justaman said:
Well that's the risk analysis one must go through right there, I suppose. It seems to me, though, that people doing this would do so because they think there is less of a risk when in fact I'd argue there's more. That's why I think such people are uninformed.
The problem is that any weighting of the risk depends substantially on other factors. For instance, it matters how well you are able to communicate with prospective mates. It matters how much emotional investment you will have to have to feel comfortable letting down your barriers enough to have sex, and it matters how much having sex will affect your emotions. It matters how important it is to you to have sex right now, and it matters how important it will be to you in the long run.
Sure, and that's fine, but I'd still argue these people are necessarily accepting a reduction in potential happiness by insisting on this course of action.
Perhaps. But then, they see you as necessarily accepting a reduction in potential happiness by insisting on another.
I think it is reasonably clear that, for some people, the "one sexual relationship in a lifetime, monogamous, and committed" policy is SO much better than the alternatives that any step away from it constitutes "a reduction in potential happiness". Perhaps not a reduction in expected outcomes, but certainly a reduction from the best possible to some less desirable alternative.
Still, I hear what you're saying. I've started volunteering at the children's hospital here in Brisbane thinking about how awesome I was for being so freaking magnanimous. Then I was talking to the co-ordinator who is this very pretty blonde girl about my age and she just dropped in the middle of the conversation, "Yeah, my boyfriend's a quadriplegic and...." and I suddenly realised quite how selfless some people must be.
And yet, to her, it's probably not especially selfless; most people don't do anything they see as especially selfless. Different people may have very different desires out of a relationship. If he's interesting to talk to, she may be a very happy woman indeed.
Let me put this in a bit of perspective. My wife and I were talking about two of her books, and we've always suspected that, perhaps, these books might be happening in the same world, just at different times. Well, we finally realized a
reason for it. We realized that the one book, which was written long before the other, is almost perfectly adapted to being a side-plot in a major ongoing plot point of the newer book. We were discussing this over ICQ, and the conversation spent about 10 minutes with most of the things said being exclamations.
ICQ said:
(01:05:30) Jesse: Oh my. This is... neat.
(01:05:49) Jesse: Wanna wanna play in this pool of shinies!
(01:06:20) seebachp: Everything ties together SO NEATLY.
But... We're both abstract thinkers. For us, a conversation like that is probably better than most sex. Even pretty good sex. I would never in a million years trade conversations for sex. Obviously, this has impacts on which relationship strategies might work for me. If I find someone to be really fun to talk to, I don't
care whether or not we're "sexually compatible"; I'll adapt, but I'd hate to let good conversations get away from me.