I am writing in the United States of America. I am writing in a country with a political tradition that respects different ideologies, respects people for their viewpoints, and allows the invisible hand to work in a free market of ideas. In other words, most people do not believe that there is anything wrong with, say, being a conservative. Some people being conservatives is how the system works, and most people respect and appreciate that.
But it seems that a significant number of people have no tolerance for, let alone respect for, those who are sex-negative.
Sex-negativism is at worst an ideology of human sexuality.
Subscribe to conservatism and people will simply disagree with your ideas. Subscribe to sex-negativism and people treat it like it is a personal flaw/defect and will attack you personally. Why?
If it's a personally held conviction of yours that you do not proselytize or otherwise try to impose upon others, than it should be respected as such. People are at liberty to criticize the ideology of it as much as they are any other, but that's not the same as a personal ridicule of you. If you're trying to promote what you perceive to be the virtues of "sex negativity" and you have an attitude of condemnation towards those who feel that sex is a positive, then it's more understandable you'd get flak. I think there is a broad, healthy spectrum between rigid sexual repression and sexual hedonism. I don't know what that term sexual negativity actually means. It makes me think of the Junior Anti-Sex League in 1984, but maybe what you mean is closer to Puritanism? I'm assuming you're not meaning asexuality since that's not really a lifestyle choice or religious creed.
Sex is a primal part of our existence. The desire for it is innate. It has profound psychological as well as physical benefits,
if it's within a healthy context. It can be one of the most beautiful and positives experiences of life. I feel like you'd be living in a world of black and white with no promise of the vibrancy of color if you never experienced it. The Puritans were sexual beings as much as all their ancestors and people today are. Their desire to repress their sexuality didn't actually repress the natural sexual desires they still felt. All it did was make them more secretive and to mentally self-flaggellate and flood themselves with shame for having "perverse" urges. Christians have used the phrase "spare the rod, spoil the child" in regards to disciplining children assuming it was directly from the Proverbs verse. It became a a popularized expression by a mock heroic narrative poem titled
Hudibras by Samuel Butler that was directed against the militant Puritanism. "In the context of Hudibras the phrase is a bawdy metaphor suggesting the best way to curtail amorous passions or, through double entendre, to prevent conception:
If matrimony and hanging go
By dest'ny, why not whipping too?
What med'cine else can cure the fits
Of lovers when they lose their wits?
Love is a boy by poets stil'd
Then spare the rod and spoil the child (Part II, Canto I, ll. 839-44)."
Hudribas was extremely popular at the time it was published and bootlegged around. I think it was kinda like the Puritan's version of
50 Shades of Grey.
I also feel like the censorious Puritanical attitudes regarding sexual morality places excessive emphasis on chastity as supreme above other virtues. I'm not stating that it doesn't have legitimate value but history and literature are filled with innumerable incidences where it took undue precedence over love, kindness, compassion, forgiveness, honor, and basic decency and humanity. I think it's understandable that society is less tolerant of it considering the centuries worth of detriment extremist attitudes towards sexuality and sexual morality have inflicted. I'm not trying to imply that you, personally, on an individual level are having any harm. I do see the reason for why as a whole society would be in opposition. I think they don't want to feel apologetic, ashamed, embarrassed, defensive, or the like for having natural sexual desires, especially if they have not been acted upon in any way that has caused distress or harm to self or others. Are people who are sexually negative in their mindset asexual with their desires and feelings? I think asexuality is rare in humans so it's not something as relatable or easily understood.
Anyhoooo.
Sexual negativity, if I'm at all correct in relating it to Puritanism, seems to be tilting at windmills to me, but I wouldn't care if someone else wanted to do that so long as the proverbial windmill wasn't on my property......
Apologies if I didn't understand the OP or anything else properly. I'm in a half-awake, half-asleep, fuzzy-brained state right now cause it's a waaaaay too early predawn hour here.