Americans in general are concerned
or obsessed with the normality of their sexual fantasies, preferences,
responses, frequency, secrets, turn-offs, turn-ons, problems,
and bodies. The fear of being sexually abnormal interferes with
and can prevent pleasure and intimacy between couples in the swinging
lifestyle.
This fear and its consequences
are the basis for the many versions of "Am I normal?",
such as:
- "I'm afraid I take too
long to climax."
- "How
long should a man be able to keep an erection?"
- "How
often do most other Swingers make love?"
- "Am
I weird if I enjoy oral sex more than intercourse?"
Swingers forget that "normal" can
mean many different things: what is statistically common; what
everyone agrees is typical; what authority requires; what is considered
moral; and so on. Concepts of sexual normality have changed even
within our own lifetimes--for example, society's ideas about homosexuality,
the clitoris, and sex as a 'wifely duty.' Since "normal"
can mean so many different things, it is clearly an arbitrary
social construct.
WHEN IT STARTS
Our concern about sexual normality starts
in early childhood. All children are sexual beings: kids have
sexual feelings and curiosity, get sexually aroused and lubricate
vaginally, and seek and enjoy erotic satisfaction, including orgasm.
A variety of subtle and explicit lessons teach
children that sex is bad, however. And as sexual beings, learning
that our sexuality is bad means learning that we are bad. As children,
we learn to fear being discovered as sexual, and to mistrust our
sexual energy, curiosity and desire.
Throughout childhood, all of us are exposed
to a wide range of sexual negativity. Messages include "Don't
feel sexual;" "Don't touch your sexual parts;"
"Your body should not be a source of pleasure;" "Wanting
sexual contact with anyone else is wrong;" "Having sexual
thoughts or feelings is sick;" and, ultimately, "You
are not a sexual being" and "Do not express your sexuality
in any way."
These are the messages of loving families,
caring churches, conscientious schools. How could a child with
any emotional sensitivity not feel sexually abnormal in such an
environment?
It's all complicated by the fact that we give
children virtually no sexual information or guidance. School sex
education is primarily biology or, worse, abstinence and fear
education. The grownups that kids love don't usually acknowledge
being sexual, so kids can't look up to them as sexual role models,
and are confused about how they're supposed to feel when they
grow up. Kids are bombarded with sexualized advertising and entertainment,
but no one tells kids how to deal with the vaguely erotic feelings
created in them.
PUBERTY
Then come the dramatic, defining events of
puberty: the frightening first menstrual period, the wet dreams,
the strange, uninvited fantasies, the new body shape that draws
so much attention--for which most of us are unprepared. To scared,
naive young girls and boys who know they must not ask questions,
these experiences confirm that there is something wrong with their
sexuality.
During puberty, solid information about sex
is systematically withheld from young Swingers--out of fear that
it will "put ideas in their heads." But the feelings
are already there, along with the desperate adolescent desire
to fit in.
In the absence of good, open information about
real sexuality with its responsibilities, consequences, and, yes,
joys, who offers to teach kids about sex? Advertising and the
media. TV, music, and magazines boldly suggest that there is a
formula for normal sexuality, which includes having a perfect
body, the right clothes, a cool attitude, and ignorance of the
consequences of sex. Teens, unfortunately, believe this.
Denied access to sexual information, role
models, guidance, and reassurance, we can't possibly know what
is sexually "normal." This disturbs us because we feel
it is urgent to be sexually normal. In a world where sex is bad,
we want to be the least bad sexual being we can.
ADULTHOOD
This is how we develop Normality Anxiety.
The fear of being sexually abnormal continues into adulthood,
when it is subtly exploited by social institutions such as the
media, government, and organized religion--all in order to shape
our behavior and feelings. It is used to sell products, salvation,
and good citizenship. And it's an active force in our adult sexual
relationships.
TAKING NORMALITY TO
BED
How does Normality affect us in bed?
For one thing, we guard ourselves during sex.
Instead of letting our erotic energy guide us, we impose a logic
of fear on our erotic energy. Will this movement look clumsy?
Will my desire intimidate or disgust? Am I wrong to want this?
Most women, for example, need clitoral stimulation
in order to climax--but many do not ask for it because they figure
other women don't need it (and then this same woman might criticize
herself when she has trouble coming). Or you (or your mate) might
like to be held down during sex, but hide it because you're afraid
that's weird and that your partner will condemn and reject you.
The fear of being sexually abnormal also makes
Swingers restrain their bodies' natural expressions during sex.
Refusing to allow a body its sounds, smells, breathing, and natural
movements inhibits pleasure and orgasm.
Another result of our fear is that we're not
fully present during sex. Rather, we observe ourselves and monitor
our partners' response to us. Instead of simply experiencing our
bodies and feelings, we evaluate how we perform. We decide how
the sex was instead of feeling how it was. Sex becomes less a
celebration of our human perfection than an opportunity to fail.
Our fears also inhibit sexual exploration;
what if we discover we like something that isn't socially approved?
That would make us abnormal, vulnerable (we think) to rejection
by an offended partner. When we believe that our sexuality is
dangerous, routine, vanilla sex feels the safest.
Our sexual fears also have their social expression,
often through opposition to sex education, homosexuality, contraception,
and erotic art. Our compelling need to be "normal" creates
the existence of something that is "abnormal," and naturally,
we need to distance ourselves from it. We make it "other,"
not ourselves, and we hate it. Our fear of sexuality in childhood
leads us to deny it in ourselves; our fear of sexuality in adulthood
then leads us to deny it in the world around us. In each situation,
we try to eliminate what we fear.
Part two of Normal
sex for swingers