
Originally Posted by
Charlie Boy II
B]The condom-free in relationships attitude seems to promote the attitude that condoms are optional, so there's a decision making process there, on whether to use one. [/B]
I just think we'd all be a lot safer if we all used them.
There's always a decision making process... to do things merely out of habit - even the seemingly beneficial things - without too much thought risks dangerous consequences when such a mentality is applied to other things in life. There is no one-size fits all method of thinking when it comes to using a condom or not (no pun intended). You had better be thinking every time you have sex... thinking about who you are with and why...
Yes, we'd be safer if we all used them... but then again I'd be safer if I had someone follow my bf around 24/7 making sure he never cheated on me... better yet, I could lock him away... then there really wouldn't be any risks of disease from him at all.
Trust is what you must have in a relationship and a valid reason for having that trust. That is why people in a marriage or long-term committed relationship have 'unprotected' sex... because they have felt they've known the person long enough and well enough to have reason to believe they are faithful.. therefore free of disease. This is not akin to the recklessness of the young and the restless playing partner swap whenever it suits them. There is a calculated risk... an informed decision in these far more stable relationships.

Originally Posted by
carl1222
If the relationship does in fact end, you can't catch an STD from his/her NEXT relationship, so the fact that not all serious relationships work doesn't really affect risk.
But I wouldn't trade my quality of life just to live it in greater safety.
Agrees.
Life is meant to be lived... cannot spend your days trying to safeguard against all the risks... all you can really do is avoid the obvious based these decisions on good information... and more importantly... live and enjoy life.
"The weakest soul, knowing its own weakness, and believing this truth that strength can only be developed by effort and practice, will, thus believing, at once begin to exert itself, and, adding effort to effort, patience to patience, and strength to strength, will never cease to develop, and will at last grow divinely strong."
- James Allen