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#26
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It was you who said you almost blacked out and that you became "mortified" and "panicked" even reading certain words describing body parts - which is quite different from simply "poor taste" - your earlier descriptions of your response to what you now describe as "simply poor taste" were fairly extreme.
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Please NO @ Selfishness is not living as one wishes to live, it is asking others to live as one wishes to live. Oscar Wilde Well Behaved Women Seldom Make History - Laurel Thatcher Ulrich Pain is inevitable. Suffering is optional. |
![]() Favorite Jeans
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#27
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Once again, that is what you do. However, this is about how I prefer to discuss things. And what I deem inappropriate. So to go from a decent conversation using the terms vagina, vaginal atrophy, estrogen, etc. To him talking about ****ing. FYI talking about ****ing to the lady who has explained explicit dreams, etc to work though transference. Yes, it is mortifying. And those type of words are vile and disgusting. Plain and simple. Rather odd the issue is my response to distasteful, vulgar, wording.. Opposed to the fact...... It was the T not I who did this. SMH
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#28
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I call my vagina......"Bird of paradise"---the flower....much prettier.......and I am a poet....words are powerful.
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![]() WhiteClouds
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#29
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Maybe less dramatics and more factual descriptions in future will keep your threads from derailing and give you the type of responses you were expecting... |
![]() stopdog
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#30
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For a therapist to digress into such language, particularly with a client who probably has never indicated that kind of verbiage is okay with them, is unprofessional, inconsiderate, and clearly out of touch with his clients' personal values. |
![]() WhiteClouds
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#31
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#32
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#33
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I had a friend in college who was raped and murdered. That was an act that was not about sexuality, but rawness, power, and extremes that go way beyond even the word "rape" and its clinical meaning. It needs a cruder word as does the power of one's own sexuality when one wants sex and one's self and partner are ripping off each other's clothes, desperate to get undressed. I don't know why the words bother you, maybe because of their uncontrollable extremes and that you were taught over and over they weren't "nice" and that it was important to be "nice". I don't know if you will ever not mind their use but I hope you do allow other people to not mind their use; other people are raised differently, use different words.
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"Never give a sword to a man who can't dance." ~Confucius |
![]() stopdog
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#34
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You misunderstand my previous post. I was not referring to T. Your description of nearly passing out was the dramatic bit that shifted the focus of this thread onto you reaction instead of T's vocabulary.
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![]() Favorite Jeans, stopdog
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#35
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#36
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![]() Your T's vulgarity now ensures you do not have any further issues regarding romantic feelings toward him. This is a step in the right direction I think, but I sincerely do hope that you address this with him, so that you can clear this language issue. |
![]() stopdog, WhiteClouds
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#37
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Wow, what a topic!
There's a few words that I won't say outloud.. and I would be upset if someone was to refer to me and my body parts by them. I would tell them so. But if someone else was to use them in conversation - I might sorta wince inside, but no biggie it's just how they talk. I use a lot of different words to sort of describe the KIND of sex that it was, and I don't really consider it vulgar at all. OP, I really do think that it was the way you describe your reactions: nearly passing out, getting panicky, etc, that caused a large reaction from people in the thread. It's ok to be upset with your T for using these words when he knows that you don't like them, but getting upset to the extent that you did shows that it's probably an issue that you and your T can work on. Like... I rarely refer to my v****** by any name at all. I simply don't talk about it. I do talk about getting cysts on my cervix as it's a routinely annoying result for me... but my body parts? Rarely ever have a need to talk about them. Calling it anything at all makes me uncomfortable, if I'm honest, but I sure don't consider myself to be above or below anyone else based on how I speak. They're words. They're common, everyday words, and it doesn't make someone else vulgar. I'm sure there's many women who also consider themselves to be a "lady" who are not part of the gentry who do use all of those words in daily conversation.
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"The time has come, the Walrus said, to talk of many things. Of shoes, of ships, of sealing wax, of cabbages, of kings! Of why the sea is boiling hot, of whether pigs have wings..." "I have a problem with low self-esteem. Which is really ridiculous when you consider how amazing I am. |
![]() stopdog
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#38
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![]() I read somewhere that Italians swear using sexual functions, but WASPs swear using excretory functions. So I guess t is better assimilated into American culture than I am, but his family has been here a little longer. Even one generation more makes a big difference. |
![]() stopdog, WhiteClouds
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#39
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I have always thought it interesting why "we" call our intimate sexual body parts by other names (note, we call our non-sexual parts by proper names)....I wonder if it is because of embarrassment?
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![]() A Red Panda
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#40
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Habit or conditioning, I am more comfortable using euphemisms at times. Depends on the level and nature of the relationship.
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#41
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