Maybe it's just the liberal in me
Maybe?
Given how being liberal nearly entirely dominated my life from age 18 to 39, and had continued profound influence until age 66, I can hear the countless echoes of having started off a great many sentences myself with that phrase . . .
I'm sort of confused, as usual. Is it really ownership if you chose who owns you and you do so willingly?
. . . At this point, though, I've come to see that it's important to make a number of crucial distinctions in these discussions about patriarchy; one such distinction is around who actually is doing the choosing, and this distinction is validated both by both (a) such progressive notions as "the right of a woman to choose" to end the life of her children between conception and birth, and (b) traditional conservative notions like it being normative and proper for a man to do the proposing.
Both in the past and in the present, women have had the freedom to choose who they have sex with. Even back when daddy owned her and ownership hadn't yet been transferred to her husband, there was nothing a father could do to absolutely
prevent his daughters from giving it up to targeted males, and our current jurisprudence, despite
Dobbs, still predominantly aligns with females controlling the act of sexual intercourse, ramifications thereof, and illegality of any attempt to take the choice of when she copulates away from her.
But it's not really accurate to assert that in most cases women choose their husbands.
Men choose when
relationships begin. The girl chooses when
sex begins, but the man chooses if and when
marriage takes place. It may seem like splitting hairs, but the woman is simply in a position of waiting for a proposal and then either accepting the offer of marriage or declining it. Just as men have no legitimate power to force sex on women, women have no legitimate power to force marriage on men -- and, like the baby and the bathwater, any technical protections associated with unapproved-by-father intercourse have disappeared right along with modern women's freedom to pretend they don't actually need to be covered by men.
I'm definitely not going to split hairs about "ownership;" in the end, it doesn't matter what one calls it, because even in monogamy-only monogamous marriages, the story lines that assert that the man and woman are "mutually submitting," "equal partners," "loving in spiritual balance" or "balanced besties" are pure fairy tale. Of course you don't feel the need for words that accurately nail down the true nature of a type of relationship that stood the test of time until those words were permitted to become fuzzy to the point of near meaninglessness. One can recoil at the concept of being owned, but what that points to is making an individual demand that one truly be
self-owned, but self-ownership, to have any tangible meaning, would have to entail being able to take full responsibility for providing everything needed for the upkeep, organization, maintenance, repair and protection of one's entire self. I look around and can find no woman or group solely composed of women who can accomplish that. We've erected governmental structures that provide all those things in such an indirect manner that it makes it easy for recipients to be in denial of where everything actually comes from, but it's undeniably from men. When Moses wrote down Torah, a not insignificant portion of it was intended to put structures in place to protect women. Our postmodern society has almost entirely rejected those structures, but, conveniently, women continue to demand what the structures provided while refusing to participate in their end of the bargain as far as the fulfilling-structures are concerned.
Some would assert that those who accept the largesse of the providers are equally as dependent on those providers as they were back when the providers owned them (ever heard the phrase, "they've just put me back on the government plantation?"), so it ends up becoming a distinction without a difference -- other than that the recipients are free to pretend they have nothing to be grateful for, which, in itself, is a perverse form of self-enslavement.
The need for words is fundamentally a reflection of the need for clarity in contracts.
Submission doesn’t seem like it necessary when there are only two people in the relationship, a loose partnership works ok if there isn’t any selfishness.
I laughed when I read that sentence, Steve -- not that your sentiment was inaccurate but at wondering how old I'll have to be when I meet the next "loose partnership" in which "there isn't any selfishness."
Even the relationships that approach such an unreal potential are more Tinder than tender, and I certainly wouldn't label them TTWCM, much less biblical ones.