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Don’t be alone together in private.Does anyone have advice on how to quit doing those things or any advice at all for me?
You’ve been dating 3 years?or any advice at all for me?
Yeah, that’s not kosher.It’s fine for him to want virginity, but it’s not fair to want virginity whilst simultaneously complaining he doesn’t feel close if you aren’t doing sexual acts.
He sounds jealous and insecure, if I’m honest. It’s fine for him to want virginity, but it’s not fair to want virginity whilst simultaneously complaining he doesn’t feel close if you aren’t doing sexual acts.
That may fly in the secular / pagan world where serial divorces/remarriages, same-sex marriage, and all sorts of behaving like rabid cocker spaniels in heat are perfectly acceptable, but this is a Catholic forum. In Catholicism, there is an exclusivity between husband and wife; otherwise why “Thou shalt not commit adultery” being a commandment? Why the comparison by St. Paul of fornication to uniting Christ to a prostitute? Quite the contrary, the concept of “all of me” needs to be reinforced, not denigrated as “immature” or “objectifying”.The whole “all of me” concept is a very immature one, when it is based on the status of someone’s virginity. This needs to be addressed. I am not sure if you subscribe to the belief that you are no longer whole because you lost your virginity, but you need to correct that if you do. Your boyfriend needs to check that attitude as well. Sex is biology, physically speaking. It has nothing to do with losing a part of yourself to someone else. It can (and in a healthy relationship like marriage, should) have a lot to do with sharing yourself emotionally with another person.
Once your boyfriend gets over his jealousy (yes, that is what it is) that you were with another person prior to your relationship with him, you will be able to move forward in a healthy relationship together. What you are doing now isn’t healthy because you both feel guilty about it. So stop it, and work on changing attitudes.
Please reread the opening of the post that I responded to:You missed my point. My point is that she had sex outside of marriage. Outside of marriage, whether you believe it is sinful or not, sex is not “all of me” unless that is what the parties participating in the act intend for it to mean. My point to OP is that if her boyfriend thinks the sexual acts she previous engaged in were of the “all of me” caliber simply because the acts took place, he needs to mature his attitude. The impression I got from OP was not that her previous relationship was “all of me” sex. If the boyfriend doesn’t believe that or can’t wrap his head around the fact that sometimes people have pre-marital sex and it wasn’t “all of me” sex, then he needs to learn more about what living is like in the real world.
My post didn’t condone pre-marital sex.
Nothing I said is “secular” or against Catholic teaching. I suggested that unless boyfriend wants to be dating some who still has their V-card, he needs to understand human relations a little better. As a catholic, he may very well consider his girlfriends previous actions as sinful, and that is OK for him to believe that. He needs to either accept that she sinned, or move on if it is a dealbreaker for him. Instead, it sounds like they are involved in activity that is causing both of them a big ball of guilt, and they know they shouldn’t be doing it because it goes against their beliefs. It is an unhealthy relationship she describes, so I was giving my advice on what needs to be addressed.
The whole “all of me” concept is a very immature one, when it is based on the status of someone’s virginity.
Again, please reread the first sentence.It is immature. What is wrong with me saying that? It is a reflection of someone who is lacking the maturity to understand that sometimes the emotional aspect of sex is not a component of the physical aspect of sex.
Obviously, the church teaches that is why sex is supposed to be saved for marriage.
But a lot of the time, it isn’t saved for marriage. And that is what OPs boyfriend is dealing with now.
I was not condoning the pre-marital sex that took place. I was encouraging OP that boyfriend needs to have a better understanding of how it all works, unless he only wants to date virgins. If that is the case it is a moot point. However, OP indicates there is sexual activity of some sort or another currently going on the relationship. It seems as though they are lacking understanding of how the emotional piece works with regards to sex in general. Meanwhile, the are racking up a whole lot of guilt, which is perhaps the most unhealthy part of the whole thing. Not good. If they are doing things they believe they shouldn’t be doing, then they need to knock it off.
I still don’t understand what you found so offensinve about my post.
OK. I am going to try one more time, then I won’t participate in this circular conversation any more.And the part of your post that I bolded (about the emotional aspect being separated from the physical act) should be disturbing to everyone. Such people who engage in such casual sex should be the ones flagged as “immature”.
All irrelevant. It doesn’t matter whether it was casual sex that means nothing or whether there was an emotional investment. Sex is something reserved for marriage. NOT realizing that is what is immature. What the boyfriend is doing wrong is his “playing with fire”. To me - and I could be wrong - he may have seen her as “easy” to push some envelopes, but then realized that it was wrong and a satanic temptation, so he is pulling back?OK. I am going to try one more time, then I won’t participate in this circular conversation any more.
People have sex all the time. Often time, the physical aspect of the sex act is detatched from any sort of emotional investment. Certainly, you understand this, right? It is part of what the Church so strongly opposes. Mature adults get this. The understand the difference between casual sex for entertainment and sex in a committed (i.e. married) relationship.
The boyfriend doesn’t seem to understand the difference. This shows a lack of maturity.
As an anology to understanding real world situations: A child might believe that every child lives in a happy family where all their needs are met. A mature adult understands that this isn’t always the case. GOOD: Happy family, needs being met . BAD: Abusive family, goes to bed hungry.
The boyfriends immaturity comes into play, in my opinion, because he doesn’t realize that the pre-marital sex his girlfriend engaged in didn’t come with all the goodies you get when you save it for a commited relationship (as in a Catholic marriage; since this is, afterall CAF). He is putting more importance on the pre-marital sex act than it deserves. If he was mature, he would understand it didn’t mean much of anything. He can have whatever moral opionion he wants about it. As a Catholic, I would assume he would consider it sinful.
However, everyone sins and nobody is perfect. It is on him to decide if he can overlook the sin of his girlfriend (assuming she is remorseful in a way he thinks is acceptable, as a Catholic) Then he can either move on or stay…his choice.