River
Well-known member
Dissociation has a common dictionary definition and a psychological one. These two vary significantly.
The common dictionary definition goes like this.:
noun
1. an act or instance of dissociating.
2. the state of being dissociated; disjunction; separation
The psychological definition varies from place to place, and its definition partakes considerably in matters of theory (and practice in psychotherapy).
Psychology deals in two kinds of norms -- ethical and statistical. For various reasons, philosophical and otherwise, psychology as a "science" has tended to err on the side of statistics -- with "normal" being referenced in relation to
the statistical norm in any given society or culture. The problem here is -- obviously, I hope -- that a whole society can be confused, disordered, ... pathological, pathogenic. (E.g., rampant racism, sexism, etc.) This is all commonplace thinking for those with any sincere inquiry into anthropology, sociology and cultural history.
Our topic here is complex and difficult. But I'm growing increasingly convinced that a certain variety of dissociation is now commonplace in certain modern (contemporary) cultures, perhaps especially that of the people I'm most acquainted with: Americans. (Or, more precisely, USA-ians). A great many Americans seem to me to dissociate what we call "feelings" and sexual "intimacy" -- by which I mean that when they "have sex" with people they very often do not see (experience) the person as a person at all -- or even themselves. Sex, then, is over here -- dissociated (not in association with) the whole wide round of human experience and relating.
I could go on and on, but I think this is enough beginning for a conversation to ensue.
Or perhaps not? I think my observation here is not commonly recognized as meaningful or valid, which would in fact fit my hypothesis -- that contemporary American culture encourages dissociative sexuality -- which could be called "fragmenting the heart (feeling) from the erogenous zones," or some such. Even the world "feeling" here is likely to be a confused matter, sadly. So many of us are dissociated from feeling in its full natural range that what I'm saying here will seem like nonsense to perhaps even a large majority.
Just how my topic relates to the topic of polyamory is something which must be drawn out gradually, since this is a conversation and not an essay.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dissociation_(psychology)
The common dictionary definition goes like this.:
noun
1. an act or instance of dissociating.
2. the state of being dissociated; disjunction; separation
The psychological definition varies from place to place, and its definition partakes considerably in matters of theory (and practice in psychotherapy).
Psychology deals in two kinds of norms -- ethical and statistical. For various reasons, philosophical and otherwise, psychology as a "science" has tended to err on the side of statistics -- with "normal" being referenced in relation to
the statistical norm in any given society or culture. The problem here is -- obviously, I hope -- that a whole society can be confused, disordered, ... pathological, pathogenic. (E.g., rampant racism, sexism, etc.) This is all commonplace thinking for those with any sincere inquiry into anthropology, sociology and cultural history.
Our topic here is complex and difficult. But I'm growing increasingly convinced that a certain variety of dissociation is now commonplace in certain modern (contemporary) cultures, perhaps especially that of the people I'm most acquainted with: Americans. (Or, more precisely, USA-ians). A great many Americans seem to me to dissociate what we call "feelings" and sexual "intimacy" -- by which I mean that when they "have sex" with people they very often do not see (experience) the person as a person at all -- or even themselves. Sex, then, is over here -- dissociated (not in association with) the whole wide round of human experience and relating.
I could go on and on, but I think this is enough beginning for a conversation to ensue.
Or perhaps not? I think my observation here is not commonly recognized as meaningful or valid, which would in fact fit my hypothesis -- that contemporary American culture encourages dissociative sexuality -- which could be called "fragmenting the heart (feeling) from the erogenous zones," or some such. Even the world "feeling" here is likely to be a confused matter, sadly. So many of us are dissociated from feeling in its full natural range that what I'm saying here will seem like nonsense to perhaps even a large majority.
Just how my topic relates to the topic of polyamory is something which must be drawn out gradually, since this is a conversation and not an essay.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dissociation_(psychology)
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