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Sex and the City: Asexuality and Genderlessness
I live in St. Petersburg, a city of contrasts. Here I have to be very careful with my conclusions. I see girls on the streets of the city who dress like boys and boys like girls.
And if Tatyana Doronina’s heroine in the film “Three Poplars on Ivy” called the tall guy from the back a girl, then sometimes I can’t understand whether it’s a guy or a girl from the front.
This is so unisex.
The current trend is that the line between men and women is blurring. This leads to a loss of sexual value and attractiveness of a woman to a man.
Sex leaves real relationships and migrates to the virtual format and/or takes the form of painful distortions.
1. Genderless.
Not long ago, in some European countries, they decided to say “parent number one” and “parent number two” instead of mom and dad.
What does it lead to? To complete disorientation in male-female relationships. If there is no difference between father and mother, then there is no defining functionality of these two key figures.
Father, a protective and providing figure. Mother is loving and nurturing.
The Mother and Father archetypes are key to human personality. They have been formed over hundreds of thousands and even millions of years and are included in the structure of the “emotional” brain.