tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4319274394110754575.post962667451996686742..comments2022-04-05T04:48:33.888-07:00Comments on true blue: Building Better Bisexual WorldsLaurahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05429109904609742051noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4319274394110754575.post-75298817913601993862010-02-23T08:04:37.444-08:002010-02-23T08:04:37.444-08:00Thanks so much! Interesting quote too. Love the &q...Thanks so much! Interesting quote too. Love the "pink and blue booties" part.. so true!Laurahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05429109904609742051noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4319274394110754575.post-11758115307676967842010-02-20T17:41:38.405-08:002010-02-20T17:41:38.405-08:00This is very interesting stuff, and it's very ...This is very interesting stuff, and it's very well written too--especially if it was written under extreme sleep deprivation.<br /><br />Carl Jung also believed that we were all bisexual by nature and that if we were to fully integrate ourselves we would accept (meaning: act upon) our bisexual nature.<br /><br />"A part of our persona is the role of male or female we must play. For most people that role is determined by their physical gender. But Jung, like Freud and Adler and others, felt that we are all really bisexual in nature. When we begin our lives as fetuses, we have undifferentiated sex organs that only gradually, under the influence of hormones, become male or female. Likewise, when we begin our social lives as infants, we are neither male nor female in the social sense. Almost immediately -- as soon as those pink or blue booties go on -- we come under the influence of society, which gradually molds us into men and women."<br /><br />http://webspace.ship.edu/cgboer/jung.htmlA. J. MacDonald, Jrhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02606590381956913426noreply@blogger.com