LD_Tickler
3rd Level Yellow Feather
- Joined
- Nov 23, 2005
- Messages
- 3,735
- Points
- 38
Look into Sigmund Freud, and his essays on sexuality.
I've actually read quite a bit of Freud. Are you referring to anything specifically?
Look into Sigmund Freud, and his essays on sexuality.
Your chemicals know to reproduce themselves, and so we're born with a sex drive - the potential to be aroused by things. My issue is with the assumption that we're born with a particular sex drive with its own shape and colour (kinks, preferences, etc). I think those are details, experiential in nature, which could never be stored in genetics.
I've actually read quite a bit of Freud. Are you referring to anything specifically?
No part of your body is aware of tickling before it happens to you. There is no "tickle fetish" gene.
From what I gather a lot of what Freud had to offer was based around the human child naturally being fascinated with sex. It wasnt supposed to be anything specific, I just thought it was interesting... ><
Point is, if somebody believes that they were "born" with a tendency towards tickling, feet, whatever, Id like to think that it may more or less be true if there is an absence of any other evidence to the matter.
I've always had real difficulty believing that anyone was born with a tickling fetish. Especially since most people I've seen make that claim tend to use the argument "I can't remember not liking it, so I must have been born with it."
Right. OR, you had experiences with tickling at a very young age - to which you subconsciously assigned "meaning X" (power, loss of control, whatever), then once puberty came, "meaning X" became eroticized for whatever reason, and tickling along with it.
For example, I find sadism and objectification erotic, and my most vivid experiences with tickling allowed me to associate it with objectification and cruelty. So when my sadistic sexuality developed, tickling was a big feature. Was I born finding sadism erotic? Why on earth would I believe that, since it's abundantly clear how that kind of thing can develop through experience?
Which experiences we find enjoyable in whatever form seem to be far better explained through our development. Positive and negative associations. Experiences interpreted in particular ways. The fact that we can't remember every milestone, and aren't aware of every change in our psyche, isn't proof that there's such a thing as being "hardwired" deviant.
Thoughts?
No, but there might be a similar grouping of chemicals that correlate once tied together.
hear what you're saying, and you could be right. Still, I find it odd that so many people, exposed to the same situations and circumstances, will experience them completely differently. How many people with this kink had a sibling sitting right next to them when Bluto tickled Olive Oyl, and the sibling didn't even notice? How many people were tormented with tickling as children yet grew up to love it while others HATE it for that very reason? Heck, I've cared for identical twin infants with one loving veggie baby food and the other spitting it out every time, and I highly doubt one of them was frightened by a green bean at the age of 3 months No, I have a hard time believing that every person with a kink or passion had something happen at an early age that caused it; though certainly our early experiences shape those kinks to an extent, I'm pretty sure some of us are born/predisposed towards our eventual kink while others aren't. The fact that our proclivities 'can' be created later, from a love of chocolate to a passion for spanking, doesn't mean that they always are.
I have a hard time believing that every person with a kink or passion had something happen at an early age that caused it; though certainly our early experiences shape those kinks to an extent, I'm pretty sure some of us are born/predisposed towards our eventual kink while others aren't. The fact that our proclivities 'can' be created later, from a love of chocolate to a passion for spanking, doesn't mean that they always are.
This, I find far more plausible than the "tickle fetish gene" thing.

Saying "hardwired" is a lot easier then explaining how elements were implemented during my child-hood. So, I will continue to state "born with it" or "hard-wired" it saves time and creep-o's who enjoy wanking to explanations of a TK fetish growing within a pre-pubescent girl.
Here's my limited response, due to time constraints...
#1. Fetishism has been linked to neurological wiring...we're born with a certain blueprint for neurological wiring... and, it's uncontrollable, meaning that we simply can't decide which synapse fires when, etc. This is what makes each individual different...as a functioning human being...
#2. Many fetishes are, of course, learned behaviors as well...
These topics will be debated for years and years...and, we may never know a specific answer as to why we are fetishists.
-In my opinion, as long as we grow into responsible adults, and learn to embrace our particular realm of fetishism in a respectful fashion, we need to spend more time accepting our fetishes as a part of who we are, and less time wondering why we have them.-
Hope ya'll have a great weekend...
Ryan
Saying "hardwired" is a lot easier then explaining how elements were implemented during my child-hood. So, I will continue to state "born with it" or "hard-wired" it saves time and creep-o's who enjoy wanking to explanations of a TK fetish growing within a pre-pubescent girl.
Which is fine; nobody's claiming to know 100% either way, because there's no such thing as an absolute. Especially not in discussions like this where neither side has any original observation to support their claims. If people want to believe there's a tickling gene, or that they've been the way they are since birth, that's fine. I choose not to, because it seems a bit far-fetched to me when so many other psychological aberrations are purely the result of formative experiences, but like I said; there are no absolutes.
Right. OR, you had experiences with tickling at a very young age - to which you subconsciously assigned "meaning X" (power, loss of control, whatever), then once puberty came, "meaning X" became eroticized for whatever reason, and tickling along with it.
Yeah. It's nothing to do with the human desire to better understand oneself. It's all about blowing your load thinking about a prepubescent girl, or boy, becoming a tickle fetishist.
I used to hate bananas. With a passion. The smell alone was enough to make me baulk. Now I eat at least 2 a day because I think they're yummy.

I disagree. I loved Marmite when I was a kid, and then had a really bad experience with it (I bit into a cheese and "Marmite" sandwich, which was actually cheese and Branston Pickle). The shock of this turned me of marmite for years, until I eventually got over myself.
But here's the rub; nobody is born with a predisposition towards marmite. You can teach yourself to like or dislike different types of food, especially at a young age.
I appreciate the Marmite analogy doesn't transfer to tickling so well, but I do think there is a lot more to it than genes.
Plus, I have a stupidly good memory for things I did/dreamed as a very small child (my first vivid memory that I can still remember was when I was 6 months old), and I do remember a time when it (tickling) didn't give me a weird feeling in the pit of my belly. Course, that changed by the age of 3 or 4.
Everyone is born with theyre own individual preferences, at a young age many of those dont come to light.
Some people hate cheese, some people adore it, and your born with that like/dislike, Tickling is also something that a person either enjoys or doesnt enjoy, like cheese, some people end up finding sexual gratification from eating cheese off people, and some people from tickling eachother, I dont think this is something that develops from other past experiences at a younger age etc, I think that sometimes it really is just the way a person is going to turn out.
Tickling didnt happen any extra amount to me when I was younger, no more than anyone else, but from as far back as I can remember, I felt uncomfortable being tickled, there was something thing about it that I couldnt quite put my finger on and that scared me.
Then I slowly began to realize is was because I liked it, and that realization became stronger and stronger as I investigated it further.
It was there from the start.
I just think its in the genes somewhere for some people, theres a little gene that says "tickling turns you on" and once your old enuf to understand that, you know you have a fetish.

Well, I actually have good indicators that I was born with this fetish. I was NEVER tickled as a child and the only way I was exposed to tickling was through cartoons and books. And it became fully eroticized for me when I had my first sexual awakening this year upon discovering I'm a lesbian. Before that, tickling was just a mere fascination...a desire of some sort, I guess. Like Ryan said, I truly think certain humans are hardwired for certain fetishes. And I believe I'm one of those people.![]()