At least stick with the facts as you know them. Your forays into fictionalization don't become one who claims to be impressed solely by empirical evidence.
As a matter of fact, however, Mrs. S and I were just reading KA's blog entry about her breast exam (hilarious, by the way -- I highly recommend it) and I reminded her (Mrs. S.) that KA was the hot little dish I had seen in the black spaghetti strap number at the exmo conference in '06. (KA, to my knowledge, doesn't remember our brief meeting. I think she'd had a little to drink that evening.)
I realize you people are mega hung up on the notion that married couples could never have inviolable trust between themselves, and I'm sorry your respective experiences with love and relationships has been so poor. But the simple fact is that confident women married to devoted men don't spend much (if any) time wondering whether or not that man is going to cheat on them. They've long since become one with that man, and the very notion of that part of them destroying the other part never enters into their minds.
Nor would such a woman seek to suppress certain aspects of their man's personality just to give them some twisted sense of control over him. To me, that is patently pathological. And, ironically enough, if we were having this discussion in any other venue than a LDS-related message board, normal people would think that your finding something wrong with my commenting on KA's blog entry about her cosmetic surgery was just freakishly prudish, and anachronistically Victorian. It is, after all, the 21st century, and people do talk about such things absent any sense of shame.
Man, you people are the strangest collection of pathological hangups I have ever seen!
You’re right, it was a tank-top, not a Tshirt. My mistake.
You have an odd idea of what “inviolable trust” looks like. As I’ve said to you before on this topic, I know there are some married couples who get turned on by watching each other flirt and make suggestive comments to other people – and sometimes even more than that. I can’t imagine that these people would be active LDS, however. I also know that there are some married couples who are so emotionally disengaged that they really don’t care what their spouse may say to others. And, as well, there are some married couples in which one partner has decided to tolerate a certain amount of flirtation and suggestive behavior, as long as it goes no further than that, although the tolerant partner usually isn’t thrilled about the “compromise”. Being LDS would not disqualify those scenarios, so they are real possibilities.
Perhaps your wife has reason to believe that you will never act on your suggestive, flirtatious behavior. That could be the “inviolable trust” portion, I suspect. But the question remains: does a man who truly loves and
respects his wife behave in such a manner? Sure, he may love her, but I doubt the respect part of the equation.
Despite your personal traits of bravado and grandiosity, you seem to be a fairly intelligent man. You should be intelligent enough to realize that what I’m pointing out isn’t simply “commenting about KA’s cosmetic surgery” – it’s rather your cyber-drooling over females other than your wife. You’re just tap-dancing now.
My opinion is that men who brag the loudest about their supposed virility and manhood, and decry other men as “emasculated”, are usually protesting a bit too loudly. My opinion is that men – like women – who have no reason to feel insecure about their sexuality (either performance or attractions), also have no reason to go around loudly proclaiming how virile and manly they are.
Here’s why I am skeptical that an active LDS female would be comfortable with her husband behaving the way you do:
If you are married, avoid flirtations of any kind. Sometimes we hear of a married man going to lunch with his secretary or other women in the office. Men and women who are married sometimes flirt and tease with members of the opposite sex. So-called harmless meetings are arranged, or inordinate amounts of time are spent together. In all of these cases, people rationalize by saying that these are natural expressions of friendship. But what may appear to be harmless teasing or simply having a little fun with someone of the opposite sex can easily lead to more serious involvement and eventual infidelity.
A good question to ask ourselves is this: Would my spouse be pleased if he or she knew I was doing this? Would a wife be pleased to know that her husband lunches alone with his secretary? Would a husband be pleased if he saw his wife flirting and being coy with another man? My beloved brothers and sisters, this is what Paul meant when he said: “Abstain from all appearance of evil” (1 Thes. 5:22).
President Ezra Taft Benson
The Message:
The Law of Chastity
http://LDS.org/ldsorg/v/index.jsp?vgnex ... &hideNav=1This statement of President Benson’s was also repeated in the Institute manual about marriage.
Now, of course it’s possible that Will’s wife thinks this is quaint, silly, and “emasculated” advice. I’m sure there are some LDS women like that – but I also imagine their numbers would be extraordinarily small, and the chances that Will’s wife just happens to be one of those women even smaller. While I could be wrong, of course, in my opinion it is far, far more likely that Will’s wife is simply unaware of his internet behavior, and he’s putting on an act here.
But there’s no doubt – Will feels some need to engage in bravado concerning his virile manhood.