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Breaking the Sexual Revolution’s New Taboos

By Jennifer Johnson

This article was first published June 30, 2015, at the Christian Post.

A taboo is a subject, word, or activity that is avoided because it is offensive or embarrassing. It seems to me that children who are not raised by
their married biological parents are subject to a new kind of taboo. They are not encouraged to discuss what it is like to live in a situation
where one or both biological parents were amputated from their lives on purpose. I’m thinking of the following kinds of people:


Children of divorce

Children of unmarried parents

Donor conceived children

Children in a “single-parent-by-choice” household

Some adopted children

Children with falsified birth records

In addition, there are others who live under the Sexual Revolution’s new taboos:

Men, grandparents, etc., who had a biologically-related child aborted against their will

Children with an aborted sibling (or half-sibling)

Children with frozen embryo-siblings (or half-siblings)

People divorced against their will

All of these situations have become legitimate due to the Sexual Revolution, which was a cultural shift surrounding marital, sexual and reproductive
choices that has transpired over the past 40-50 years.

Not only are these people not allowed to discuss any pain of living in those situations, our language does not describe the experience very well. If
they do discuss problems they have, they are labeled as whiners or are diagnosed as having some kind of treatable mental illness. When these kids
have problems with depression, for example, they may be said to “have issues.” However, I think it’s very possible that they are responding as
a normal person would when living with stress, living with injustice, and living in a social environment that is inhospitable to the unique kind
of pain caused by those situations.

The Sexual Revolution’s new taboos mean that we must avoid offending people who believe in the new morality surrounding marital, sexual and reproductive
choices. Also, offending those people goes against popular cultural beliefs such as:

“The kids will be fine if the adults are happy”

“Babies are blank slates”

“Kids are resilient”

“Freedom to choose is a woman’s fundamental right”

Here is an example of what I mean. It’s a message I received a few days ago from a child of divorce, copied here with his approval:

“I want to share my testimony online about my family upbringing. I can only do it if it is done anonymously, I don’t think I can really share a very public testimony about the mistakes of my parents without guaranteed anonymity. In their own individual way, my parents are too sensitive to handle that kind of criticism.”

This is an example of how the popular cultural belief of “Kids are resilient,” has an unspoken corollary: “Your parents are fragile, so you are duty-bound
to keep quiet about their marital, sexual and reproductive choices.”

At the expense of their own feelings, people in those situations become responsible for maintaining their parents’ (or others) feelings. To object
to new kinds of marital, sexual and/or reproductive choices made by others is to break the taboo and to risk sanctions.

The Sexual Revolution did not remove any taboos. It only shifted them from one realm to another. Isn’t it time we broke the Sexual Revolution’s new
taboos?

What do you think? Do people in those situations live under a taboo? If you were subject to one of the above situations, do you have complete liberty
to talk about any pain you experienced because of it? If not, why not?

Jennifer Johnson is the associate director at the Ruth Institute.

 

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