sexual maturity

Middle-School Aged Missing (Or At Least Overlooked) Gender Gap

Between all the things we “know” about the differences between boys and girls on the one hand, and things we “know” about men and women on the other hand, there’s this roughly three-year gap that… we don’t “know” much about at all.

It’s not that it’s not studied (I’m sure it must be) and it’s obviously experienced by everybody. It’s just that you don’t hear many people talking about it.

It’s that gap between early childhood and early adulthood, the gap where girls hit their growth spurts, and puberty, and cognitive and social expansion, and start developing romantic and/or early sexual identities while boys in their classes mostly… aren’t.

And yes, mileage varies, yes there’s overlap, yes, yes, yes. But…

There’s this little one, or two, or maybe three year window. One that probably seems small to most adults. It’s maybe 20% of an early adolescent’s life.

It’s not talked about much. Outside of middle-school administrator’s offices anyway.

Seems like it probably has an impact disproportionate to how much it’s discussed though.

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Another point about this that’s pretty important though: the gap I mentioned between middle-school aged girls and boys would be a gap relative to middle-school aged girls and boys. Not compared to, say, high-school aged girls, not to high-school aged boys, definitely not to adults.

Seems like that probably has an impact too.

Failing to understand it, though, probably has an even bigger impact. Much bigger.

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And finally, (and this point is a lot more speculative) I’m not sure when exactly boys start catching up. I’m guessing somewhere between average late high-school and, say, mid-college age.

That definitely seems to have an impact, one that’s probably a little better recognized. And one that I think is considerably exploited by military recruiters and other adults, vendors of gendered-male products and services, and, for better or worse, peers.

Failing (sometimes, I think, willfully failing) to understand that one has, I think, tremendous impact.

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Anyway, two questions:

  • What’s your recollection of your own middle-school experiences?
  • What’s your recollection of the experiences of middle-schoolers you might have watched grow up?

The Ultimate 'No-Sex' Class

image caption says 'lolicon,' it has a nicer ring than 'pedophile'
Photo from Gilding’s page, hosted at Photobucket.

Gilding of Gilding the Lily brings news of a telling word and illustrates it with an even more telling picture.

‘Lolicon’ is a slang portmanteau of the phrase “Lolita complex”. In Japan, the term is used to describe an attraction to girls below the age of consent, or an individual attracted to such a person. Outside Japan, the term most often refers to a genre of manga and anime where childlike female characters are depicted in a sexualized manner or engaged in sexually explicit acts. The equivalent term for the sexualization of or attraction to young boys is shotacon.

As the genre created by and for men evolved, according to Kinsella, it moved from these cute, tough heroines towards depictions of girls as sexual victims: naked, helpless, fearful, sometimes bound or chained and was expanded into computer games and animated videos.

She said it here.

See… I… Look… Thing is, if you’re a real man what possible problem could you possibly have with relationships — sexual, social, marital, or otherwise — with real women? What conceivable reason could one ever have for preferring sex with a child (helpless, fearful, virginal, or otherwise) instead of a grown woman with all her faculties? [Note: Or for those inclined to shotacons, a grown man. —fl]

Seriously!

For all that I advocate for the end of masculinity, I always have and always will enjoy my extraordinarily lusty heterosexuality[**]. And when I say I’m a reluctant but sincere monogamist I’m sincere about the reluctance part. But I’m just saying that if I started making a list of the women I could imagine spending an afternoon, or a weekend, and/or a lifetime with, from fellow bloggers to fellow commenters online to friends new and old to acquaintances to erstwhile co-workers, bosses, employees, teachers, fellow students, or trainees, to doctors and nurses, paralegals, lawyers and judges (ok, only one judge so far), UPS drivers, baristas, coaches, teammates, in-laws, and camp-mates I might use up every pen and wear down every pencil in the house and yet… I just don’t see much room there for non-adults.

And for once I’m not talking out of my usual disquiet about all the ways adult interference can disrupt children’s normal sexual development and lead to their inability to appreciate all the varieties of real sex throughout the rest of their long, long lives. Nor am I asking out of moral outrage, parental concern about my children, nor fastidious adherence to legal ages of majority, emancipation, or consent. Those would all be expressions of concern for “lolicon” and “shoticon” children.

Instead, at the moment, I’m concerned about the men and women (don’t be a dope, of course there are surprising numbers of both) who for whatever reasons imagine that sexual attraction to those who are not yet peers — let alone children who might be “naked, helpless, fearful, sometimes bound or chained…” is anything but an admission of their own infirmity, their own inadequacy, their own miserably insecure unpreparedness.

Yes, yes, I know it’s somehow supposed to be manly. And yes, yes, in some cultures heaven is supposed to be filled with perpetual virgins (doesn’t that sound far more half-empty, or empty outright, than half-full?) And yes, yes, some cultures neither stigmatize nor traumatize children’s sexuality. Let’s just say, then, that unless such societies give adult members no, zero, none choice and require them to have sex with inexperienced children rather than adults, then in both those cultures and any others it’s fair game to ask what possible motivation grownups might have for choosing, let alone preferring, not merely “barely legal” but barely pubescent children for sex partners.

[** Near as I can tell, as social constructions go neither masculinity nor femininity have much to do with heterosexuality. In fact, considering the constraints they impose I think one could make a nice case that the constraints of femininity and masculinity interfere mightily with both heterosexuality and lust. —fl]

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