Or they get surgically mutilated and regret it immediately.
What if “the body” isn’t just a vessel for the personality. What if they’re inextricably intertwined and what happens to one effects the other in unforeseeable ways. Is there maybe an ancient, yet curiously timely text that clarifies any of this? Nobody’s teaching - that- in school.
Just read Phaedrus from Plato’s Socratic dialogues. Making somebody else’s son into a catamite was a bad idea, even in ancient Athens. It still should be. Anybody promoting this now should be taken for a short, but endless walk in the woods.
Or they get surgically mutilated and regret it immediately.
What if “the body” isn’t just a vessel for the personality. What if they’re inextricably intertwined and what happens to one effects the other in unforeseeable ways. Is there maybe an ancient, yet curiously timely text that clarifies any of this? Nobody’s teaching - that- in school.
Just read Phaedrus from Plato’s Socratic dialogues. Making somebody else’s son into a catamite was a bad idea, even in ancient Athens. It still should be. Anybody promoting this now should be taken for a short, but endless walk in the woods.