Sex, Morality, and the Questions We Don’t Often Ask
This piece isn’t an
argument or a call to abandon deeply held beliefs. It comes, instead, from a
place of curiosity.
Recently, I’ve had
conversations with a number of people about topics ranging from faith and
identity to aging and life transitions. One subject, however, consistently
brought a noticeable shift in tone: sex. Not disagreement, but thoughtfulness, the
topic feeling delicate rather than taboo.
Delicate issues
For many women, sex and
feminine sexuality has been carefully constructed over time through family
expectations, religious teachings, cultural norms, and lived experience. These
ideas did not emerge overnight. They are rooted in systems that stretch back
hundreds of years, including patriarchal structures that shaped social order in
profound ways.
Historically, particularly
in medieval Europe, women’s chastity was tied to inheritance and lineage, rules
were enforced to maintain order and secure bloodlines. Control of female
sexuality functioned as a way to secure property, legitimacy, and power. While
societies have changed, echoes of these systems remain embedded in modern
attitudes toward women’s bodies and sexual behaviour.
Silence and secrecy have
often shaped our sexual experiences and histories. Speaking openly about sex
hasn’t always been welcomed and has often been viewed as distasteful; at times
it has been met with judgment, misunderstanding, or shame. In that context,
hesitation makes sense. The hesitation itself feels meaningful, not something
to push past, but something worth paying attention to.
Protection and control
Sexual morality is
frequently framed as protection: protection of dignity, bodies, families, and
communities. Patriarchy often presents this as care or safeguarding, yet what
is imposed rather than chosen is a form of control.
This is especially evident
when moral expectations fall more heavily on women than on men, or when women’s
sexuality is discussed primarily in terms of risk, consequence, family
reputation, or restraint rather than mutual responsibility, pleasure, or agency.
Perhaps the question is
not whether sexual morality protects or controls, but when it does, and who
gets to decide.
Internalisation and early
patterns
These messages do not
remain external. Many of us internalise them from a young age, long before we
have the language to question them. Patterns formed in childhood (around shame,
modesty, fear, or self-surveillance) can be remarkably difficult to unlearn.
Over time, these
internalised beliefs may shape not only how women experience sex, but how they
relate to their bodies more broadly: how much space they take up, how visible
they allow themselves to be, how safe it feels to desire, age, or simply exist
without apology.
Faith
Many women today are not
rejecting spiritual or religious practice. For many, faith remains a source of
meaning, grounding, and moral guidance. Yet there is an increasing willingness
to question how certain teachings have been misinterpreted, over-emphasised,
and enforced over time within societies shaped by unequal power.
This can create tension,
anxiety, and often guilt: valuing faith deeply while sensing that conversations
about women’s bodies and sexuality may have been shaped as much by cultural and
political forces that benefit masculinity as by spiritual doctrine.
Living within that tension
is an ongoing reality for many women.
A wider question
One might wonder how
different women’s inner lives might look in a freer society, one less
preoccupied with control, perfection, and moral surveillance of the female
body.
Would rates of anxiety,
depression, eating disorders, and body dysmorphia be different? Would the
relentless striving for physical perfection, anti-aging ideals, and nervous
system dysregulation soften if women were not taught, explicitly or subtly,
that their worth is tied to appearance, restraint, or desirability?
These are not simple
questions, nor do they have easy answers. But they feel worth asking.
Why these conversations
still matter
There are easier and
equally important topics to discuss: menopause, retirement, aging, and health.
These invite open and very necessary conversations. Yet sex and sexuality
remain central to our freedom of spirit, mind, and body.
Sex sits at the
intersection of faith, power, morality, identity, and selfhood. Avoiding the
topic doesn’t remove its influence; it simply makes reflection more difficult.
Perhaps some of our collective lack of joy, ease, or the celebration of the
feminine is rooted in these unexamined subjects that feel too complex or
uncomfortable to approach.
An invitation
You are invited to notice
where silence exists, and to question what and especially who the silence has
protected, and what it may have cost.
If these questions feel uncomfortable, that may be a sign of how personal and important they are. Dialogue doesn’t require certainty or resolution. Sometimes it begins with permission to wonder out loud, and to ask the questions that may, over time, lead us toward healthier, more expansive, and more joy-filled lives as women, and yes, especially as enlightened men.
So much to unpack here and I will definitely be giving it much thought
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for your input xx
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