Sex or Hey, I Thought
This Was Supposed To Be Fun! by Cathy (1972)
(Editor's Note: In a February 1972 issue of Womankind, Cathy
wrote about the contradictory feelings that many women have toward
sex.)
One
or the realities illuminated by the Womens Liberation Movement
has been the appalling lack of knowledge we as women have about
our own bodies and how uncomfortable we often feel with them and
in them. This is bound to have an effect on our having good sexual
and sensual relationships. Heterosexual relationships provide a
special problem because we are learning that relationships between
the sexes have historically been unequal, more often than not oppressive
to women, and clearly favoring mens sexuality and well being.
Ironically,
the female body, while a source of real and fantasy pleasure to
men, is often itself left frustrated, unpleased, cold. Accepting
the fact that heterosexual relationships will probably not change
significantly for large numbers of women until the social and economic
relationships between the sexes have been radically changed, perhaps
it would be useful to consider a few of the things that block our
having pleasurable relationships with men now.
Today,
in accord with the sexual revolution, it is more socially acceptable
for women to enjoy sex. Some magazines encourage this notion to
the point of assuming women should always love sex and have multiple
orgasms every time. This idea has created some problems because
though we are all in favor of women enjoying sex, it will take
more than cheering articles in Cosmopolitan to make this
possible.
In the
first place this new attitude can become a new means of oppressing
women. We all recognize that part in ourselves that lives up to
what is expected of us it is a common psychological attitude
of any group of people who is oppressed. So now instead of being
the good wife and mother (postwar through early 60s
expectation), we have to be the sexually alive and enjoying it woman
(later 60s, 7Os expectation.) The catch is that we werent
consulted as to our desires in either case. Particularly in the
counter culture and youth movements, there has developed a new image
of women which tends to look down on women who arent eager
to go to bed with every man who approaches them and dont enjoy
sex a lot. How can we enjoy our own body just like that overnight?
It isnt as though we are all potentially sexually eager and
are just waiting for the social word to start enjoying ourselves.
Centuries of definition hove kept us from experiencing (or admitting
feeling guilty about being a poor wife and mother), we now feel
guilty about not enjoying sex. We must learn about what is pleasurable
to us at our own speed, with our own rhythms, in our own terms.
There
are many reasons that we cant change overnight with regard
to sexual pleasure, and these reasons are neither mystifying or
complex, they are just ignored, not dealt with. They also tend
to be historical and social rather than immediate and personal.
1. Until recently social mores trained men to enjoy sex and women
to endure it. There is still a lot of this Puritan feeling around.
Recently there has been a new slant which might be characterized
as men are trained to enjoy sex and women are trained to enjoy
men enjoying sex. Check out any best selling sex manual and
see if the attitude isnt something like: Women have
as much right to sexual pleasure as do men. However, many women
admit that even though they do not often reach orgasm, they take
great pleasure in seeing their lover reach climax and are emotionally
content with his pleasure. Says who! To fully appreciate
this absurdity, reword it with the man being emotionally content,
though not reaching orgasm.
2. What pleases men does not please women. Traditional heterosexual
activity has centered around the male orgasm and how to achieve
it. It was just assumed that a woman would be pleased by the same
activity. Thanks to Masters and Johnson, what many women have long
known has been given legitimacy; a womans sexual pleasure
centers around her clitoris and not her vagina. Even this does
not give us smooth sailing, however. Many men are loath to admit
that the basic traditional sex act (penis in the vagina) does not
directly give pleasure to women.
3. Women get pregnant; men do not. It seems too simple to be worth
mentioning but the heterosexual relationship involves for the woman
the risk of getting pregnant. If that doesnt cut down on the
pleasure threshold of women, its hard to imagine what will.
A word should be said here for the attitude that all real women
want to be pregnant and have children so this risk shouldnt
deter pleasure. Not only is this not true, but even if it were,
it should not be hard to see the difference between a woman wanting
X number of children in X number of years and in certain circumstances
and a womans risking a conception every time she has intercourse.
I think
this is a valid point even with the pill because the number of
women on the pill is large but the number not on it is larger (not
even considering whether for reasons of health any of us should
be on it) and the same women for whom the pill is often inaccessible
are those for whom pregnancy is often socially unwelcome (underage
women, unmarried women, poor women). The other birth control devices
combine a high failure rate with often unaesthetic preparations
to further detract from womans potential pleasure.
4. Areas of sexual pleasure are defined. That is, in concentrating
on the genital area as the legitimate source of pleasure, the body
as a total sensual being is ignored. Expressions of affection,
often very pleasurable and necessary for women, are considered
valid only if they lead to specific genital sexual activity. We
might add that men suffer from this ignoring of the affective element
too, but because women are socialized to be more affective and
emotional than men, they suffer doubly. Men are trained to think
of affection for affections sake as unnecessary if not downright
suspicious.
5. There is a whole range of experience related to womens
sexuality which is not even a potential source of pleasure, but
always at the least frightening and at the worst, fatal. I refer
of course to assault from mental assault ( the uninvited
whistle or catcall), which few women escape, to real assault -
rape, and often murder, which not only happens directly to hideously
large numbers of women, but is never very far from the consciousness
of the rest of us. This fact cannot help but give us incredibly
ambivalent feelings vis a vis our bodies and sexuality, whether
they are a source of pleasure or pain for us.
6. Finally, I wonder how many of us realize that our position as
a sexual object gives us a certain amount of power. A perverse
power, granted, and no substitute for real control of our lives,
but power just the same. It represents our bargaining power with
men. Since there is no weapon to take its place, sex must be kept
in its place. We cannot make use of our own sexuality for purposes
of pleasure while it remains the most effective weapon in our arsenal
for survival.
Are
there any answers? We can band together on the job, unite to confront
the welfare bureaucrats, join forces to boycott sexist companies,
but we can hardly get together to challenge the men we are involved
with individually. This is an area which challenges the whole male
power structure. Each of us has to judge how far we can go in demanding
that men pay attention to our sexual needs as we do to theirs,
that men give up their ideas of womens place and needs and substitute
these misconceptions with the truth. Together, we cam learn with
each other about our bodies, about how social indoctrination has
led us to consider our needs unimportant, and in many cases, to
dislike ourselves. We can talk with each other and learn that its
not just my problem, but is universal. Each new thing
we learn and each good feeling we have about ourselves makes us
less oppressible. It's not a solution, but at least a start.