Sex Identity

The sex identity (or sexual identity 1 ) is the part of one’s Social Identity representing the artificial edifice of feelings, beliefs, rules, virtues and narratives built on top of the biological “base” of libido. It produces socially scripted behaviour - wherein one is playing the role of a “Husband,” a “Bachelor,” or “Someone Looking for The One” and so on, acting out a script telling them who to desire, how to pursue them, and what the relationship must look like to be considered “valid”.

By becoming free of this sexual identity, sex largely becomes recreation (a pleasant bodily activity) rather than a “sacrament” (a source of worth). There is virtually no hope, despair, expectations, disappointments, demands, sorrow, malice, jealousy, dreams, fantasies, boredom, inferiority/superiority (self-worth complex) and so on. Social scripts become null and void, for one’s behaviour is spontaneous (guileless), as opposed to being pre-planned (with guile), guided by the pure intent of the PCE.

Thematic components

‘Man’

‘Woman’

Footnotes
1.
Which is nothing to do with ‘sexual orientation’.
Links to this page
  • Social Identity
    The term ‘social identity’ is also inclusive of a sex identity (identifying as ‘boy’/ ‘girl’, ‘man’/ ‘woman’).
  • Romantic identity

    Vineeto explicitly links the romantic identity to her conditioned female identity. She notes that “love and empathy are praised as woman’s greatest virtues!” and that she had been conditioned to believe her “only identity and power had been to feel and express emotions”.

    [!NOTE] AI summary of Actual Freedom articles by Vineeto Based on Vineeto’s writings, “Romantic identity” is a component of social and sex identity that she defines as the “Cinderella-syndrome”. It is a “romantic dream that most women have” of finding a “perfect and noble man”.

  • Is There Anything Good About Men?

    Is There Anything Good About Men? is an article by Roy Baumeister, arguing that culture is not a patriarchy designed to privilege men, but a competitive system that exploits male expendability and risk-taking to build large social structures, often sacrificing men to ensure the survival of women.

  • Anatomy of Female Power

    Anatomy of Female Power is a book by the Nigerian essayist Chinweizu Ibekwe portraying the precise role of covert female power in gender dynamics of Psyche.