The ‘OTHER’ tab is for journalists, educators, researchers, law enforcement, govt., students, therapists, and other individuals and organisations interested in learning about… PTSD. People who do not have PTSD, and don’t support people with PTSD, but have personal or professional or academic interest.
Whether kissing on the lips is appropriate? Is a social-anthropology question. As it’s totally appropriate in some cultures, and wildly inappropriate in others, and “it varies” amongst the rest.
For example? In cultures with prescribed social kissing (one cheek, both cheeks, 3 alternating cheeks for business & social events, to denote how “close” one is, debts owed, respect owed even within a blood family, etc.?) Lip kissing is reserved for immediate family within one to two generations. Grandparents, kids, grandkids…aunts/uncles/nieces/nephews one generation, two would be great grandparents & great grandkids, great aunts/uncles, etc.). Of course, blood DEBT means also means lip kissing amongst mortal enemies. It… gets complicated. As do almost all families & politicking. Where a kiss on the lips could be a ‘goodbye’ between business rivals, or best friends, before one of them is about to be melted in acid. Sociocultural rules… are…. Complex. As are family politics.
If the bloke tries to f*ck you, feel you up, borrow money, need an organ? Then, no. It’s not cultural. If he doesn’t? Shrug. Depends on the cultural rules he’s adopted.
Being CONCERNED about someone kissing you on the lips? Means you’re probably American, and have never travelled abroad, and aren’t that cute. So you’re tragically self conscious, desperate, and hope to have found your long lost “dad”. Meaning you’re a near perfect mark for all kinds of shenanigans. 1. Get a DNA test. 2. NO ONE has solved the nature/nurture debate. Sharing genes with someone? Does. Not. Determine. Your. Spirit. Even if you stir your coffee the same way, work in the same field, etc. ALL KINDS of assholes also do this. As well as all kinds of idiots. And all kinds of heros.
He kissed you on the lips. So? He either comes from that kind of culture (you don’t, as you’re worried, instead of relieved), or? He’s a perverted asshole, whether you share genetics or not. Like “OMFG, he saw my HAIR!!!” Level of freaked out in cultures where hijabs are worn in public, but not at home. But Americans? Couldn’t. Give. A. f*ck. Who. Saw. Their. Hair. Even though they try to hide “bad hair days” in various ways? It’s not a sexual perversion kind of situation for a stranger to see your hair. Because hair is for family (who doesn’t care) and lovers (who DO). Like tits/pussy/ass in america. Your family wants you to put it away, your lovers want you to show them. But both? See.
NONE of this has to do with PTSD. I only happen to be an anthropologist who is bored, in this moment. So I’m sharing 100/200 level “any university freshman/sophomore would know” BASIC info.
Seriously. Your maybe-biological dad kissed you on the lips. And you’re feeling weird about it. So you hit up people who were raped, raped as KIDS, abused, tortured, in combat… to process a weird feeling??? That’s where your head goes? I got PTSD from being cut in line?
SELF CONFIDENCE.
You felt weird.
That’s a valid concern.
That’s not life threatening trauma &/or sexual assault. It just isn’t. And even WITH life threatening trauma & sexual assault? Only a minority get PTSD. The majority deal with other clusterf*cks.
My bio dad kissed me weird, is a shrudder. A red flag for a con, or conflicting cultures. Not a lifelong disorder.