Perhaps the song is describing a happy relationship like this, only hopefully without the destructive interference at the end:\n\n"Germaine Greer (1975) ... relates the experience of one of her school friends: [She] enjoyed sex with her uncle throughout her childhood and never realized that anything was unusual until she went away to school. What disturbed her then was not what her uncle had done, but the attitude of her teachers and psychiatrist. They assumed that she must have been traumatized and disgusted and therefore in need of very special help. In order to capitulate to their expectations, she began to fake symptoms she did not feel, until at length she began to feel truly guilty for not having felt guilty. She ended up judging herself quite harshly for this innate lechery. (Page number not given.)"\n\n-- Paul Okami, "Sociopolitical Biases in the Contemporary Scientific Literature on Adult Human Sexual Behavior with Children and Adolescents," p. 11\n\nGreer G. Seduction Is a Four-Letter Word, New York: John Cushman Associates, Inc., 1975
Perhaps the song is describing a happy relationship like this, only hopefully without the destructive interference at the end:\n\n"Germaine Greer (1975) ... relates the experience of one of her school friends: [She] enjoyed sex with her uncle throughout her childhood and never realized that anything was unusual until she went away to school. What disturbed her then was not what her uncle had done, but the attitude of her teachers and psychiatrist. They assumed that she must have been traumatized and disgusted and therefore in need of very special help. In order to capitulate to their expectations, she began to fake symptoms she did not feel, until at length she began to feel truly guilty for not having felt guilty. She ended up judging herself quite harshly for this innate lechery. (Page number not given.)"\n\n-- Paul Okami, "Sociopolitical Biases in the Contemporary Scientific Literature on Adult Human Sexual Behavior with Children and Adolescents," p. 11\n\nGreer G. Seduction Is a Four-Letter Word, New York: John Cushman Associates, Inc., 1975