amicus
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- Sep 28, 2003
- Posts
- 14,812
Heh, interesting thread, but I take no credit for its inspiration (whereas a misunderstanding is the apparent cause). The excerpt from Rand sounds like an individualism manifesto to me, and I am certainly not contra to that--I love and revel in the individual, in the personal. I think group experiences are good only in the ways they add unique substance to the individual journey.
Initially, my distinction about possession (of loved ones) came from lack of need to own others, but it is in no means a shirking of self. I am an individual ("We are, too," shouts the Monty Python crowd), and because I have reached a particular point of sentience, I deserve to own certain important-to-me things. I own myself, including my attitudes, my fortune, my responsibilities, my mistakes, and with effort, my ability to correct my mistakes. I love owning them, and I, too, like Ayn, celebrate this fact and am wary of those who cannot identify with this earned aspect of my life.
But notice even she does not say, "Therefore, I can also own you." When this is done (even with the best intentions), this erroneously places oneself above someone else, and creates a false/superficial/at-best-temporary relation, attempting to take their individuality (or perhaps their chance to grow into an individual). So, I'd not claim a loved one as mine in any possessive sense. When I say "my <insert specific loved one here>" I mean it as an identifier only, that I have the fortune of relating to this person, hence I clarified in our PMs and named them as "companions" rather than "possessions." Hopefully, that is clearer (though probably not since I'm rushing so I can get back to work).
Not taking ownership is a whole other can of worms (opened in this thread). All reasonable people will understand how important personal responsibility is, hopefully, for I sure as hell won't take ownership for them.
PS: When Ayn talks about "this earth of mine", she isn't making an assumption of ownership, but of companionship. It influenced and nurtured and helped her grow into who she became, so she identified it as hers (hers to enjoy/appreciate/be a companion to/be a part of). That's my take, at any rate.[/QUOTE]
~~~
Hello again, Kev H, and thank you...I quoted your post because I can 'feel' the honest thought process you offer and perhaps it will gain another reader or so.
I have been asked to perform the marriage ceremony for my youngest son; I did it for my oldest son and can't very well decline...
Please know that my following comments, if they come out as I visualize them, are not intended to suggest women or children as 'chattel' or property.
Drawing upon what I have read and surmised about the species, a joining of a man and a woman, is more than two individuals agreeing to face the future together. It is also the friends and families of each that join, where past, present and future come together in a simple yet complex agreement.
It is also the community at large, or society, that will look upon those two in a different light, as a 'family', and thus change and act accordingly.
When a man chooses a mate, his individual life may stay basically the same or it may change a great deal When a woman says, 'yes', she is entrusting her future to her mate in many more ways than the man does.
In the normative world, each swears to respect and honor each other, and, in biblical terms, 'cleave only unto...' let me find an accurate quotation:
“Marriage is therefore God's first institution for the welfare of humanity.
It is ordained that a man shall leave his father and mother, and cleave unto his wife, and they twain shall be one flesh, united in hope and aim and sentiment for all time.”
in taking the woman you hold by the right hand to be your lawful and wedded wife, before God and the witnesses present you must promise to love her, to honor her, to cherish her in that relation, and leaving all others cleave only unto her, and be to her in all things a true and faithful husband so long as you both shall live. Do you so promise?”
in taking the man you hold by the right hand to be your lawful and wedded husband, before God and the witnesses present you must promise to love him, to honor him, to cherish him in that relation, and leaving all others, cleave only unto him, and to be to him in all things a true and faithful wife so long as you both shall live. Do you so promise?”
***
Again, to restate, in a 'normative' world, marriage forms the basis for a 'family' the bearing, nurturing and raising of children to benefit the community and humanity in general.
Back to an earlier thought, that the woman has more invested in a marriage than does a man; although times have changed, the woman entrusts her mate to provide for her and her children. It is an earlier vision of the division of labor to facilitate an agreement, it is also the egoism, the self replication in a child, that will bear the looks and personality of both parents.
That oath, to share intimacies only with a chosen one and to reject all others, is intended to create a bond between not just the two, but the whole of society which will act to support and perhaps enforce that oath and bond.
There is also the matter of raising the children as a reflection of both the man and woman as the children will naturally copy and emulate the behavior of its parents.
My two sons and the are my sons, share features of mine in eye and hair color and even, to some degree, in dispostion and personality.
More than that, they carry my genes and chromosomes and will carry, already have, my unique existence into the future.
So, as I stated, not chattel or ownership, but certainly a special relationship between both the married couple and their offspring that easily justifies the description, 'my', wife and children.
I comprehend the dismay and distress of many, who must, as circumstances dictate, farm their children out to schools and daycare and babysitters and do not feel that special bond of 'your' children, as they have been raised and influenced by others.
There is also the touchy matter of sexual intimacy, 'cleaving', to address. The value of chastity and/or virginity upon entering marriage is no longer widely practiced; perhaps it never was. I met a married lady in her 40's who claimed pride that she had only had sex with eleven other men before she married.
There is a value, I suggest, in sharing intimacy with one who has not been calloused by a dozen previous encounters. It is something that cannot be hidden in a relationship; certain acts or movements to 'assume the position' or other relevant indications of previous experience, become a fact in modern relationships.
But for two people, a man and a woman, to learn sexual intimacy from each other, both for the first time, there is a special bond that brings them both together into a 'oneness', that is, by definition, unlike anything else one can experience and it can only be done once.
Thus, if one owns, 'oneself', when two become one...?
And thus, if a child reflects the parents in life and no one else...?
It may not be ownership, which the words my and mine imply; perhaps I am called upon to create a word that conceptually identifies that special relationship between both man and woman and child?
regards...
ami