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Jews and Gender

Started by WendyPeer, Today at 02:58:54 AM

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WendyPeer

Judaism is probably the most non binary sect of all of the world religions. In my mileau of our little diaspora of Jewish males we all had role models, after role models. A deep need to  be the best, and effort in trying to be better than the best, as  the primary motive of our actions, and even beliefs. Male sexuality was understood as homo erotic. Jewish women were viewed as leaders both in what we could expect in life, and also what we could hope to accomplish, and achieve. Male Jewish thought while very gender exclusive was focused on adultery, and how our mind, and body were connected to an internalized anal libido that taught us that our thoughts were female. Jewish culture between men, and women communicates that the world, and Jews are the embodiment of faith that evolve by our being created as a race that is  female. Freud taught that all masturbatory feelings are oedipal, narcissistic, and obsessive compulsive. While men in the Torah appear to have differing interactions in relationship to other men, in a manner that implies a homosexual instinct, inclination, and experience. Jewish women throughout hold a conviction,and wisdom about the direct message of survival, and the cause to have belief in Adonai. Atonement in our culture is believed to be a primary need of Jews, since we have a profound internal libido that is also anal, and can be disruptive to living in harmony, and cause denial about our Jewish identity, and integrity as it is based on the view  that life is female. Atonement is what removes our obstacle to clarity about having a non binary religious belief about our experience. This is not exactly the case in other faiths that see their religious beliefs as teaching values and morality. This is a very objective concern with the quality of humanity in general. While Judaism is more of a co creative understanding of how faith starts in the body, and is focused on our survival. As Jewish gender diversity takes into account that the lives we live are not based on roles, but on the interpersonal individuality of jewish thought, taught mainly by men to understand why our experience of life in the world  is gender  oriented. This is an integral faith that evolves from the growth and development of our life as it is lived in the soul. This is also the integrity of how Jews communicate effectively their individual  concept of how their lives are lived as a part of a whole.
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