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Eve Tushnet's avatar

It's interesting to see people picking up on that line, "Some desires are worse than others," because it's also something that stood out to me and I don't know that I think it's the best framing. Lol it hit me on the raw a bit! I've written a lot, both nonfiction and fiction, about the way sexual desire works kind of like a language, in which the "words" (the desires and the acts) can mean a lot of different things; we use desire to "say" a lot of things, and desire can be expressed in many different ways that aren't immediately obvious.

Imho on some level all (? almost all?) of our longings are longings for God, or at least prepare us to encounter God, and finding ways to express those longings which help us to love others and love God is often better than just trying to have better longings. I know in switching from "desires" to "longings" I'm cutting some corners, but with sexual desire too, I've really found that for myself and many others, trying to have better desires is harmful whereas trying to express our desires better is healing and transformative. "Some desires are worse than others" will mean, for some people, "*Your* desires are worse than others," and imho that framing usually imposes shame without hope. It doesn't actually guide or educate desire.

I'm sure it depends a LOT on which specific desires we're discussing, but I want to at least suggest that "Some desires are worse than others" is a framework which has the potential to foster self-hatred rather than humility, chastity, self-respect, or self-gift.

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Jen Roth's avatar

"What kind of sex-ed goes beyond just consent to focus on willing the good of the other?"

I think the next move beyond "safe sex" and "consensual sex" should be "wise sex." This would incorporate the first two but would also focus on responsibility for the well-being of one's partner and oneself, and any others whose lives might be affected by this sexual relationship. For the latter, I'm mostly thinking of any children one might conceive or might already have, but it would also encompass things like not being the person a cheating spouse cheats with. Some people argue that it's not that person's problem because they're not the one who's breaking a vow; but they're still responsible for their choice to help someone else do it.

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