KA, you must excuse me for being pretty ignorant about women's clothing, but what would a slip have helped? I don't get it.
Some dresses/skirts "cling" and reveal more curves. The slips are supposed to stop this effect.
KA, you must excuse me for being pretty ignorant about women's clothing, but what would a slip have helped? I don't get it.
Sethbag wrote:KA, you must excuse me for being pretty ignorant about women's clothing, but what would a slip have helped? I don't get it.
KimberlyAnn wrote: Excuse me? My perception most certainly is not false. My perception is spot on correct about your false Mormon church and how it treats women.
What the hell was the cupcake lesson supposed to teach me, Wade? The message was loud and clear. Used girls are useless. The boys got the point, too - they shouldn't want a disgusting used woman.
wenglund wrote:Runtu wrote:maklelan wrote:Runtu wrote:Has it occurred to you that KA's perception might be more accurate than yours? Might it behoove you to reconsider your perceptions? I'm willing to reconsider mine.
And what of Beastie's? Why is hers inferior?
Uh, Mak, that was my point. Wade seemed to be suggesting that KA's "negative" perception was inferior and required an attitude adjustment. I would argue that KA's perception is no more or less valid than Wade's or beastie's, and it is better to try and understand why we see things differently than it is to judge that someone is "uncharitable" or negative for simply perceiving things differently.
You read both way too much into what I said and way too little--quite a feat I must say. I said nothing about "negative" or "inferior" or "attitude adjustment", nor did I intended to (the thoughts didn't cross my mind). And, in this instance I judged no one as "uncharitable". Furthermore, I did included myself in my GENERIC comments, and simply made the rather benign and useful point that we should be looking at personal perceptions rather than the Church in this instance. Your post merely reinforces my earlier point about perceptions--given the radically different way in which you interpreted what I said from the way I actually said it and meant it. ;-)
Thanks, -Wade Englund-
wenglund wrote:KimberlyAnn wrote: Excuse me? My perception most certainly is not false. My perception is spot on correct about your false Mormon church and how it treats women.
You just mispercieved what I said. The perceptions I was speaking to were regarding how you and I perceived women, and not to your perception of the Church. So, in addition to my opposing perception of women, do you see from your misperception of what I just said, that you may have a personal challenge in correctly perceiving what others may say--including teachers in the Church? In other words, do you recognize that your previous perception of women may have more to do with the distorted way in which you interpreted various religious instructions, rather than the instructions themselves?
What the hell was the cupcake lesson supposed to teach me, Wade? The message was loud and clear. Used girls are useless. The boys got the point, too - they shouldn't want a disgusting used woman.
In no reasonably way could it be interpreted as a general commentary on the value of women in relation to men, nor can it in any reasonable way be viewed as viable example of the general perception of the Church and its members regarding their view of women in relation to men. Rather, it is an attempt to convey a somewhat sophisticated concept in way that would be understood by the teenage mind--that concept being, that with sexaul behavior, like with many other things, there will be unfavorable consequences for poor choices, and because of the nature of things (women having the only visible symbol of virginity and also the ones who may get pregnant, etc.), women will tend to experience more of those unfavorable consequences than men, and it would behove them to take more care to avoid the unfavorable consequences. The intent behind the cupcake analogy is to help prevent teenager in general, and female teenagers in particular, from making certain poor sexual choices that could adversely affect them throughout their lives. I view that as a loving and admirable intent, particularly in regards to the young women (contrary to your misperceptions).
What can't be controlled for by the Church and its teachers, though, is one of the student later twisting this perfectly reasonable message into feminist hysteria and an irrational call to vacate the restored gospel of Christ.
If you really think carefully about this, you will realize that it isn't the Church that is giving women a bad name, but women such as yourself who spew this kind of nonsense.
Please, for everyone's sake, get a grip on yourself and reality. Set aside your dysfunctional feminist agenda, and begin to adopt healthy and functional strategies that will result in mutual love, respect, and value.
Stop looking at the Church as the cause for your problems, and begin to earnestly and honestly introspect. In other words, focus not on what you think the Church is saying about women, but instead focus on being the best woman you can be, and act lovingly and respectful and in ways that are valued, and the same will more likely be returned to you.
Thanks, -Wade Englund-
Sethbag wrote:Part of the problem here, Wade, is that you don't see that a girl who has had sex is not disgusting, like a cupcake that's had its frosting licked off by someone else.
This is the issue here, not even whether girls are better than boys, or worse than boys, or whatever. I don't know what KA and others feel about this, but I feel that the prime lesson here is that a girl who has had sex is not "damaged goods" that should be shunned by everyone. A girl should not be made to feel like if she has "messed up" and had sex with someone, she's now disgusting, revolting, and will never be desirable to anyone. That is a sick and twisted belief and mindset to be teaching a girl, or a boy, or anyone.
KimberlyAnn wrote: Also, that same Bishop told us at a Standards Night that French kissing was having "sex with the mouth" and that it was to be confessed to him. I was overcome with guilt, but my kissing partner wasn't. He never confessed a thing, but I was denied a recommend to do baptisms for the dead because of my wanton ways. Now, I just feel sorry for that Bishop. He must not have been getting any real oral sex if he thought French kissing was sex with the mouth.
KA
moksha wrote:There is always a possibility that he was laboring under the misapprehension that the two were actually the same. You must remember that sex eduction if it existed for your Bishop, did not go into detail. If he had heard the distinction along the way, he may have been too preoccupied with a slip fetish to pay much attention. Perhaps his reaction was indeed predicated upon your performing oral sex without a slip.
No, I will resist any mention about a slip of the lip....