[Search for users] [Overall Top Noters] [List of all Conferences] [Download this site]

Conference quark::mennotes

Title:Discussions of topics pertaining to men
Notice:Please read all replies to note 1
Moderator:QUARK::LIONELE
Created:Thu Jan 21 1993
Last Modified:Fri Jun 06 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:268
Total number of notes:12755

25.0. "Early perceptions" by MORO::BEELER_JE (America is being held hostage!) Sat Jan 30 1993 17:09

Watched a segment on "20/20" last evening ..  concerned the  perceptions
that "porno" creates for young men/boys.

The definition, issue, and/or legality of "porno" notwithstanding it was
interesting.  Seems as though when a  boy looks at "porno"  and sees the
sensual female ..  large, firm, well formed breast ..  narrow waist  ...
trim  glistening  body  ..   enchanting  eyes  ..  tender hands ..  firm
thighs and legs that are spread and seem to say "take me..." -  THIS  is
the  basis  for  his  first sexual experience.  He masturbates with this
picture and this is the image that forms his  perception  of  women  and
sex.

That is to say:  The male is to look for a woman with large firm breast,
narrow  waist, etc- and as to sexual experiences he perceives that (as a
result of his early masturbation experiences with the  magazine)  -  she
will  naturally  succumb  to  him  and  sex  is as easy and rewarding as
masturbating with a girlie magazine.  We all know that such is  not  the
case.  Such was the sentiments of those men who were interviewed.

One guy said that it even distorted his view of men!  He said that as  a
result of watching porno flicks he was absolutely convinced that all men
had a 12" penis and could have sex  all  day  long!   "Boy,  I  couldn't
wait", he said.  "Boy, was I disappointed".

Now, as opposed to canned interviews I'd like to hear from  the  men  of
MENNOTES.

Did you or did not not, as a young man  (up  to  the  age  of  18)  seek
sensuous  or  out-right  pornographic  pictures  of women?  Do you think
that your initial perception of women and sex was  influenced  by  this?
If  yes,  how?  Was this perception accurate or did the experiences that
you had with the photography lead you astray?

Discuss.

Bubba
T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
DateLines
25.1HDLITE::ZARLENGAMichael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEGSun Jan 31 1993 13:227
    re:.0
    
    It's all one big load of new age psychobabble.
    
    Erotica has been around since man learned how to create art and it's
    always featured the women (and men) who were considered attractive for
    their time.
25.2SMURF::BINDERQui scire uelit ipse debet discereMon Feb 01 1993 13:007
    Re .0
    
    Yes.  I believe that it distorted my perceptions of myself and others
    to the extent that my misperceptions came within hours of destroying a
    rich marriage of more than two decades' duration.
    
    -dick
25.3WAHOO::LEVESQUEPsychic Steroid AbuseMon Feb 01 1993 14:145
>I believe that it distorted my perceptions of myself and others
>    to the extent that my misperceptions came within hours of destroying a
>    rich marriage of more than two decades' duration.

 How was such a disaster averted?
25.4SMURF::BINDERQui scire uelit ipse debet discereMon Feb 01 1993 14:321
    Sorry, Doctah, not in this notesfile.
25.5WAHOO::LEVESQUEPsychic Steroid AbuseMon Feb 01 1993 15:101
 I figured as much.
25.6NEST::JRYANMon Feb 01 1993 16:0728
    I too watched the program.

    I was struck by how one-sided the input these young men had had in the
    area of females and relationships.

    One talked about the need to communicate more. One mentioned that he
    took the magazine "FORUM" to be the truth. I felt badly for them that
    they would receive such a distorted view.

    I certainly had a more balanced view of life so that I was able to
    regard this type of material for what it is (in regards to woman and
    relationships).

    My wife commented on the ages these guys mentioned they were first
    exposed.... one said 2 or 3rd grade, I believe. I was never exposed to
    such material until at least 7th grade (memory is a little fuzzy). 

    Perhaps the age of introduction had something to do with it, lack of a
    role model, or lack of communication from another male. I would have
    wanted to know more about their upbringing and home situation, to
    better understand how they formed their views.

    I was encouraged that they *did* something about their situation and
    are offering education to others.

    My 2 cents,

    JR
25.7PornSALEM::GILMANTue Feb 02 1993 14:5729
    
    My understanding is that males are much more visually oriented
    sexually than women are (by COMPARISON) I did not say that women
    were not at all visually oriented.  Porn plays into the males 
    'need' for visual sexual stimulation.  Where they is a market there
    is a supply.  Why isn't womens porn more in demand than it is?  I
    surmise that its because women don't care as much for it.  Less
    demand = less supply.
    
    Nature has designed males to inseminate females to procreate humankind.
    The male 'has' to have an orgasm during normal sex for the woman to
    become pregnant.  Nature wants results.... more babies.  Therefore
    I surmise that males are designed to be turned on relatively easily
    by visual stimulation.  Females must insure food and a stable place
    for the babies to grow which means she need EMOTIONAL stability with
    her mate to keep him around helping supply food.
    
    So whats this have to do with porn? Porn plays into the 'need' for
    males to be turned on visually.
    
    I think that whether the porn is harmful to a young teen depends on
    what he has learned from other sources..(hopefully his parents)
    regarding 'appropriate' sexual stimulation and the meaning of sex
    in a relationship.  All to often thanks to movies and porn sex and
    VIOLENCE wind up linked together in his fantasies.  We are seeing 
    the results of that in the papers daily.
    
    Jeff
    
25.8PCCAD::RICHARDJBluegrass,Music Aged To PerfekchunTue Feb 02 1993 15:4016
    I saw the 20/20 program and I wished they'd fire that woman reporter,
    Lynn Sheir sp? Every week she's got her feminist agenda to fill which
    usually consist of  stories about male female relationships in which
    the male is made to look evil. Why didn't she interview women who read 
    romance novels too ? If males get screwed up sexual ideas about women 
    from porn, then  women get screwed up ideas about men from reading soft 
    porn too.  Her reporting is one sided. She portrayed the male as a villain 
    for feeling sexually attracted towards naked women. Also, she had on that 
    feminist lawyer, telling us how men feel, which was distorted, and how its 
    wrong for men to feel the way she tells us we feel. To me the group of 
    males that they interviewed look and sounded like they were gay and had 
    problems with being heterosexuals. Lynn Sheir even stated that she had a 
    hard time finding a group of males involved in this type of study. Well, 
    no wonder !

    Jim
25.9CRONIC::SCHULERGreg - Hudson, MATue Feb 02 1993 17:2726
    Jim I don't think we watched the same program.
    
    She *did* speak to women, several of whom noted that they too
    recieved wrong information from porn about how to behave (around
    men) and felt they had to try and match the unrealistic images in 
    porn in order to attract men.  It would have been interesting to
    see if any of those women had views of men based on what one might
    find in a romance novel, but that doesn't negate what those women
    had to say about their own experiences with pornography (which was
    what the program was about).
    
    And there was nothing at all in the entire program that made men
    look evil (where do you get this stuff??). On the contrary, I thought 
    it was refreshing in that it was the men who decided something was 
    wrong with their relationships with women and decided to try and find 
    out what the problem might be.  They are the ones who decided early 
    exposure to pornography distorted their views of women, and it was
    never even implied that the problem was something inherently wrong
    with men or with being male.  The whole emphasis at the end was on
    what could be done to improve relationships without casting the blame 
    upon *either* sex.
    
    /Greg
    
    P.S. You thought all the guys were gay?  You must not get out much...
    
25.10JUPITR::HILDEBRANTI'm the NRATue Feb 02 1993 17:515
    RE: .8
    
    Agreed....it was a load of crap. 
    
    Marc H.
25.11distortions are plentifulSOLANA::BROWN_ROdayz of whine/neurosesWed Feb 03 1993 17:0710
    We are bombarded by all types of media images about the way that men
    and women relate to each other, through both commercials, and through
    the relationships depicted in T.V. shows, which are not particularly
    realistic, either. Not to mention popular songs! I don't think that
    pornograpy is any more of an influence in the way that men regard women
    than these other media outlets.
    
    Should we discuss, say, the realism of the soap opera?
    
    
25.12too young to fall in loveCOMET::BRONCO::TANGUYArmchair Rocket ScientistWed Feb 03 1993 20:4815
I missed the 20/20 show, but I'd have to agree with the earlier reply which
said that the age at which we are first exposed to pornography is most
important.  It seems likely that a 2nd grader who got a hold of a Playboy, or
Playgirl or Penthouse or something would hide it from mom and dad.  So he/she  
gets the double-whammy:  1) exposure to someone's erotic fantasy without 
explanation from an adult that it really is just a fantasy, and 2) a feeling
that sexual feelings are something to be ashamed of, and hidden in a box 
under the bed.  Too bad, really.

As I recall, I think I saw my first Playboy when I was in Junior High.  I don't
think I suffered any longterm detrimental affects on my image of women.  But
I also didn't get many negative messages about sex from my parents.

 
Jon
25.13HDLITE::ZARLENGAMichael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEGWed Feb 03 1993 23:385
    re:.12
    
    I don't think so ... my own personal experience is that a second
    grader wouldn't be interested in a magazine like Playboy.  Most boys
    don't get interested in girls until the 6th or 7th grade.
25.14yeah, but. . .COMET::BRONCO::TANGUYArmchair Rocket ScientistThu Feb 04 1993 01:3114
  <<< Note 25.13 by HDLITE::ZARLENGA "Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG" >>>

 >   I don't think so ... my own personal experience is that a second
 >   grader wouldn't be interested in a magazine like Playboy.  Most boys
 >   don't get interested in girls until the 6th or 7th grade.
    
    I agree, but didn't an earlier reply say that one of the "interviewees"
    on the 20/20 program claimed to be influenced by porn at around the 2nd
    grade?  I should have made my allusion more clear.
    
    I was terrified of girls when I was a 2nd grader!!!   ;^)
    
    
    Jon
25.15TENAYA::RAHsupportive, but skepticalThu Feb 04 1993 01:495
    
    wonders what careful coaching will accomplish.
    
    did 20/20 pay for the interview, even expenses?
    
25.16TENAYA::RAHsupportive, but skepticalThu Feb 04 1993 01:503
    
    just a thought: if mapplethorpe had worked for hef, would
    that make looking at playboy less of a sin?
25.17HDLITE::ZARLENGAMichael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEGThu Feb 04 1993 02:309
    re:.14
    
    I don't know about the earlier replies ... I parachuted right into .12
    and started replying without reading any of the previous notes.
    
    I think Holtski (.15) mighta hit the nail on the head re: coaching.
    
    Either that or I was an unusual 2nd grader, old, because back then, girls
    were totally disgusting, yukky, and needed to be avoided at all costs.
25.18WAHOO::LEVESQUEPsychic Steroid AbuseThu Feb 04 1993 10:224
>    just a thought: if mapplethorpe had worked for hef, would
>    that make looking at playboy less of a sin?

 Behehehaha!
25.19DSSDEV::RUSTThu Feb 04 1993 11:394
    Re .18: Well, I bet he'd have put more  interesting-looking _guys_ into
    the pictures!
    
    -b
25.20SMURF::BINDERQui scire uelit ipse debet discereThu Feb 04 1993 12:1910
    Re .13
    
    "Most boys..."  How many have you consulted, Michael?  Among the kids I
    knew, second or third grade was pretty much the norm for lots of early
    experimentation, starting with playing post office and doctor and
    progressing, in one case I wormed out of my next door neighbor, to an
    attempt at actual intercourse when the boy and girl were eight and
    seven repectively.  They couldn't find the right orifice.
    
    -dick
25.21QUARK::LIONELFree advice is worth every centThu Feb 04 1993 12:3036
I remember an incident when I was 7 or 8; there was a girl named Gail, about
my age, who lived a couple of houses down and with whom I would play from
time to time.  One day she decided to form a club, like many kids do, and
of course she had to have an initiation ceremony.  Hers was to have me walk
into the bathroom at her house, close the door, sit down on the toilet seat
and look at the back of the door without laughing.  On the door, Gail's
father (I assume!) had tacked up a number of Playboy centerfolds.

Though nowadays I have to wonder about Gail's family life, at the time I
didn't find the pictures amusing nor exciting.  I wondered what the big
deal was.

As a teenager, I would occasionally look through issues of Playboy, and I
subscribed for a number of years through my mid 20's, but I recall a number
of times when I thought the pictured women were not what I would consider
attractive.  In my late teens, I also went to see one or two X-rated films,
but found them mechanical and boring.

I think I can say with near certainty that the images of pulchritude which
abounded during my youth did NOT set my expectations for women.  But then
I also didn't adopt the common attitude of the time that women were objects
to be obtained and abused, which probably accounted in part for my difficulty 
in finding women who could be interested in me, during my college years.

Of course, many women buy into the images pressed upon them of what they
ought to look for in a man.  But in their case, it isn't a set of physical
attributes so much as how they should expect a man to abuse them. (They
don't  think of it as abuse, of course.)  And men are similarly being
trained to abuse women, (not that THEY think of it as abuse.)  

It's important that we try to break this pattern by teaching our children
that people, women and men, are human beings and not objects, property or
"masters".  If we can do that, the fads of what is physically attractive
will matter less.

					Steve
25.22AIMHI::RAUHI survived the Cruel SpaThu Feb 04 1993 13:568
    Golly Wally! Girls really look like this? :) Speaking of porn, local TV
    station has been flapping its arms and doing its best to tell everyone
    what a sinful place Manchester N.H. is with its prostution running
    rapet it the streets. Wounder what kind of thoughts are going thru
    young men who have figured out what women look like's brains.:) 
    
    By day she was mild mannered Ms. Bo-daa-shish Taa-Taa. At night she
    prowled the streets looking for Mr. John. 0)
25.23HDLITE::ZARLENGAMichael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEGThu Feb 04 1993 14:595
.20> "Most boys..."  How many have you consulted, Michael?  Among the kids I
    
    Geez, -dick, is today "let's be obstinate day" or something?
    
    I think the phrase "my own personal experience" (.13) covers that, no?
25.24"Most boys I knew" maybe?SMURF::BINDERQui scire uelit ipse debet discereThu Feb 04 1993 15:2112
    RE .23
    
    Well, actually, Mike, no, I don't think "my own personal experience"
    doesn't cover it.  You say that you as a second grader weren't
    interested in a magazine like Playboy.  Then, in a grand leap of
    generalization with zero support, you say, and I quote, "Most boys
    don't get interested in girls until the 6th or 7th grade."
    
    Sorry, but if you can't learn to say what you mean you will have to
    expect people to misconstrue what you say.
    
    -dick
25.25give it a restHDLITE::ZARLENGAMichael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEGThu Feb 04 1993 16:121
    You're making yourself look awfully pedestrian, -dick.
25.26OpinionsSALEM::GILMANThu Feb 04 1993 17:3221
    re .12  .........most boys interested at
    
    I thought that ages 8 - 11 were called 'the latent years' by
    psychologists, which refers to the degree of sexual interest.
    
    Based on my own observations (I was once 8 years old myself and
    did speak to my peers upon occasion) I would have to agree with
    .12 that most boys aren't particularly interested in sex/girls
    until 6th grade (12 years old) or so.  Of course there are plenty
    of individual exceptions as prior noters have pointed out so clearly.
    
    However, I believe the word included the word most, not the word all.
    
    Have I done studies on this, or conducted a formal survey of the boys
    in my neighborhood?  Of course not.  But, like so many things one forms
    an impression and forms opinions after years of informal observations.
    
    Its amazing. Virtually whatever one says in notes there is SOMEONE who
    will refute it.
    
    Jeff
25.27CSC32::CONLONThu Feb 04 1993 17:4010
    Some boys are *very* aware of their changes in the 12-year-old
    range, of course.
    
    My Dad got a big kick out of it when he was driving on Kalakaua Ave.
    near the beach (Waikiki in Honolulu) when my son begged him to drive
    closer to the right side of the road so he could get a closer look
    at the young women in the bikinis.
    
    Ryan said, "Indulge me, Grandpa.  I'm in puberty."
    
25.28early experiences with porno and other liesCSSE::NEILSENWally Neilsen-SteinhardtFri Feb 26 1993 15:4535
There's an old line by Mort Sahl, or was it Lenny Bruce

	We are raising a generation of American men to believe that
	women have staples in their navels.

I first saw a copy of _Playboy_ in the 7th grade.  By that time, I had a lot
of information about men and women from friends, books, movies and TV, so 
_Playboy_ just became part of the mix.

I had also learned, years before, that books, movies and TV did not have
much to do with my life.  One feeling I remember strongly was at about age 8
or 9, reading the Bobbsey Twins (I bet they never imagined they would appear
in this topic) and being very frustrated that my life was so much more 
boring than theirs.  I realized that I could never be satisfied if I 
compared my experiences with theirs, so I stopped, mostly.  By the time I
saw _Playboy_, I had had a lot of practice separating life from fiction.

I suppose _Playboy_ and suchlike had some effect on my attitude towards
women and relationships, but it was not as simple or obvious as that
suggested in the base note.


Re: several previous

The Latency Period is part of the Freudian theory of childhood.  The ages
vary, but it is often assumed to start about 7 and end about 12.  Lots of
folks have pointed out that childhood is a lot more complex and variable
than the Freudian theory.

Personally, I never stopped being interested in girls, but I do remember 
being less interested between the ages of 9 and 14, than I was before and 
after.  I also remeber a lot of social pressure, from peers and adults, to
be less interested in girls (age 9) and more interested (age 14).  I think
that in my case, the latency period was socially imposed.