sex and intimacy
Starving for Emotional Intimacy
Look At The Lies We Face
I saw this article I wanted to share with
you. A very interesting perspective, even if you aren't into religion. The
writer, Alice Fryling, is a speaker and author of "A Handbook for Engaged Couples : A Communication Tool for Those
About to Be Married."
History teaches us that people believe what
they want to hear. Lies can sound so true when people are starving for truth.
Even whole societies will feast on their promises. The Inquisition was based on
the lie that some people could force other people to change their religious
beliefs. American colonists believed the lie that people of one race had the
right to own, buy and sell people of another race. More recently, hundreds of
thousands of people believed Hitler's lie that the Jewish race should be
eradicated. Most of us can hardly imagine that anyone could have believed these
lies. And yet we swallow other lies all the time.
Our society is starving for intimacy. And many
of the lies we believe in our culture have to do with our hunger for
relationship. We want acceptance, loving relationships and deep intimacy, and
yet we believe the lie that sex will satisfy our hunger. It's true that we are
profoundly sexual beings, but it's time to examine some of the lies we feast
on: the lie that premarital sex is one of our unalienable rights, the lie that
sexual intercourse is the route to intimacy, and the lie that premarital
abstinence is obsolete at best and repressive at worst. These are all
lies.
We have bought into these lies because we are
a starving people. We are people who long to be loved, touched and understood
in a world of declining family ties and epidemic dysfunction. Our desires are
certainly not new; they are as old as humanity. The difference in our world
today is that people are trying to fulfill these longings in strange ways:
through machines (TV's, CD players, and computers), through sports, material
possessions, institutions and sex. Especially through sex. "Try it just
once and you'll be fulfilled." "Go for variety and you won't be
bored." "A life without sex is a life without belonging." Sexual
experience has become a personal right, a need to be met and a norm to be
accepted.
The tragedy of all this is that people are
dying of emotional starvation, and they are looking for food in the wrong
places. I would like to identify seven lies that our society is making about
sex. The truth is that sex outside of marriage is not all it's cracked up to
be. There is no pot of gold at the end of that rainbow.
Lie #1: Sex creates intimacy.
Genital sex is an expression of intimacy, not the means to intimacy. True
intimacy springs from verbal and emotional communion. True intimacy is built on
a commitment to honesty, love and freedom. True intimacy is not primarily a
sexual encounter. Intimacy, in fact, has almost nothing to do with our sex
organs. A prostitute may expose her body, but her relationships are hardly
intimate.
Premarital sexual intercourse may actually
hinder intimacy. Donald Joy writes that indulging in sexual intercourse
prematurely short-circuits the emotional bonding process. He cites one study of
100,000 women that links early sexual experience with dissatisfaction in their
present marriages, unhappiness with the level of sexual intimacy and a
prevalence of low self-esteem (Christianity Today, October 3, 1986).
Lie #2: Starting sex early in a
relationship will help you get to know one another and become better partners
later. Sexual intercourse and extensive physical exploration early in a
relationship do not reflect sex at its best. Of course there is sensual
pleasure for those who engage in premarital sexual experiences, but they are
missing out on the best route to marital happiness. Sex is an art that is
learned best in the safe environment of marriage. I met with one student whose
disappointment with her sexual encounters prompted her to overcome great
embarrassment and ask me point blank: "Is sex in marriage as bad as it is
outside of marriage?" She had arrived at the end of the rainbow, looking
for the promised pot of gold, and she had found only disillusionment.
When unrestrained physical intimacy dominates
a relationship, other parts of that relationship suffer. In healthy marriages,
sex takes its natural place beside the intellectual, emotional and practical
aspects of life. Married couples spend less time in bed than they do in
conversation, in problem solving, and in emotional communion. The lie that
premarital sex prepares you for marriage denies the fact that sexual happiness
grows only through years of intimate relationship. The height of sexual
pleasure, psychologists tell us, usually comes after ten to twenty years of
marriage.
Good sex begins in the head. It depends on
intimate knowledge of your partner. The Bible uses the words "to
know" to describe sexual intercourse: "Adam knew his wife Eve and she
conceived . . ." (Genesis 4:1, NRSV). This choice of words elevates human
sexuality from mere animal sex where availability is the main requirement to a
full, intimate expression of love and commitment.
Lie #3: Casual sex without long-term
commitments is both fun and freeing. Those who settle for short-term
sexual relationships are settling for second-best sex. Journalist George
Leonard observed that "casual recreational sex is hardly a feast-not even
a good hearty sandwich. It is a diet of fast food served in plastic containers.
Life's feast is available only to those who are willing and able to engage life
on a deeply personal level, giving all, holding back nothing." (Quoted by
Joyce Huggett in Dating, Sex & Friendship, InterVarsity Press,
p. 82.) For a woman, particularly, sex can reveal hidden fears and lack of
trust. Good sex-which can be a healing agent over time-requires trust, trust
which grows best in the context of the life-long commitment of marriage.
Last updated: 8/05
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