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| More Tags: A fellow is often baffled by such behavior in a girl. He asks quite bluntly, "Why is it that a nice girl will lead you on and then not be willing to go through with it?" What he fails to see is that what is obvious to him as a male is not at all clear to a young, inexperienced girl. He knows the meaning of a sex-toned situation. He is aware of sexual excitation from its beginning. But the young female has no such clear-cut sensations. She reacts to the earlier stages of love play with relaxation and enjoyment at being cuddled. It's not until the man becomes "fresh" that she's aware of what is happening. Not all older fellows date young girls with the purpose of seduction. Sometimes an older boy may have been preoccupied with work or studies while others of his age were dating. When he does start going out with girls he finds that he's more comfortable with younger girls who are at his own level of social poise. Also many an older fellow is genuinely interested in and charmed by a young girl; he would be shocked to learn that adults are assuming that he wants only to exploit her. Lester is a case in point. He was a studious lad all through high school, entering into few activities outside his studies and basketball. In college he made the basketball team and got straight A's in his courses. He loved to read and devoted a lot of time to that. From college he went on to a seminary where his studies and student preaching took up all his time. By the time he was ordained he was twenty-six and ready to get married. But now he found that the young women his own age were either married or so socially aggressive that they frightened him. As a result he started going out with ajunior in college who shared his intellectual interests and encouraged him into the social life he had missed. The relationship was hardly exploitive-but mutually helpful-and ended, upon the girl's graduation, in a happy marriage. It's clear, then, that age is only one factor. While there are some boys and men who date much younger girls for the advantage it gives them in "the battle of the sexes," this is not always the case by any means. One has to know the persons involved to predict the dangers and rewards that their relationship may reap. It All Depends . . . A point frequently discussed in high school is whether it's advisable for a high school girl to date a college man. In general, high school boys tend to oppose the practice vigorously as unfair and unwise. The girls are not quite so positive. They argue that dating a college boy gives a girl real prestige among other girls. It introduces her to college functions and to other college students of both sexes. It makes her feel grown-up, and not infrequently leads to her getting pinned and engaged much sooner than if she had restricted her dates to high school boys. The other side of the argument recognizes that a girl who dates college boys may be cutting off her chances to date the boys in her own school. She may miss out on the normal social life of the school. She may not find a real sense of belonging with the college set, in whose interests and conversation she cannot participate fully. And she may also find that the college man who takes out a high school girl expects to be rewarded by favors that the college girls do not generally permit. In the last analysis, what really must be considered are the personalities of the college boy and the high school girl involved. If they have a great deal in common and find delightin sharing a multitude of similar interests; if he enjoys the hospitality of her home, while she thrills to occasional campus affairs-they may both feel that these advantages outweigh those of being cut off from their own classmates. |