For me, if it's safe, sane, and consensual, between adults in private, I am not particularly judgmental.
Some things gross me out but if I don't have to watch it, then my policy is "Don't ask, don't tell; don't know, don't care."
Do you distinguish between things you just personally don't enjoy, things you find distasteful or aesthetically unappealing, things you suspect may indicate deeper "issues", things you regard as immoral, and things you believe should be legislated, or do these things sort of run together for you?
How much do you feel pressured to conform and how much does that pressure make you respond with judgments of your own, i.e. when people push the "everybody's doing it," "you're missing out," "let go of your hang ups" type stuff, do you feel more inclined to insist the thing you dislike is immoral?
Do you find people are sometimes just as judgmental of celibacy or asexuality as they are of various taboo sexuality?
Some things gross me out but if I don't have to watch it, then my policy is "Don't ask, don't tell; don't know, don't care."
Do you distinguish between things you just personally don't enjoy, things you find distasteful or aesthetically unappealing, things you suspect may indicate deeper "issues", things you regard as immoral, and things you believe should be legislated, or do these things sort of run together for you?
How much do you feel pressured to conform and how much does that pressure make you respond with judgments of your own, i.e. when people push the "everybody's doing it," "you're missing out," "let go of your hang ups" type stuff, do you feel more inclined to insist the thing you dislike is immoral?
Do you find people are sometimes just as judgmental of celibacy or asexuality as they are of various taboo sexuality?