Bill and Sally shouldn't get married if they can't get past their previous injuries. If Sally can't bug Bill for physical intimacy so often that he begins to avoid going home... There's issues in the marriage and because both are happy as newlyweds they won't see it. But it's already there.
Physical intimacy is an expected part of marriage. But that comes as a natural extension of emotional intimacy. Sally holds all of Bills secret fears and ambitions and wants...and vice versa. It's when a counselor is needed at all there is a problem. Why doesn't Bill know about Sally's history? Why does Sally not understand that Bill isn't her stepfather and this is a completely different situation than that? This is marriage.
Of course hormones drive our actions... you are hungry because of them. You drink when thirsty.... because of hormones. Sleep is also because of them.
If your endocrine system makes you feel that you are still hungry even after a big meal... you are likely going to be diabetic and overweight and fearful about not having enough food. Normal reaction to life long feelings. You know that you shouldn't be hungry but after a big meal the feelings fade enough that you aren't ravenous....just simple hunger that you can withstand.
Same thing with testosterone...it's a driving factor of aggressive behavior...in business and in a personal relationship.
Hi John,
I hope you don't mind me breaking up your singular post again so that the points I'd like to specifically address won't be lost.
In the example I gave, Bill knew Sally's history, just as she knew his. In fact, one of the reasons they both got married is because they thought that marriage (and what they were told would be a holy sex life) would be the key to escaping their pasts and the shame it caused.
You brought up the subject of hormones and the fact that they drive our actions -- sometimes beyond our normal responses (you gave the example of a an endocrine system that makes someone still feel hungry even after a big meal.) I know the mechanisms are different, but I also think of things like the alcoholic who still feels the overwhelming urge to drink even after a massive hangover, or the anorexic who, for whatever reason, refuses or can't see the skin and bones in the mirror, and, even though she's absolutely starving, still refuses to eat.
From what I understand, sexual abuse can be a lot like that. It's not just a matter of telling yourself, "This isn't my abuser, this is my spouse, I can feel safe and secure with this person." And since Christian couples wait to have sex after marriage, they often don't find out all the issues they're still having until it's "too late" (and there is no way of getting out of the marriage.)
Several years ago I was very interested in Dr. Ed Smith's Theophostic Ministry because he was a Christian psychologist who specialized in treating people for sexual abuse, and he cried out to God for something that would actually work. One of the things he wrote about extensively was people's inability to just use logic and reason to acclimate to marriage and a spouse.
For example, he talked about one woman who was avoiding her husband but didn't quite know why. After several sessions, she realized that she was uncomfortable with her husband smiling at her affectionately during their private time together. But when Dr. Smith dug a little deeper, it turns out that her childhood abuser used to smile at her as a way of signaling what he would do to her, and she understandably dreaded it. She KNEW that her husband was not her abuser, but she couldn't shake off that feeling of dread.
I think it's very much like addicts who are trying to get clean have come to associate certain cues: places, people, actions such as going on a break -- with former reactions and behaviors, because it becomes nearly impossible to break that association.
For whatever reason, the mind, soul, and body might logically know that the person and situation is different, but yet it can't seem to break free of it.
This is where I always find my heart -- yearning for a way to help people who are suffering in silence -- the victims of abuse who don't know how to break the cycle even after it's been left behind, and the spouses who are suffering due to the fallout.
A friend of mine and I were talking about the power of sexuality. When I was in college, I had a professor who was considered to be one of the leading state experts in abnormal psychology, and it was his professional opinion that pedophiles cannot be cured, but can only be kept away from children, because he had seen every treatment out there and didn't feel that any of them were successful.
My friend and I were talking about how a person's sexuality seems to become permanently bonded to whatever it becomes attached to (whether good or bad, wanted or unwanted,) and it seems nearly impossible to break that bond.
We were discussing the fact that this must be why God is also so strict about where sexuality can be expressed, because God's will is that a person's sexuality would be bonded to one spouse in a permanent union.
For so many people, the choice of what their sexuality was bonded to was taken from them, or they chose the wrong things to attach it to, or maybe a combination of both.
Regardless of how a person got there, I long for God to show us a way in this life to be able to successfully heal and redirect people's sexuality towards what He originally intended.