The Female Price of Male Pleasure
The Female Price of Male Pleasure
The Female Price of Male Pleasure
pleasure
Lili Loofbourow
http://theweek.com/articles/749978/female-price-male-pleasure
Why didn't she just get out of there as soon as she felt
uncomfortable? many people explicitly or implicitly asked.
It's a rich question, and there are plenty of possible answers. But if
you're asking in good faith, if you really want to think through why
someone might have acted as she did, the most important one is
this: Women are enculturated to be uncomfortable most of the time.
And to ignore their discomfort.
This is so baked into our society I feel like we forget it's there. To
steal from David Foster Wallace, this is the water we swim in.
The Aziz Ansari case hit a nerve because, as I've long feared, we're
only comfortable with movements like #MeToo so long as the men
in question are absolute monsters we can easily separate from the
pack. Once we move past the "few bad apples" argument and start to
suspect that this is more a trend than a blip, our instinct is to
normalize. To insist that this is is just how men are, and how sex is.
So let's actually talk bodies. Let's take bodies and the facts of sex
seriouslyfor a change. And let's allow some women back into the
equation, shall we? Because if you're going to wax poetic about
male pleasure, you had better be ready to talk about its secret,
unpleasant, ubiquitous cousin: female pain.
The studies on this are few. A casual survey of forums where people
discuss "bad sex" suggests that men tend to use the term to describe
a passive partner or a boring experience. (Here's a very unscientific
Twitter poll I did that found just that.) But when most women talk
about "bad sex," they tend to mean coercion, or emotional
discomfort or, even more commonly, physical pain. Debby
Herbenick, a professor at the Indiana University School of Public
Health, and one of the forces behind the National Survey of Sexual
Health and Behavior, confirmed this. "When it comes to 'good sex,'"
she told me, "women often mean without pain, men often mean they
had orgasms."
While women imagined the low end to include the potential for
extremely negative feelings and the potential for pain, men imagined
the low end to represent the potential for less satisfying sexual
outcomes, but they never imagined harmful or damaging outcomes
for themselves. ["Intimate Justice: Sexual satisfaction in young
adults"]
Once you've absorbed how horrifying this is, you might reasonably
conclude that our "reckoning" over sexual assault and harassment
has suffered because men and women have entirely different rating
scales. An 8 on a man's Bad Sex scale is like a 1 on a woman's. This
tendency for men and women to use the same term — bad sex — to
describe experiences an objective observer would characterize as
vastly different is the flip side of a known psychological
phenomenon called "relative deprivation," by which disenfranchised
groups, having been trained to expect little, tend paradoxically to
report the same levels of satisfaction as their better-treated, more
privileged peers.
This is one reason why Sullivan's attempt to naturalize the status quo
is so damaging.
Or, since sex is the subject here, what about how our society's
scientific community has treated female dyspareunia — the severe
physical pain some women experience during sex — vs. erectile
dysfunction (which, while lamentable, is not painful)? PubMed has
393 clinical trials studying dyspareunia. Vaginismus? 10.
Vulvodynia? 43.
That's right: PubMed has almost five times as many clinical trials on
male sexual pleasure as it has on female sexual pain. And why?
Because we live in a culture that sees female pain as normal and
male pleasure as a right.
This bizarre sexual astigmatism structures so much in our culture
that it's hard to gauge the extent to which our vision of things is
skewed.
Take how our health system compensates doctors for male vs.
female-only surgeries: As of 2015, male-specific surgeries were still
reimbursed at rates 27.67 percent higher for male-specific
procedures than female-specific ones. (Result: Guess who gets the
fanciest doctors?) Or consider how routinely many women are
condescended to and dismissed by their own physicians.
Yet here's a direct quote from a scientific article about how (contra
their reputation for complaining and avoiding discomfort) women
are worryingly tough: "Everyone who regularly encounters the
complaint of dyspareunia knows that women are inclined to continue
with coitus, if necessary, with their teeth tightly clenched."
The answer isn't separable from our current discussion about how
women have been routinely harassed, abused, and dismissed because
men wanted to have erections in the workplace. It boggles the mind
that Sullivan thinks we don't sufficiently consider men's biological
reality when our entire society has agreed to organize itself around
the pursuit of the straight male orgasm. This quest has been granted
total cultural centrality — with unfortunate consequences for our
understanding of bodies, and pleasure, and pain.
Per Sullivan's request, I'm talking about biology. I'm speaking,
specifically, about the physical sensations most women are
socialized to ignore in their pursuit of sexual pleasure.
The old implied social bargain between women and men (which
Andrew Sullivan calls "natural") is that one side will endure a great
deal of discomfort and pain for the other's pleasure and delight. And
we've all agreed to act like that's normal, and just how the world
works. This is why it was radical that Frances McDormand wore no
makeup at the Golden Globes. This is why it was transformative
when Jane Fonda posted a picture of herself looking exhausted next
to one of her looking glammed up. This isn't just an exhausting way
to live; it's also a mindset that's pretty hard to shake.
Now think about how that training might filter down to sexual
contexts.
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We're so blind to pain being the giant missing term in our sexual
discussions that ABC News' epic 2004 "American Sex Survey,"
which includes an amazing 67 questions, never once mentions it. It
doesn't even show up as a possible reason for orgasm-faking:
This is how bad our science and social science about sex has been.
By refusing to see pain and discomfort as things women routinely
endure in sexual contexts, even our studies end up narrating them as
strange and arbitrary creatures who (for some reason) are "not in the
mood" or stop sex because they "just wanted to."
But it's not just about sex. One of the compliments girls get most as
kids is that they're pretty; they learn, accordingly, that a lot of their
social value resides in how much others enjoy looking at them.
They're taught to take pleasure in other people's pleasure in their
looks. Indeed, this is the main way they're socially rewarded.
In the real world, the very first lesson the typical woman learns
about what to expect from sex is that losing her virginity is going to
hurt. She's supposed to grit her teeth and get through it. Think about
how that initiation into sex might thwart your ability to recognize
"discomfort" as something that's not supposed to happen. When sex
keeps hurting long after virginity is lost, as it did for many of my
friends, many a woman assumes she's the one with the problem.
And, well, if you were supposed to grit your teeth and get through it
the first time, why not the second? At what point does sex magically
transform from enduring someone doing something to you that you
don't like — but remember: everyone agrees you're supposed to
tolerate it — to the mutually pleasurable experience everyone else
seems to think it is?
MORE PERSPECTIVES
M ATTHEW WALTHER
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J AM ES P ETHOKOUKI S
Democrats' desperate radicalism
But those aren't actually the lessons society teaches — no, not even
to "entitled" millennials. Remember: Sex is always a step behind
social progress in other areas because of its intimacy. Talking details
is hard, and it's good we're finally starting to. But next time we're
inclined to wonder why a woman didn't immediately register and fix
her own discomfort, we might wonder why we spent the preceding
decades instructing her to override the signals we now blame her for
not recognizing.
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