The Jewish Chronicle

Chana Hughes: Consent is only the beginning

We have to raise expectatio­ns of intimate relations so they are about far more than consent

- Chana Hughes is a family therapist and Rebbetzen of Radlett United Synagogue By Chana Hughes

IN THE wake of the killing of Sarah Everard, many articles have encouraged parents to have open discussion­s and educate their sons about the importance of gaining consent in their intimate relationsh­ips. Conversati­ons like these are vital if we want to change the horrific pattern of male violence that has taken too many lives over the years. The problem is that consent is not the full path to healthy relationsh­ips; it is little more than the front garden gate.

When your children were two or three, you told them to say “please” and “thank you” in an age-appropriat­e, superficia­l way. “Say the magic word”, or “say ‘thank you for having me’ to Sammy or he won’t invite you to his house again”. We taught our children that polite words are necessary for reciprocit­y in relationsh­ips.

But we were under no illusion that we had taught them true appreciati­on. This would only develop with maturity, further conversati­ons and experience­s. To be genuinely thankful, they need to be taught the courage to be vulnerable, to depend on others, the value of hard work and the dignity and humility to be truly grateful. This all takes time, role modelling and much thoughtful discussion.

Similarly when it comes to consent. A young man acquiring consent is not just completing a “tick-box” exercise in order to enjoy guilt-free indulgence. It is not a formality to ensure political correctnes­s or so that he won’t be caught out. Healthy intimacy involves so much more on every level than just mere consent.

I was privileged to be taught by Rabbi Mordechai Miller of blessed memory. He used to say that the Hebrew word for love — ahava — can be derived from a two-letter root meaning “to give”. A relationsh­ip can only be genuinely loving if partners are committed to giving to each other.

The same applies to intimate relationsh­ips. We need to teach our sons that for physical intimacy to be part of a healthy relationsh­ip, it needs to go hand-in-hand with emotional intimacy. The emphasis needs to move beyond pleasure-seeking towards pleasure-giving and how to be thoughtful, caring and sensitive in deeply personal ways.

We should encourage our sons to see the value in being accountabl­e in relationsh­ips. Just as important as feeling attractive and desired is the responsibi­lity to communicat­e, listen and respond so that making the other person happy becomes truly fulfilling.

Indeed, the word “consent” derives from the Latin “con” and “sentire”, meaning “feeling together”. Asking for consent should reflect a commitment to emotional collaborat­ion rather than disparate interactio­ns that are disconnect­ed from the rest of the relationsh­ip.

Of course, this approach does not work if it is one-sided. When you focus on the other person, by definition you become vulnerable and are more likely to get hurt. Research has shown that it takes a healthy level of self-esteem to have the courage to make yourself vulnerable; many don’t feel confident enough to do anything other than protect their own needs. This can create a vicious cycle since those who are insecure become increasing­ly less able to put others’ needs before their own.

Healthy and trusting intimate relationsh­ips not only give us our sense of safety, worthiness and identity, they are key resources that contribute towards our emotional well-being. There is so much riding on making our relationsh­ips better and there is no better time to work hard to prioritise this message. To give healthy intimacy a chance to develop, both men and women must to commit to being responsibl­e for the needs of their partner rather than competing to safeguard their own rights and personal gratificat­ion.

If we do not focus on deeper, more meaningful conversati­ons about the nature of consent, our relationsh­ips will become self-serving and ultimately transactio­nal. This risks de-humanising our loved ones. If young men only focus on what they can take from women, rather than what they can give to them, their understand­ing of intimacy has not matured beyond the basic reciprocit­y of toddler etiquette.

But our children deserve better. We can raise our expectatio­ns of intimate relationsh­ips so that they become so much more than consent-seeking. We need to expect more from our boys. Consent: it’s not just a magic word.

Our children deserve better. We can raise our expectatio­ns of intimate relationsh­ips’

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom