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Why Your Body Count Doesn’t Define Your Worth

 DOES BODY COUNT REALLY NOT MATTER?

"You owe no one the number of your body count.”

When I was in my mid-teenage years, the phrase “body count” confused me. I wondered what it meant until I came across it in a novel at a friend’s library. I cannot remember the title now, but I remember that it was written by a Western author and it was worth every second of my time.

After learning the meaning of body count, I began to question whether it was simply an illusion, a juicy bait used by society, or just a fictional idea within the world of that novel. The thought stayed in my mind like a stubborn bug, making me overthink during my leisure time as though I had been hired to conduct research on the subject.

“Having too many body counts does not matter,” a friend once told me during a girl-to-girl conversation.

Her reasoning surprised me. I remembered my mother once explaining that sleeping with too many men could make a woman lose the value she carries. According to her, a woman’s dignity is not only defined by success but also by the discipline she exercises over her sexual life.

Many people hold the belief that “women who sleep around eventually marry the best men, and men who sleep around end up with the best women.”

This belief has made many people abandon their sense of dignity simply to feel accepted or desired by someone.

Psychology, however, offers a more complex view. Some studies suggest that chronic womanizing in men may sometimes be connected to emotional gaps, including the lack of healthy parental affection during upbringing. Sociologist Ira L. Reiss also noted that in some environments, people are socially rewarded for sexual activity, which can encourage behavior that is praised rather than questioned.

Unfortunately, these ideas can also mislead many young women.

Being sexually disciplined does not guarantee that you will meet the “right” partner, nor does it mean you will avoid the wrong one. But it can help protect your emotional, psychological, and even spiritual well-being.

In the Christian faith, St. Paul warned strongly against fornication, describing it as something that damages the purity of human life. Yet as the world continues to change, many behaviors that were once considered immoral are gradually becoming normalized.

Having many sexual partners does not make someone powerful or admirable. Sometimes it simply creates a past that may follow a person into the future in ways they did not expect.

Imagine going out with your spouse and realizing that many people recognize you only for one reason. A perceptive partner may begin connecting dots and questioning the past.

Men are not exempt from responsibility either. However, my advice to women is simple: you deserve peace and respect. Avoid men who cannot control their sexual habits or who try to pressure you by threatening to look elsewhere if you refuse to give in.

Body count may not define a person entirely, but choices still carry consequences.

One thing I have learned about many men is that it challenges their ego when a woman knows her worth and stands firmly by her values.

Life is far more than sexuality. Sometimes the quiet peace that comes from sitting by the ocean, feeling the breeze and listening to the waves, is far more satisfying than chasing temporary pleasures.

Chidimma Writes 

Comments

Anonymous said…
Moral lesson
Discipline is a virtue

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