...males generally lack emotional sentiment associate to sex
Bullshit. It's just a different sentiment than you're thinking. One of ownership.
A sense of ownership is common in relationships for both males and females
There's a longer history of males' regularly exerting that ownership however. And that's important even if what we're looking
at is purely societal in nature. Innovations of the past few decades are more easily swept away than long standing traditions -
especially when those traditions are reinforced by immigration from societies which do still hold them, often in even stronger forms.
... but it's socially unacceptable to discuss people in terms of personal property.
Is it? People still use the possessive - even if they aren't willing to be explicit about what it is they
possess. They talk about 'my partner' (significant other, or whatever), but don't seem to understand
that it is actually the tie of the possessive which makes any sense in the language.
Not sure if it's bullshit in general for males to not find sex emotionally meaningful; just saying that's the accepted generalization and stereotypes are commonly based in a truth.
Once again, I think this is a matter of imprecision. That there is a strong emotional attachment, but there are
differences in the expression. And there are likely physical reasons for this, having to do with the fast reduction
in sexual hormones after a male orgasm.
Still think it's possible males are much more sappy feely about sex than what's believed, and possibly more so than males are comfortable acknowledging.
Sappy is the iffy part. I think the bro bragging about his conquests has an emotionally meaningful relationship with the sex.
Does the word 'sappy' apply there though?
I'm having trouble distinguishing exactly what you're saying. A man gets tied to a sexual partner in many of the same
emotional ways a woman does, I think. The feelings of enjoyment linked with that person all become tied together, and
both (ideally) try to do things to make the other feel happy. When those bonds are broken, even when a friendship remains,
either gender can be devastated by the loss. I've both been through and kept both genders company through breakups enough to
be pretty sure that there's little fundamental difference - at least among the types of people whom I am likely to be friends
with (admittedly, probably not a great sample of the average). I've also seen similar reactions at a distance though (anger,
betrayal, hurt) which seem very similar. Am I completely missing the point here?