A friend in an abnormal psych class mentioned to me that tickling came up in their discussion of paraphelia. Apparently it's listed as a common fetish in the DSM4 (the psychology handbook). We talked for a bit about what causes paraphelic tendencies and whether or not they constitute disorders. We came to an understanding that, left unchecked, a paraphelia can become a disorder if it takes over a part of the person's psyche to the point of usurping their ability to live a healthy life without indulging it.
She also mentioned how 90% of paraphelics are male, and how it usually develops in men who had their masculinity challenged or threatened at an early age, as a way to reassert that masculinity through control (voyuerism, s&m, exhibitionism are all classic examples of this at work). Again, this does not necessarily imply that paraphelia is psychologically unhealthy, just deviant. Speaking for myself, I can support this idea. I had a very weak male role model growing up, which seems to fit with the development of paraphelia. I have other ideas about why tickling, but that's another matter.
I'm curious to here some thoughts on this.
She also mentioned how 90% of paraphelics are male, and how it usually develops in men who had their masculinity challenged or threatened at an early age, as a way to reassert that masculinity through control (voyuerism, s&m, exhibitionism are all classic examples of this at work). Again, this does not necessarily imply that paraphelia is psychologically unhealthy, just deviant. Speaking for myself, I can support this idea. I had a very weak male role model growing up, which seems to fit with the development of paraphelia. I have other ideas about why tickling, but that's another matter.
I'm curious to here some thoughts on this.