Ok...
There's some generalizations that need to be understood.
Men's endocrine system produces high amounts of the hormone known as testosterone. Women have testosterone as well but no where near as much as men. And when women do produce high amounts of testosterone they need maintenance drugs to get them to stop.
But the thing about testosterone is that it makes men more aggressive than women in going after the things they desire. (Such as the desire to mate)
At young ages women tend to learn and are able to think more maturely than men at their same age.
That's the whole reason they are held to a higher standard. They don't have the desire to mate as strongly as men generally do. (There are exceptions) Women aren't without desire but it's not as strong as most men. Again it's because of testosterone levels...
Naturally occurring and not much could be done until recently....so tradition places most of these thoughts into society today.
I know this was originally all one post, but I broke it into two because I didn't want any of the crucial points to be cut off when readers skim this post.
The thing that frustrates me about the study of hormones (testosterone and estrogen) is that there seems to be a lot more emphasis on these chemicals themselves (and the drugs that will raise or lower the levels of them in a person's system) rather than looking at some of the underlying social conditioning that might be the biggest piece of the puzzle.
What's that? Your wife doesn't want to have sex? Let's just give her some pills and we'll get that switch turned on (just like a robot.)
Here's an example:
Let's say that Brother Bill and Sister Sally have been married 10 years, and they go for counseling because Sally isn't interested in sex as much as Bill would like her to be.
Sally then receives a somber lecture about male testosterone and a good long explanation about men's needs. Their church even goes to helpful lengths to explain that God made men visual, and that Sally, as a wife, should be responding to her husband's desires. The doctor who is counseling them decides that the best course of action is to put Sally on prescription medication that is supposed to increase her desire.
There you go, problem all solved!!!
Yeah, right.
Here's the thing: no one has even bothered scratching the surface of the fact that Bill was molested by a camp counselor when he was 9 (and due to being a man, he's told Sally but refuses to tell the doctor or their pastor about this.) He now has a hyper interest in sex because he was abused by a male counselor, and he feels that having as much straight sex as possible with his wife is the cure to making him feel like a real man, because ever since that terrible summer, he has always doubted his masculinity.
Sally had a stepfather who, from a young age, told her that she was "special" and because of this, she would be allowed to stay up late and watch "special" movies with him.
The bottom line is that even though Bill and Sally have a Christian marriage (and both of these examples are based on people I once knew in real life,) Bill is using sex to try to erase his shame, and Sally is avoiding sex because it causes her to feel even MORE shame. These are the things that no one talks about, and yet they seem to be what more and more people are marrying into. Getting married or even having an intimate relationship with a spouse doesn't just "fix" the problem. In some people, it can even make things even worse. And then people condemn those who find it unbearable and eventually leave the marriage.
No amount of pills or drugs are going to make Sally feel less resentful towards Bill for making her feel more ashamed, nor will it make Bill feel less resentful towards Sally for not meeting his needs in order to "help him feel like a man."
So when they finally decide to divorce, they are criticized, condemned, and ostracized by their church -- but yet the church has no idea what's going on because Sally and Bill (understandably) are too ashamed to tell anyone what happened to them. Nor should they feel obligated to do so.
I understand that biology and hormones have their place and have an undeniable influence, but what frustrates me is that I hear people talk about hormones, biology, and "God making men visual creatures" but never ask or the kinds of questions that will actually start digging at the real roots of the problem.
And then there's the issue of, how do we pull up that root once we find it and give people a fresh start? (And fighting chance to hold on to their marriages.) Even churches seem unable to do this.
How can we be sensitive to people's needs and privacy as we help them heal, recover, and move on from such terrible crimes that were committed against them instead of just handing them pills?
This is the part that I find myself asking God about continuously.