Every religion has a requirement or the other to be a part of the group. The Mormon Underwear myth has been around, but who does not?
The Jews and Muslims have circumcision requirements and pork is forbidden, most Hindus don't eat meat, particularly the beef; same goes with the Jains. The Sikhs have 5 K's to follow, the hair, the dagger, the bracelet, the underwear...
We have to learn to respect other's traditions, as we do our own.
Mike Ghouse
Are Mormon Underwear Magic Between the Sheets?
By Valerie Tarico, AlterNethttp://www.alternet.org/story/156161/are_mormon_underwear_magic_between_the_sheets
To outsiders there is little
more fascinating about the Mormon religion than the secret underwear that Mormon
temple initiates are expected to wear day and night. As one former believer put it,
“I've been an exmo since 1967. All that time, the underwear questions were the
first ones I got from people who found out I had been Mormon. A friend brought
it up again last week at lunch.” Another former Mormon agrees: “When people
first find out I'm exmo, their first question/comment almost ALWAYS is, ‘So what
is the deal with the magic underwear?!’ Honest! People outside the morg are
spending WAY too much time thinking about garmies!” (DC)
(“Garmies” is insider slang for
the sacred undergarments prescribed by the religion’s founder, Joseph
Smith.)
Some outside interest may be
driven simply by curiosity: Mormons have sacred underwear! What do they look
like? Or incredulity: Religious leaders can tell women to wear
undershirts with special symbols all the time beneath their bras and
people do it?! But that’s not the whole story.
The idea of sacred, secret
underwear seems a little kinky, at least to some outsiders. Commenters on blogs
and forums confess the attraction. “I tell you guys who grew up taking
"undergarments" for granted- WE in the not-know find these items fetching indeed
[Here in Idaho].” (Kymba)
“Mine had been in the bottom of my closet in a moving box, in a paper bag for 5
years until a couple weekends ago when I modeled them for my boyfriend, he was
intrigued by the whole thing and found them to be very sexy.” (Randy) It only makes sense that some subset of us would find
the idea of Mormon undies titillating. They are novel, they are secret, they are
taboo, and they are in constant contact with genitalia.
But are they kinky to
insiders?
It’s hard to get a balanced
sample from active Mormons, because the Garments, as I said, are sacred, and
catering to the curiosity of prurient outsiders would violate a covenant sworn
during the same temple ceremony in which a Mormon gets authorized to wear the
Garment. Unfortunately those who have been fantasizing about a romp in which
layers of white cotton create the perfect sense of mystery (or bondage),
exMormons offer few words of encouragement. Discomfort seems to be the
predominant theme.
I was
continuously battling wedgies--often in public; how the people would stare as I
would try to wrestle crumpled material out of my crack. Lady
DB
If you have
ever worn the modern ones you should appreciate the distance these have come.
When I first got married they came in a one piece get up with a wide neck so you
could step into them. The back had a split crotch (not the kind in kinky
panties) but this huge wide sloppy split that would separate under your clothes,
leaving a draft in your nether region much of the time. The little panel they
sew into the ladies special part was so poorly designed that it would roll and
twist till you felt like you were skewered by a roll of old toilet paper. Insanad
Of all of
the things about Mo-dom, the thing I miss the least is the underwear.Zapotec
Theologically, Mormon
undergarments are said to be symbols of a covenant between God and the believer.
Initiates pantomime their own death should they violate this sacred trust. The
underwear have sacred symbols drawn from the Masonic Order into which Joseph Smith was
initiated shortly before he proclaimed God’s desire that people wear the
Garment. True believing Mormons avoid allowing Garments to touch the ground.
They may cut off and burn the symbols when a Garment itself is worn out.
I thought
the kitchen was on fire a few times until I found my mom burning the "sacred
symbols" in tin cans before she cut the underwear into dust cloths. I was
slapped a time or two for letting them fall or drag on the floor when I did
laundry as a child. Cheryl
In Mormon folk religion,
Garments have special powers. Stories are told of wearers being saved from
bullets or fiery death in a car crash. One story tells of a Mormon soldier
during WWII who was killed by a Japanese flame thrower – but his Garment
survived intact. The stories go back to Joseph Smith himself, who died in a hail
of bullets without his Garment on. His companion, Willard Richards, who was
wearing his, emerged unscathed. Mormon historian Hubert Bancroft described
the incident in his 1890 History of Utah, “This garment protects from
disease, and even death, for the bullet of an enemy will not penetrate it. The
Prophet Joseph carelessly left off this garment on the day of his death, and had
he not done so, he would have escaped unharmed.”
Today such accounts are not
investigated or endorsed by the church authorities. The Catholic hierarchy has
an established procedure for assessing claims about weeping statues or a miracle
cure, but the Mormon hierarchy largely ignores stories about the real world
protective powers of the white underwear. In 1988, Mormon authorities asserted
that the Garment serves as a protection “against temptation and evil.”
Unfortunately, ordinary believers may take the broader protective power of their
Garments seriously, sometimes with painful consequences.
Flame swept
up my arm and no clothing burned at all except the entire sleeve and part of the
shoulder of the Garment that burned/melted. I was burned where the material
melted into globules. I was a good person. They did not work as claimed. I will
never ever forget that day. AmIDarkNow
My TBM
(True Believing Mormon) father was a radiologist and believed that his garmies
would protect him from radiation. Needless to say, the bonehead died of leukemia
at 49. Jeebus
Taking off the Garments is a
big step for many people leaving the Mormon religion. Some people feel
vulnerable when they first abandon the regulation underclothes.
Well, I
still remember the first time I took them off. Half wondered if I was going to
die in a car wreck. nonyabiz
I was on
the look out for the death from no garmies too for a bit!! Oh good Lord!makesmyheadspin
But others experience a sense
of freedom:
I cannot
believe I let another grown man ask my wife and I what kind of underwear we were
wearing and volunteer the information with a cheery smile. What was even more
sick is that I believed in a tyrannical God that cared about what kind of
underwear I was wearing. Mortimer
My hubby
and I were cooking on the grill in the back yard. All of a sudden the wind
changed, a flame leaped out of the grill and came straight at my chest. I looked
down and saw it hit my shirt and chest, then arch away from me, back in the
direction it came from. I looked down, my plastic buttons weren't melted and the
shirt wasn't singed at all. I automatically thought in my old morg ways, "my
Garments must have protected me!". THEN....I pulled my shirt collar forward and
looked down my shirt... I couldn't stop laughing!! I had no Garments on!! This
was soooo refreshing and invigorating! I had been "protected" and I had no
Garments on!! Kathy
S
Sometimes the heart of that
newfound freedom is freedom to explore sexuality or intimacy.
When we
began to just lay together, skin to skin, and talk to each other; to feel each
other’s pulse and breath; to simply feel our physical selves, our body-shame
began to dissipate. Waking
Up
I remember
when I first quit wearing my garments and how feminine I felt. WOW, actually had
breasts and a waist. It was very liberating and for the first time in my life I
began to feel sexual, not a droid without any sexuality. And even though I
didn't fit the, what I perceived as the ideal, weight, shape, looks, I felt sexy
and powerful. anonymous
This is not to say that Mormon
Garments have no place in the history or future of erotica. You say tomayto, I
say tomaaahhhto. Interestingly, the Garment may owe its existence to Joseph
Smith wrestling with his own high libido. As recent research on homosexualitysuggests, people who are struggling to contain or suppress
their own sexuality may be particularly interested in controlling the sexuality
of others. Historians are unclear on the number of women Smith actually married
and the number with which he simply had sexual relationships. The list of his
wives, first published in the late 19th century, and still debated, includes 27 names. Despite this, Smith preached against polygamy till
his death. Was the design of the Garment (then a full body long-sleeved
button-up affair) the product of a divine revelation, Smith’s sexual tastes, or
his effort to suppress desire? You decide.
Valerie Tarico is a
psychologist and writer in Seattle, Washington and the founder ofWisdom Commons. She is the author of "Trusting Doubt: A Former
Evangelical Looks at Old Beliefs in a New Light" and "Deas and Other
Imaginings." Her articles can be found at Awaypoint.Wordpress.com.
power prash
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