s about the idealism of worth
and balance.
2 comments:
You're weird! :-)
...and proud of it!
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