MaryAnnDVC
"Mare", DISing since '99; prefers being tagless
- Joined
- Feb 9, 2001
- Messages
- 14,950
I see that you posted about this after I wrote the following, but I'm keeping it in.I simply chose the ring with my father. It is not an official ring, just a gold band with an amethyst heart. I doubt many people notice it or even know what it is. My father didn't make a big deal over it. In fact, the reason he didn't want to do it initially is that he said he didn't want me to make a commitment I would later regret. I have had no regrets. I am currently in a relationship with a wonderful man and we have been dating for a year. He has similar views.
Do you have a mother? Why was picking the ring something between you and your father? Of course, I'm sure there are cases where it just works out that way, but this seems to be a thing...a commitment to one's father specifically to remain a virgin, as if one's father holds the key to a daughter's virginity. I think that's where a lot of the "creepiness" comes into play. Isn't it even sometimes worked into the wedding ceremony (if I recall from a previous DIS thread) where the father gives a key or something to the groom?
Ew.I don't have a problem with a woman making the commitment to wait until marriage. Heck, I don't care what she does. But I find this whole purity ring, when it's a public proclamation and a group activity, ridiculous. It's all about a fad, like POW-MIA bracelets were back in the 60's/70's. The concept was great, but I KNOW that many kids wanted one for the "cool" factor and because everyone was doing it, and not because of what it actually represented.
Well, if you go back to the points made about being "creeped out", you'll see that those comments were all directed at public declarations. If they were private commmitments made to one's self and not publicized, then there would be nothing to be "creeped out" about.
Not only that, but who is going to announce (whether literally, or by not signing a pledge) to one's school and parents that um, no, they're not going to make that commitment. And if they do go ahead and sign it because they have to (because not to would bring consequences), then what does that prove? Reminds me of "self esteem" assemblies at school, where everyone cheers about how good they should feel about themselves, yet what's really going on in their lives is completely in contrast to actually feeling good about themselves. It's all for show, and to make adults feel secure, however unrealistic and misguided that security is.EDA: I was horrified when my 6th grade daughter came home from school with a pledge to stay a virgin until she was married. Her body belongs to her, not the school.
JMHO







