Showing posts with label Marriage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marriage. Show all posts

Monday, September 19, 2011

A Faith That Can Change Is A Faith That Lasts

If you're reading this, you might be irrelevant. Don't feel bad: I could be too.

It's easy for people of faith to wonder about their relevancy in a post-faith world. We cherish beliefs and insights that a great deal of our culture now ignores. That puts us on the periphery of many dialogues around the issues of our day.

Take sex and marriage. In my own life, I've experienced the incredible treasures long-term monogamy can bestow, and I would wish those blessings on anyone. I also happen to believe that sex can be far richer and more fulfilling in the context of commitment. (These two perspectives, in turn, happen to inform my ardent belief in marriage equality.)

Darth Vader Railroad SignalsImage via WikipediaBut the "general conversation" of our culture has moved on. Nowadays, sex in most romantic contexts is taken for granted. Millions of people are navigating entirely different issues: the trauma (and sometimes the joy) of divorce, the issues surrounding single parenthood, expectations around dating, choices of birth control, adoption or abortion. Moral discussions of living together before marriage, and even the word monogamy itself, sound quaint nowadays, relics of a distant past.

This isn't just an issue with sex and marriage. In an era when dominant world views have given way to individual choice, the shoulds and oughts traditionally associated with religion hold less influence. Many in our secular world wonder why we hold on to ancient beliefs at all, particularly when science and reason seem more than adequate replacements. Grand Moff Tarkin's words to Darth Vader have an eerie ring in this context: "The Jedi are extinct. Their fire has gone out of the universe. You, my friend, are all that's left of their religion."

Where does this leave people of faith? It leaves us, I think, in search of a new way to live out our beliefs in the world -- a way that is both faithful to what we treasure and helpful to those around us.

This is actually a good thing, because the old way wasn't all sweetness and light. Once upon a time, long-standing traditions dictated the terms of beliefs and morals. This held true whether the morals had merit or were out-and-out destructive: society exerted tremendous pressure in favor of family stability and nurturing homes for children, but it also condemned interracial marriage and same-sex relationships. People of faith didn't have to think through each and every value they held; the dominant social paradigm essentially told them what to think.

Not anymore. In a vastly more diverse world, with an emerging secular consensus that has left them behind, people of faith now face two challenges: to revisit their values, and to change the way they talk (and listen) with the world.

On the values side, the challenge of new ideas and norms invites us to ask questions we had no need to ask 50 years ago. Take the once widespread belief that sex belonged exclusively within the bounds of formal, government-sanctioned marriage. Why have we, as people of faith, believed that in the past? Have the new ideas and norms exposed a flaw in that thinking? Is it a stance that people of faith should still uphold? Should we look deeper into that belief and perhaps uphold a slightly different ideal, like sex in the context of commitment?

To see how this might change our beliefs, take another look at the third paragraph of this article. There was a time when I would have said that long-term monogamy is the ideal for all couples, and that sex outside of marriage is immoral. The process of questioning has led me to a somewhat different stance: still faithful to my understanding of relationship and commitment, but now informed by what the new realities of our society have to tell us.

And how do we relate our revisited beliefs to the world? Rather than proclaim shoulds and oughts from a position of authority -- and thus doom ourselves to being ignored -- we can model these beliefs and join the general conversation. So I don't go around telling my divorced friends they should have stayed married. That kind of approach is both cruel and, more likely than not, inaccurate. I can, however, live out and share the joy that comes from my own long-term relationship while being fully present to my friends and loved ones whose experience is vastly different.

Some might interpret this approach as another liberal effort to "get with the times" -- to let the morals of the age dictate the values of faith. It is not. Rather, it is an invitation to dig deeper into our faith while spreading the love and will of God in a way that resonates with the people of our age.
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Friday, July 15, 2011

Infidelity Keeps Us Together

Congratulations to Dan Savage and his mantra “Good, Giving and Game.” And thanks to Mark Oppenheimer for bringing it beyond the alternative weeklies to a wider audience of mainstream, heterosexual couples (“Married, With Infidelities”). Honest communication with your partner surely is something to strive for in a long-term relationship, although it may be difficult at first for some women to define what they want, let alone articulate it.

DEB LEVINE,
Oakland, Calif.

Bravo to Dan Savage for his forthright thesis exposing the meshugas that is monogamy. Now if he can only convince my wife.

DAVID CHARAK,
Boca Raton, Fla.

I was struck by how Dan Savage’s approach to fidelity approximates the thinking of some who work with alcoholics and who believe that for some alcoholics, moderate drinking is the lesser of two evils. “Zero tolerance” is an absurd concept that does not and cannot work in any alcohol or drug program. How many members would A.A. have if participants were kicked out after “straying”? So why apply this unrealistic standard to marriage? For all of us, it seems that the approach to monogamy should be “one day at a time.”

MICHAEL G. BRAUTIGAM,
Brooklyn

I found it somewhat ludicrous that a gay therapist is dispensing advice on how to make heterosexual marriages succeed by allowing infidelities. The argument for “open marriage” was vigorously championed most recently in the 1960s and ’70s. The result was an enormous upturn in the divorce rate. My more than 54 years as a rabbi have taught me that the commandment “you shall not commit adultery” is still terribly relevant, and our religious traditions wisely maintain that marriage is sacred, the bonds between husband and wife are inviolate and that nothing shatters marital trust more than infidelity.

RABBI GILBERT S. ROSENTHAL
Director, The National Council of Synagogues,
Needham, Mass.

I appreciated Mark Oppenheimer’s views on marriage. One point I think he should have addressed is that people like Anthony Weiner and Arnold Schwarzenegger don’t have the luxury of working his valid points about infidelity into their marriages because they don’t enjoy the privacy that the rest of us do.

CHRISTINA SCHLANK
Manhattan Beach, Calif.

How are the Vitter and Clinton marriages “failed monogamous relationships”? Both the Vitters and the Clintons are still together, so either the couples in question had an agreement about having a nonmonogamous marriage, or they were able to get beyond the fact that their partners strayed. In the case of Schwarzenegger, I would bet good money that Maria knew about Arnold’s cheating heart before they got hitched. What spurred the divorce was the fact that he never told her about a child conceived with a domestic employee — right under her nose, in her own house. It was humiliation, in that circumstance, and outsize betrayal, not just the sex, that ended that marriage. Whoever is on the cover of Us Weekly is having his or her affair blared to the universe. I would argue that’s a lot more destabilizing than just sex.

JESSICA GROSE,
1:50 p.m., June 30, Slate.com

The most telling quote comes near the end: “The greater good is the home created for children,” Dan Savage says. “If there are children present, they’ll get past it. The cultural expectation should be if there’s infidelity, the marriage is more important than fidelity.” Having children shouldn’t give anyone the right to cheat just because staying together for the children is more important. Savage stresses repeatedly that the time to talk about nonmonogamy is before either partner in a relationship has a fling.

But whenever I find out that a friend or acquaintance with children is divorcing, I can’t help imagining myself in their situation and picturing what it would be like to see my kids only half the time, to have to split up Christmases and birthdays, to spend time worrying about pickups and drop-offs that should be spent on lazy Sunday mornings with pancakes and cartoons. Even if you’re the victim in the situation, you pay a pretty high price when you end a marriage.

RACHEL LARIMORE,
5:28 p.m., June 30, Slate.com

I am married and aware that my husband has posted on “menseeking women” on Craigslist from time to time. The pain and humiliation is indescribable. He gets to fulfill his fantasies and feed his ego, but there is not a day I don’t think about divorcing him for his selfishness. It’s complex to leave someone you love for nonmonogamy, but in the end this has to be at the heart of a marriage or the bond is broken. Don’t marry if you don’t intend to be monogamous.

MEG,
Greenwich,
Conn., 10:34 a.m., June 30, nytimes.com

As Dan Savage points out, the “age-old understanding” was that men could have their flings on the side, as well as frequent prostitutes, while women were virgins at marriage and monogamous afterward. Now, as far as I can see, the understanding is that both sexes will sleep around quite a bit or have a series of “relationships” then, once married, remain completely monogamous.

FLORAMAC,
Maine, 9:59 a.m., June 30, nytimes.com

In this country, we worship marriage and demonize infidelity. How many times did a friend of a “victim” who was cheated on tell that victim to leave? But not many friends will actually try to support the victim and try to help them analyze whether the relationship is worth holding onto. Most married couples that I know have had some sort of an extramarital affair. Unfortunately, some of them divorced because of their affairs, and many regret that choice. The essence of their regret is that they miss their friend/partner and the stability that went along with their marriage and children. So let’s stop judging and crucifying private sex lives and instead lend a hand to those who just need to talk and to sort out their true emotions.

MOMOFTWO,
New York, 10:10 a.m., June 30, nytimes.com

Nowhere in this article does it talk about the person the married person is cheating with. The “other woman” and the “other man” are frequent casualties of married people using them as a tonic to what ails their marriage. Often, a married person meets another person who expands their world, offers them love and a fresh start, but because of an oath they took years before, often foolishly, they are obliged to stick out their marriage, bored and unfulfilled.

SINGLEWOMAN,
New York, 11:31 a.m., June 30, nytimes.com
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Saturday, July 2, 2011

Charlize Theron on marriage, gay marriage and the closets

Charlize Theron has decided marriage isn't for her, but still thinks anyone who does find the institution important should be allowed to marry.

Meanwhile, she worries her "bit of OCD" when it comes to closets might hurt her in the long-term-relationship department.

"I really want for myself a long-term relationship, and I have been in long-term relationships, and so ... that's the kind of union that I want," the actress said Wednesday on "Piers Morgan Tonight." "The actual ceremony is not something that's important to me."

Theron said in 2009 that she would not marry then-boyfriend Stuart Townsend unless same-sex marriage were made legal. After nine years together, she broke up with him in the wake of a Christmas 2010 trip to Mexico.

So, now that she's single -- there's the closet thing.

"I have a thing about things that are hidden," Theron said. "Like I will -- yes, I have a hard time, especially when I'm, like, renting a house if I'm working on a film and I don't know what's in all the -- I have to know what's in all the -- this is so pathetic. I cannot believe we're talking about this."

Pressed for details, she revealed that upon arrival in a new place, the first thing she does is inspect every closet and drawer. Then she has to put things where they belong, in a manner that allows access a certain way, and -- did she mention, Piers, that this is pathetic?

"Seriously, would you stop talking about it? Really beginning to freak me out now," she said. "I am single. I need to find a man. ... This is not going to help."

Somehow, we can't imagine it hurting that much either.
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Sunday, June 26, 2011

Women Seeking Long-Term Relationships


  1. Men who flaunt flashy cars not the 'marrying kind'


    USA Today - Mary Elizabeth Dallas - 5 hours ago
    "When women considered him for a long-term relationship, owning the sports car held no advantage relative to owning an economy car," study co-author Daniel ...
  2. Rekindling the flame: Sex and the long-term relationship


    ABC Online - Eleanor Limprecht - 2 days ago
    Once the first fires of love have cooled, life can get in the way of sex and romance in a long-term relationship...

    ABC Online
  3. Daniel Craig and Rachel Weisz: Marriage in New York


    International Business Times - 5 hours ago
    Sample The actors both ended long-term relationships in late 2010. Weisz, 41, announced her split with Black Swan director Darren Aronofsky in November 2010 ...
    Daniel Craig and Rachel Weisz Secretly Marry‎ - Hollywood Reporter
    Rachel Weisz, Daniel Craig wed‎ - Hollywoodnews.com
    TheCelebrityCafe.com CBC.ca
    all 604 news articles »

    The Guardian
  4. Get your sex life back on track


    News of the World - 18 hours ago
    It's a long-distance relationship so we only see each other at weekends, but recently I've lost interest in having sex. This hasn't caused any arguments yet ...
  5. Ford Adds 17 Companies to List of Preferred Suppliers Selected for ...


    PR Newswire (press release) - Jun 14, 2011
    ABF companies enter into long-term relationships with Ford to strengthen collaboration and drive mutual profitability and technology development. ...
     F
  6. Making a long distance relationship work


    Bangkok Post - Jun 13, 2011
    Despite miles of separation, long distance relationships can be equally romantic and satisfying as more traditional arrangements. Most of us share a healthy ...

    Bangkok Post
  7. Porsche drivers get the girls, but don't keep them long term


    CarAdvice - Tim Beissmann - Jun 16, 2011
    “When women considered him for a long-term relationship, owning the sports car held no advantage relative to owning an economy car,” said assistant ...
    Porsche 'deters long-term partners'‎ - Belfast Telegraph
    Men with flashy cars often want flings: study‎ - CTV.ca
    Women can't stick with Porsche drivers‎ - JOE
    all 110 news articles »

    Globe and Mail
  8. For Gay Couples, Now the Pressure's On!


    New York Magazine - 7 hours ago
    "I think I didn't know I was in a long-term relationship until gay marriage got so close to passing and so many people started asking," says Andrew Sessa, ...

    New York Magazine
  9. Study: Women attracted to BMW, Porsche drivers – but not if they ...


    eGMCarTech - 2 days ago
    ... for those seeking a fling or short-term relationship and being a frivolous spender is actually a turn-off for women seeking long-term relationships...
  10. Physician Integration Economics:How Market Share is Captured and ...


    Becker's Hospital Review - Marc D. Halley - Peg Holtman - 5 days ago
    Market share is captured and retained in primary care practices, where long term relationships are built and revenue is generated for those practices. 

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Tuesday, June 21, 2011

The long-distance sex life

Long-distance relationships suck. I don’t recommend it; in fact, I would say avoid them if at all possible. Sometimes though, long-distance happens. Summers and semesters away from one another can be inevitable realities, and if the options are break up or suck it up, sometimes you have to deal with it as well as possible.

Of course, it is easier to agree to long-distance before the sex withdrawal hits. In truth, going long-distance may be the perfect time to pick up a gym habit, so at least you’re getting your endorphins somewhere. Added benefit: a better body to show off when back together.

Everyone may say that they’re going to the gym to get healthy, but “looking good naked” probably hovers near the top of their list of goals. Plus, squats, hanging leg raises and a host of other exercises strengthen your kegels, making for better orgasms. And a little yoga to improve flexibility can really open up doors, position-wise.

But while the endorphin boost is nice, anyone who says that exercise can replace sex is lying. The advice to “take the opportunity to get to know each other better as people,” is also a little off base. If I want to be having sex but can’t, that is pretty top-level in my consciousness.

Screw getting to know them as people — if you didn’t already like them, you wouldn’t be in this position. Really, it is an ideal time for getting to know each other’s fantasies.

My advice: write erotica.

Skype can be fun, and in some ways is inherently awesome, so it’s not that hard to figure out. I would say that as long as you remember that taking clothes off can be more fun than starting naked, as well as dispelling some initial awkwardness, you are pretty good to go. Check in the next day to see what you each liked best, and each call should be more fun than the last.

Erotica takes a little more finesse, though it can be more rewarding. It provides an opportunity to play out and test fantasies in a manner that is much lower pressure than in person. Even if you don’t get too far outside of standard sexuality, erotic writing allows you to explore each other’s personal kinks.

During sex can be an overwhelming time to try to catalog and remember, “Oh I really liked it when you …” Having sex in a written form means you can easily go back and say “what you described in this sentence gave me shivers.” Taking the time to write and then review with your partner means the next time you are together you will be armed with very specific information about what moves get you a ticket on the fast train to arousal.

Getting the ball rolling can be a bit of a hurdle, but once you start a back-and-forth of fantasy, it is quite easy to keep it up. Just like with Skype, checking in with each other on favorite bits isn’t solely educational. Experience allows for continual improvement with each email.

When starting out, writing can be intimidating, as there are certainly ways to do erotica wrong. Luckily, the wrong ways are pretty easy to spot. Don’t take your inspiration from bad dime store romance novels. If the phrases “throbbing member” or “wet heat” show up anywhere in your erotic email, you may want to re-evaluate not staying with Skype. Truly though, erotica doesn’t have to be daunting to write.

Sticking to the basics is a safe bet when referring to genitalia. Anything else can be either offensive, or downright funny. While laughter can bring you together, it’s not really the best result when you are going for sexy or sensual.

Overall, don’t worry how you are saying it, focus on what you are saying. Rather than trying to write poetically or with perfect prose, the goal is to not write jarringly.

There should be enough hormones flowing that it’s more about following along with a scene rather than how the scene is laid out. Focus on emotion and desire, and just let words flow. Describe what you feel, emotionally and physically, when thinking about the scenario you are writing. Use “you” and “I,” and focus on what you would be doing in the immediate scene.

If you need something to get yourself started, think of what you would do if your significant other showed up at your door. Writing as “I would” instead of “I am” can be a less awkward way to start, and easier to get out on paper. Though personally, I find erotica written for me in the immediate rather than supposition much hotter.

Though not ideal, distance doesn’t need to mean the end of your sex life. With a little communication, it could lead to long-term improvements.
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