cabalist
4th Level Red Feather
- Joined
- Apr 11, 2004
- Messages
- 1,863
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I don't think the tolerance of pain has squat to do with it. Just because women give birth by no means that have a high pain tolerance. Ask many women who have given birth -- they'll love to tell you how freakin' awful it was. Myself, I have no pain tolerance. I cry at paper cuts, but can be relentlessly tickled. I think it all has to deal with the individual and how they interpret tickling.
Also, as far the M/F orientation, I believe that has entirely to do with gender roles. Men in control, women as submissive. As much as I'm a femininist and say, yea, tickle the dudes, I still have issues with F/M scenes or M/M. I enjoy the dominant male; it's attractive to me. I also enjoy the dominant female, which is why I like F/F scenes. But to have a man switched into such a vulnerable position, my mind reels against it. Maybe yours doesn't; that's great. But ultimately, those ancient gender roles are still very much alive in our sexual preferences even now.
I have little doubt that it varies with the individual regardless of gender, as do most other tendencies to various characteristics which might vary as between the sexes. Although you might say my above observation was semi-tongue-in-cheek, short of actual scientific research into the question, which I'm not sure how easy it would be to find a method of doing, one might only speculate.
But while I have little doubt that the suggestion might raise some self-proclaimed feminists' ire, I personally consider it quite the "norm" for the male to play the dominant role. And I say that as probably one of the least "macho" males I've ever known, even though generally inclined toward a "dominant" role (although I once scored a "perfect balance" on an "androgyny" personality test).
Of course, because it is the "norm" (and "feels" "normal" to myself as well), doesn't mean that those with different "orientations" are "wrong" -- just perhaps more "out of the mainstream" and in the minority for certain "natural" reasons -- just as I don't consider, say, homosexuality "wrong", just because I don't "go that way", although of course, likewise, there are also "natural" reasons why heterosexuality is more "the norm."

. Sticking up for yourself doesn't make you closed-minded, provided you're willing to do what you can do to keep you both happy 







