I'd Rather Eat Chocolate: Learning to Love My Low Libido
by Joan Sewell
She's Just Not That Into You
A review by Sandra Tsing Loh
Here's the next wild turn in the female sexual revolution.
Goodness! we hear you wondering, half in excitement, half in alarm. Is
it some hot new wave of Seattle girl-on-girl action? (Or is that
"grrrl-on-grrrl"? Indeed, do we even have grrrls
anymore -- are they still in bisexual vogue, with their tattoos,
piercings, perky magenta pigtails, and combat boots?) Or is the latest
sex trend something America's desperate housewives are doing? One
pictures sleek gated communities in Scottsdale, Arizona, where randy
Hot Moms -- possibly the bored, blonde, ex-model wives of
millionaire athletes -- are defiantly throwing Chardonnay-soaked
house parties involving dildos and Botox, where Botox is actually shot, into the forehead, from
a dildo. Or can it be...octogenarian pole dancing? Or perhaps
it's a crunchy-granola California womyn's thing involving
shaving, much gentle shaving -- shaving circles, in fact, that are
starting in Esalen, during luxurious weekend retreats led by Gail
Sheehy, who, unlike Nora Ephron, does not feel bad about her
neck but at sixtysomething feels rather more like a delicious peach,
laughingly sensual, newly juicy. Never mind the lubrication issues, the
vaginal dryness some may experience: There are Vitamin E creams
and aloe vera unguents for that. In fact, today's young men
report how surprised they are by how much they prefer older
women. The sheer brazen confidence is refreshing; the blithe
sensuality, the lack of inhibition, except about the neck, but
that's why there are turtlenecks. Turtlenecks and no
pants -- that's the ticket! And lots of Pilates...nude,
nude Pilates.
But no. All of these possibilities will pale
compared with the corporeal depravity I'm about to
describe -- a radical self-pleasuring act that may well represent
the true frontier of female liberation. Which is to say I speak to you
candidly now about some lesbians I know, two lesbians. They live in a
suburb of Los Angeles. They're both a hair north of forty. One is
a computer technician; the other, a hospital administrator. Physically,
they are much as you might picture them. For the past twelve years,
Teri and Pat have had a special Monday-night ritual. They order an
extra-large cheese pizza (sixteen slices). While waiting -- and I am
not making this up -- they settle in on the couch with large twin
bags of Doritos. Each chip is dipped first in Philadelphia cream cheese
and then in salsa. Cream cheese, salsa. Cream cheese, salsa. Cream
cheese, salsa. The Doritos are finished to the last crumb, and then,
upon arrival, the pizza as well. For Teri and Pat, this night of a
million carbs is, by special agreement, guilt-free. Both feel that it
is better than sex.
On the one hand, yes, Teri and Pat are poster
children for what wags call "lesbian bed death." Naysayers
will look for -- and find -- yet more evidence to damn this pair,
maybe pointing to the fifty pounds Teri and Pat have each gained over a
decade, or to Pat's extensive collection of Beanie Babies, or to
Teri's five cats, all of whom are named after colorful jazz divas
who also, coincidentally, happen to be big fatties. On the other hand,
Teri and Pat consider themselves happy. They are cheerful and generous
with friends and with one another. In twelve years, neither has ever
expressed an urge to stray. Or even to swing, to experiment outside the
relationship with a new woman, a man, or even -- more pertinently,
on Monday nights -- Chinese food. (Doesn't a trial foray into
popcorn shrimp at least sound tempting?)
And in fact, evidence suggests that a growing
number of women in America, if they looked into the deepest recesses of
their souls, would admit to feeling that these two pushing-200-pound
lesbians may be not so much pathetic as...damn lucky. Because, to judge from the continual roiling crises on Oprah and Dr. Phil, American women are experiencing an epidemic, today, of not wanting to have sex.
Or at least not wanting all the sex they "should" be
having -- i.e., once or twice or even three times a week, depending
on which sexpert is confidently throwing out the vague approximations.
It is a particularly vexing problem for heterosexual married females,
who -- now that we and our spouses are living so long, what with all
the improved medical care -- can expect to face another several
decades of domestic union with a man. And clearly we can't just
let the sex fall off like an unused appendage. Unlike Teri and Pat, we
don't have the luxury, as we age, of letting our sex drives die a
merciful death, or at least be ecstatically smothered (can't
breathe! can't breathe! ooh, ooh! getting light-headed!) in
Philly cream cheese.
Because first of all, men have needs, and if
we don't service our sex-starved husbands, someone else will!
Although I sometimes wonder if my own husband, after eighteen years of
cohabitation, has grown, well, too lazy to have an affair. Like me, my
soulmate has developed a certain endearing reluctance to change out of
his sweatpants and leave the house after 5 p.m., and all of those
kittenish young Sex and the City gals seem sharply demanding.
They require meals eaten sitting up in restaurants, chilled crantinis,
vigorous discoing. If my beloved husband were to embark on an affair
with a twenty-six-year-old, I would be hurt, of course, but also
impressed: all that showering, the micro-trimming, the grooming, the
continual anointing, of all the body parts!
But this -- the unhappy husband -- this
is but collateral damage for twenty-first-century women, because at its
core, maintaining a vibrant sex life with one's man, woman, or
even joy-giving appliance (and there's no shame in that) is, like
anything, all about us. And in this marathon run across the
veldt that is life, to be true to ourselves (whoever we are) and true
to our sex (and our sexiness), we must fight -- even at
fifty -- to keep at bay the woolly macramé projects, the
cunningly knit pet sweaters, the comforting vats of vanilla pudding
that increasingly beckon.
Or...must we? In these, the
sex-frequency wars, an authentically fresh new voice has arrived. Her
name, Joan Sewell; her groundbreaking new sex book, I'd Rather Eat Chocolate: Learning to Love My Low Libido.
And just how low is her libido? Writes Sewell, throwing down the gauntlet:
If I had a choice between reading a good book and
having sex, the book wins. I notice I put in the adjective
"good" -- and that leaves me wondering if I'm not
trying to put a better face on things.
We know what sort of woman you're
envisioning -- and you're wrong. Sewell is young, hip, slim,
urban, and recently married to a man with the boy-band-cute name of
Kip. Kip is smart, funny, sensitive, even hot. How hot? Let us look
together at Kip's nude body. In fact, ladies, let's not
rush. Let's take our own languorous, sweet time about it.
Let's watch now as Sewell gives Kip a full-body massage, in
preparation for some hot, hot sex:
I took the scented oil from the dresser and put a
good amount into my cupped hand. I let it warm there for a minute,
making myself aware of its liquidity, then I massaged the hand-warmed
oil...against the rough hair of his chest...I told him to
turn over and oiled his back (so smooth!), and then his legs
(swimmer's thighs!), and then I centered mischievously around his
buttocks (naughty and luscious), and then tantalizingly onto his
testicles (aww, he trimmed the pubic hair on them -- so
considerate!). I focused on all his swoops and curves and the way my
fingers played along them. Was any of this heightening my desire? Sure.
I mean it had to be. I was definitely more sensually aware, more
sensually aware of Kip's body. Okay, so it wasn't exactly
making me hot. Was feeling sensual the same as sensual feeling?
Let's not dwell.
Impossible to believe, but true. For
this hip, young, urban woman, even rubbing massage oil into her
husband's naughty and luscious buttocks ends up inducing not lust
so much as a kind of low-level tedium. So it is with all the other
popular "hot monogamy" techniques Sewell
attempts -- from talking dirty at a museum (which is so
uncharacteristic that her husband is confused), to wearing thong
underwear in public (cold, uncomfortable, and humiliating; younger
women look and laugh), to smearing chocolate frosting on her
husband's penis and then licking it off (resulting, to her
horror, in the awful reveal: In the mirror, Sewell sees that her face
has become a ghastly, chocolate-smeared reverse of Al Jolson's).
And understand that all the while, Mr. Naughty
Luscious Buttocks is working as hard as he can to be the model
postfeminist husband. His top half couldn't be more open and
caring: He listens to all of his wife's stories, makes a point of
buying her favorite ice cream, stands by so ready to deliver gentle
back rubs (with oily hands) that she practically shrieks, turns tail,
and runs away from him. There's literally nothing this Sensitive
Man won't do to make his wife relaxed enough so that she might
possibly, at some remote point, consider having sex with him. (Even
still, Mr. NLB is lucky: Though sexpert John Gray, in Mars and Venus in the Bedroom,
says that for a man to arouse his woman, he should be ready to
"camp out" between her legs for approximately twenty
minutes of cunnilingus, a creeped-out Sewell herself won't abide
it.)
Figuring that there must be some deeper
emotional trauma at play, Sewell and Kip seek a sex therapist, who
probes Sewell's sex history. (Or her sexistory. At a certain point, you want to start conflating every word with sex -- e.g., what midlife marrieds have is fortysex; a particularly galling episode would be a sextastrophe.
To that end, I think of a bookish fiftysomething bachelor friend of
mine, who had suffered a four-year-long sexual dry spell. After much
arduous typing on eHarmony, he finally met a similarly sex-starved
female, and they broke the curse. How was the sex? He admitted:
"Over the course of the evening, on a scale of 1 to 10, I'd
say we hit every number.")
Anyway, surely, the therapist wonders, Sewell
must have some prior upsetting incident? Past relationships must be to
blame, including those Sewell had with her parents. And indeed, after
digging, Sewell's therapist points to such sex-inhibiting factors
as a distant father, teen feelings of ugliness, failure to trust, and
thinking of sex as dirty.
Of course, as Sewell points out, Kip (who we
know is also dutifully in therapy) has the exact same psychological
markers in his background, and his libido is sky-high. Which brings us
to the crux of Sewell's underlying political argument:
Hormonally, it has long been understood that men and women are
measurably different. Sewell was reminded of this obvious fact while
watching a documentary about a sex-change procedure. With presumably no
particular psychological agenda in mind, the doctors informed the
female-to-male subject that
she would have a higher sex drive when given that large an amount of testosterone. They simply took it for granted
that there was a direct correlation between high testosterone levels
and higher libido. They didn't have to know how Anita felt
emotionally, or the status of her personal relationships, or her
confidence levels, or trust issues to know that the amount of
testosterone she received would increase her sex drive enormously.
But in this day and age, Sewell points out, to
admit that a woman's sex drive tends to be lower than a
man's seems politically incorrect.
Of course -- and here's the
paradox -- this is not to say that Sewell finds masturbation
either stressful or, in fact, a chore. Demurely shifting to the third
person, she admits that "she herself has bowed her own violin,
and darned if she can't get her own strings to sing like
Pavarotti." It is true enough that women who feel tense about
keeping up with their marital sex duties often find masturbation to be
a stress-buster. Do it constantly, even daily? Why not? And what
are we girls thinking about while we bow our own violin strings? Admits
Sewell, "When I was an adolescent, I imagined these knights from
the Middle Ages would ravish me." A recent confession that made
me howl is in the anthology Mortified, where one of the
contributors, Jillian Griffiths, describes her teen sexual fantasies
about the members of Duran Duran -- John puts on the Rio album and climbs on top of her "like a baby tiger. Gentle but sort of aggressive."
As one gets older, fantasy quality only
worsens. An informal survey among women of a certain age who
don't care anymore reveals the secret: Whatever is politically
correct, you imagine its polar opposite, and that's what's
hot. It's not fantasizing that you're Jodie Foster getting
drooled over for your Oscar-winning acting -- no. It's
fantasizing that you're the victims Foster has played to get the
Oscar, the waitress raped on a pinball machine by a bunch of
mooks -- yeah!
Or here's another: You are a
nineteen- year-old blonde, a slightly chunky and bored communications
major with a defiantly unquenchable taste for amaretto sours. They
are a passel of fiftysomething Kuwaiti businessmen (oil?) at some
hideous downtown hotel with glass elevators. The oilmen offer money for
a private party. Thirty dollars? No. Five hundred? Better. Two thousand
seems about right. Five thousand is definitely too much (the high price
being too call-girl-professional; proper licensing in the state of
Nevada and vaginal health exams somehow become involved). At $5,000 the
fantasy loses traction.
Regarding movie stars, again, political
idealism, earnestness, and altruism have become drawbacks. I've
never once had a fantasy involving Richard Gere and Tibet. Brad Pitt
these days seems completely desexed, what with the close-cropped hair
and the relentless pussy-whipping by Angelina Jolie. He is always
trooping somewhere, saving Africa or something, hamstrung every which
way by multiple Baby-Björns. Many women my age admit to
feeling little for Ralph Fiennes now, or even back in The English Patient. Oh no. Only in Schindler's List -- some thirty pounds heavier, the fleshy Nazi captain, harassing young Jewish women in his basement. Hot!
Sewell is partial to Mel Gibson in Mad Max.
But forget Young Mel. How about Old Mel, anti-Semitically ranting by
the side of the highway, mad-dog-drunk on tequila, his career in ruins?
We are Cop Lady, and Gibson is taking us right there in the squad car,
oddly gleeful, pretending to flay us as in The Passion of the Christ. "Sugar Tits! Go! Fetch my coffee!" Hot hot hot!
No wonder no one wants to talk much about real sex, dirty sex, hot
sex -- because the true nuts and bolts can't be made to suit
any forward-looking social agenda. Maybe, in this sense, female
sexuality really is a culturally subversive little beastie. Not only do
many women enjoy it best alone, but of their fantasies, perhaps the
less said the better (in terms of humanity's social progress).
For women, though, the bizarre and the irregular might just be
"normal." And if so, as Sewell suggests, widespread
pressure -- from both the left and the right -- for women to have
a "normal," at-least-two-times-a-week sex life may
ultimately be geared to serve not women's natural tendencies but
men's. Who sets the pace anyway? As Sewell notes, about the
husband/wife divide:
No one is trying to lower men's sex drives. I don't hear, "Doctor, my sex drive is too high.
Please, do something about it. I feel guilty and ashamed that I
don't want less sex. It's killing my marriage."
No one suggests, continues Sewell, that men
take estrogen supplements to mellow out so they better complement the
moods of women. Although that could have measurable benefits. After
all, elevated testosterone levels in males have been linked to such
social ills as murder and rape. And I have to admit, the urge to slap
my own husband and vomit in a ditch comes not from sex but from what I
feel is his kamikaze driving. When he's at the wheel (i.e.,
always), I white-knuckle it, I close my eyes, I can barely restrain a
scream. (Many wives feel this way. As a girlfriend said recently about
her husband, "If any woman drove as ragefully as Ron, she'd
be hospitalized!")
Nor is heightened female sexuality always
about true spiritual liberation. The given orthodoxy, which I recall
first learning in my early-1980s college years, was that for a woman,
to appear "sex-positive" was to be labeled a
whore -- this was our repressive history. Socially she would be
sidelined. But how the pendulum has swung. Consider the current
proto-cultural-Hollywood-liberal-mediavor-blogosphere-feminist-ish
woman of this year, and next, Arianna Huffington. A few months ago, I
looked up at the Colbert Report episode my husband had on, and I
let out a little yelp. There was Arianna, chatting articulately with
Stephen about her latest publication, On Becoming Fearless...in Love, Work, and Life
(which, with all of its generous quotations, I found less a book than a
literary breezeway; but no matter). "She really is
fearless!" I exclaimed. Because -- no Nancy
Pelosi-pearls-and-jacket-wearer, she -- there sat tousle-haired
Huffington in a frilly, sleeveless, plunging-V-neck blouse, complete
with visibly erect nipples. (I thought immediately of that Sex and the City episode in which Samantha shows her girlfriends handy nipple caps one can wear to render a similar effect.)
I want to give credit where credit is due. La
Huff looks good. Every time you see her, she looks younger and hotter
(like she's drinking the blood of Mary Matalin and James
Carville, who seem to become more and more desiccated by the day). But
do the erect nipples signal she's ready for sex? We remind you
that, unlike the hapless Joan Sewell, who faces the daunting specter of
her husband's naughty luscious buttocks every night, Huffington
is glamorously single, has a busy media schedule, and in a former life
was actually married to a gay man. So what Huffington's Colbert Report
twinlets are saying is less "Come and do me!" than "I
am very, very excited...about selling books!"
And so it is, for a certain influential ilk of
modern, high-achieving women, particularly those in the camera's
eye. The ability to signal sexual readiness -- regardless of whether
you actually put out for some poor chap waiting at home -- is not
disempowering but empowering. As is being thin. As is the latest hoop
to jump through for women over forty: having
impossibly-toned-for-your-age upper arms. (I think of the cover of
author/law professor Susan Estrich's recent political book, Soulless. A bite back at Ann Coulter's Godless,
it shows Estrich with long blond hair and wearing a tight black tank
top, in Coulter's same provocative stance. At my local
public-radio station, we women crowded around the book. Not only were
Estrich's breasts perky, but -- as one fiftysomething editor
breathed in awe -- "Look at her arms!") Then again, I
suppose you can't totally blame our media for favoring catlike,
frisky women. Four hundred pounds of lesbian bed death may be yet
another all-too-common human reality that's just not ready for
prime time.
You know? If it were really about sensual female pleasure, everyone
would stop waving the dildos already and let us eat. Sewell herself
would "rather eat chocolate." But even here a Puritan ethic
crashes the would-be sybaritic fun. Yes, by all means, eat
chocolate -- not more than half an ounce, or approximately
three-quarters of a teaspoon if you do not own a food scale, per week.
And dark chocolate only -- it wards off hypertension, is full of
antioxidants. As for sex, just think of it as another cardiovascular
workout, a self-improvement regimen not unlike aerobics
("sweating to the oldies," we call it, at my age).
That's right. Sex -- your sexologist/cardiologist commands it.
Two to three times a week. Hop on that sex treadmill. Get your heart
rate up, to at least 160 beats per minute. And drink plenty of water
(avoid alcohol at all costs). It's good for ya!
Look, you don't have to camp out between
a woman's legs for twenty minutes of cunnilingus to know that
sex -- like life itself -- involves a fair amount of tedium. With
sudden shooting moments of pleasure. Because Sewell loves her husband
and knows that he, like her, craves physical contact (never mind that
for her it's cuddling and for him it involves his penis), they
eventually work out a contract both can live with. It involves hand
jobs, lube jobs, and -- when she doesn't feel like being
touched -- her dressing up like a Playmate and letting him watch...so he can finish himself off by himself. For a woman who
doesn't crave sex, our brave protagonist has, by the end,
actually had a fair amount of action -- with her husband, no
less -- and one can't help but applaud the warty and ungainly
thing long-term love really is. (For more on the intricacies of nuptial
whoopee, see Cristina Nehring's "Of Sex and Marriage," in the December 2006 Atlantic, and Caitlin Flanagan's "The Wifely Duty," in the January/February 2003 Atlantic.)
Even with all the massage oil and E-Zone
handbooks in the world, sex is much too mysteriously volatile an
activity for even loving men and women to have to have together, all
the time. Or perhaps they can have it, at the same time, but in
different rooms. Vive la différence! Rather than trying
to rate oneself on one's ability to hit regular marks on an
abstract calendar, members of both sexes could well find this to be
true liberation. So what if our peak sexpisodes (again, like life) are
nasty, brutish, and short? For many -- may God and John Gray forgive
us -- that's just the way we like it.
Sandra Tsing Loh is a writer and performer whose radio commentaries appear regularly on American Public Media's Marketplace. She can also be heard on KPCC-FM, in Pasadena, California.
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