“Women are
systematically degraded by receiving the trivial attentions which men think it
manly to pay to the sex, when, in fact, men are insultingly supporting their
own superiority.”
Mary
Wollstonecraft
By
Alex P. Vidal
DO we belong in the Maria Clara times if we still equate
sex with emotional attachment?
Has sex nowadays become a commercial commodity that can
be experienced even with the absence of a serious relationship commitment?
Some of the sexual revolution ideology stated that
it was old-fashioned to want to connect sex with feelings—it meant we weren’t
“hip.”
Not only marriage but monogamy and love or even
tender feelings were often considered to be something only “neurotic” women
wanted.
The idea was that “people should spontaneously have
sex and not worry about hurting each other, just behave freely and have sex, no
strings, anytime with anybody, just for pure physical pleasure.”
But almost no woman in the study conducted by Shere
Hite, an American-born German sex educator, wanted that kind of sexual
relationship very often—although a few thought that they should:
“I saw a TV show the other night and this guy said
we need to separate sex and love and I think he is right—that is why women get
hurt so much because men for some reason seem to be able to do this while we
have a great deal of trouble separating them. At least I don’t seem to be able
to.”
According to Hite, whose sexological work has
focused primarily on female sexuality, “Overwhelmingly, women wanted sex with
feeling.”
TESTIMONIES
Here are some of the testimonies of the respondents
in Hite’s study published in The Hite
Report:
ALMA: “I think the sexual revolution is fantastic. But I have remained
‘faithful’ to my husband and will because I know from past experience that sex
with me is totally involved with personal relationship. It’s part of me that I
can’t separate from the rest of my body and mind. I could not successfully
divide my sexual life among two or more.”
ROSE: “I think the sexual revolution has totally distorted the place of
sexuality to the point that it has become an end in itself, an escape, or a
desperate attempt to achieve love. Writers like Rollo May (Love and Will) and the women’s movement have helped me to value the
integration of love and sex as opposed to casual encounters with partners who
do not value me.”
DEBBIE: “Well, I like being able to have a sexual life even though I am not
married. But I do not like the casual and ‘cool’ sort of relationship as well
as what used to be called ‘romance.’ I like to feel involved with someone.”
RUTH: “I approve of the acceptance of sexual desires and relations. But
personally I still believe it is more desirable to have a personally intimate
and close relationship, not a casual one.”
REBECCA: “Where I see trouble is in people of my generation, many of my
friends. In their attempts to be freed
by the sexual revolution they have undertaken sexual practices they are not
psychologically equipped to handle. In joining groups gropes and multiple
sexual encounters they seem to mess up their lives…leave their partners and
families for all the wrong reasons…become middle-aged hippies, as though we
could ever be twenties again.
“They seem confused and definitely not content. This
older group has simply forgotten that sex should be a thing that fits in nicely
with a lot of other things like a good nourishing one-to-one relationship,
work, personal growth, strengthening friendships, going fishing and watching
sunsets.
“I get the feeling they’ve thrown out all the
commitments, not just the bad ones, and sex has become the mainspring of their
every waking moment.
“The sexual revolution has permitted me to share
home and life with a man without marrying, and it gave me the right to choose
my way of life without having to be a flag-carrying rebel about it, but if I
were not to pick and choose within this revolution to suit myself, to avoid
damaging myself…then I would not have been freed by the so-called revolution
either; they’ve just exchanged one kind of slavery for another.
“Without doubt though, more good than harm has come
of it, and my generation will pass out of it in time anyway.”
SUPPLEMENT
TIFFANY: “I like sex a lot. But it can only supplement a warm affectionate,
mutually respecting, full personhood relationship. It can’t be a relationship.
It can’t prove love. It can’t prove anything. I have found sex with people I
don’t really like, or who I’m not certain will really like me, or with people I
don’t feel I know well, to be very shallow and uncomfortable and physically
unsatisfying.
“I don’t believe you have to be ‘in love’ and
married ‘till death do us part.’ But mind and body are one organism and all
tied up together, and it isn’t even physically fun unless the people involved
really like each other.”
JESSICA: “The sexual revolution is great. But as an individual I feel I could not
have sex except with someone I loved. And if I felt such love I’d want it
permanently (as permanent as anything can be). I am even at 53 a romantic
idealist—Damn it!”
JANE: “Because I’m very sensitive and afraid of getting hurt (I’m only 18), I
still imbue intercourse with very strong emotional meaning. It upsets me and
leaves me unhappy to be with someone who views intercourse casually and feels
no meaningful tenderness afterwards.”
PAULA: “My emotions play an enormous part in sex for me—maybe too much for my
liking. I sometimes feel that I’m too ‘particular,’ or selective or delicate—I have
to be feeling very intensely, or in love, or overwhelmed by sexual feelings in
order to enter a deep sexual encounter. Sometimes I worry about whether the man
will expect too much from me, sometimes whether I will expect too much from
him.
“Sometimes I worry about whether I won’t feel
enough, or will be disappointed afterwards. At times I have gone out to have a
totally casual encounter just to avoid these complications. Most of my
relationships—maybe all—begin with a combination of the physical and emotional.
I can’t get turned on to a partner without an emotional or mental factor being
present, even if not primary. And sometimes it is primary, and the physical
secondary.”
DONNA: “I think the sexual revolution has caused a lot of suffering. People use
it to avoid commitment; they refuse to work a relationship, preferring to
search for the ‘perfect’ love. They fantasize their way through relationships,
always seeking perfection, running scared at the first sign that work is needed
to help two people together.
“No one knows where the other person is at, and what
attracts one may turn off another. Everyone wants to try everything, but not
stick to any one thing, so they change from day to day, and are bewildered by
the way they and their friends reverse opinions and trade partners.
“I’m not saying the old way was better, but I’m
afraid of what kind of life I can look forward to. I’m not married, but even if
I do get married it seems that my marriage has a small chance of surviving. And
I don’t see the advantages of this style, frankly.”
ELAINE: “I’m confused as hell about the ‘sexual revolution.’ My husband and I
lived and slept together for over a year before we were married—and that was
fine. We loved each other and there was some kind of commitment between us. The
summer before I was married, my (then) fiancé was away and I slept twice with
another man because I was curious. Fine.
“As I mentioned earlier, I lost my virginity to a
friend, a bit of a cold way to start out, but I was scared and wanting to get laid,
so he helped me out. Fine.
“But extra-marital sex, after a man and a woman have
made a big commitment to each other—I can’t buy. I moved out on my husband when
he took on a girl friend because I couldn’t stand the pain. A year later, right
now, we’re negotiating. We seem to be at a stalemate. I hate to think of myself
as behind the times, but I just can’t hack anything but monogamy.”
GREATEST
HELEN:
“I still believe the greatest sexual satisfaction
comes from having a partner you care about. I’ve gone through stages of having
several lovers and thinking I was really liberated. But I’m much more fulfilled
now with one caring partner.”
MICHELLE: “I went along with the sexual revolution quite a while until I realized
that holding my feelings back was causing me lots of anguish. I was very
depressed. I tried opening communications line up—that was part of the problem,
but not all of it. Now, in love with my lover and trusting him, I can see how
all that damaged me—made my trust mechanisms inhibited by sex.
“For a while I stopped having sex with him because I
couldn’t love and fuck him both. These days things are much better. I think
that the loyalty is important.”
MARY: “It’s an overreaction and after years and years of the old double
standard, of women expected to be pure and virginal for marriage and to always
set the limits, society has overturned itself.
“Now women are supposed to be willing, ready, and
able to have sex with anyone, anytime, no strings attached and so on. Out of
the latter swing of the pendulum have come some good opening ups of certain
repressive taboos.
“But women, and men, remain oppressed by these
roles. I have found that I can’t detach myself from sex and still enjoy it. I
can’t make love with someone I’m not supposed to trust—and feel good about it.
“These attitudes don’t treat me like a whole person
either. Too much mind/body separation results in either compulsive screwers or
strained virgins!”
BERNADETTE: “I have mixed feelings about the sexual revolution. Hedonism seems the
opposite side of the coin of Puritanism.
My daughters tell me that they feel used and abused and refused
promiscuity, although they have had sex with young men they cared about. I
personally hate the singles scene. It makes me feel like a walking cunt!”
SOPHIA: “I guess I like the idea of intercourse—two people’s bodies joined in an
act of love or mutual excitement or whatever, but I’ve become so disillusioned by
the whole thing—having met and fucked with a lot of guys who (as I came to
realized later) just wanted to get laid and liked the looks of my body but
wanted little or nothing to do with me.
“I have come to regard sex as exploitative—having sex
is almost like saying ‘here, fuck me, do anything with me that you want, I’m
not worth anything anyway.’
“I guess I’m sort of screwed sexually, my ideas
about sex are screwed up, and I hope my therapy will help me there. I’ve found
I have a lot of guilt feelings and a refusal to enjoy sex, or at least that is
what my therapist says.”
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