Feed on
Posts
Comments

I’m probably late to the party on this, but evidently millennials aren’t having much sex.

Blame it on porn, blame it on hookup culture, blame it on the number of 20-somethings still living it home — maybe it’s all of that or some of that or none of that.  Is sex bad for women?

Or maybe it’s something different. Like maybe there are getting so many mixed messages about sex that young people would rather not deal with it at all. Especially women.

I’ve been reading Laura Kipnis’ book Men: Notes From an Ongoing Investigation, and her chapter on the late Andrea Dworkin — an anti-porn activist who believed intercourse is domination — and her book, Intercourse, in which she makes an argument that all sex is bad for women, and my head has spinning ever since.

Kipnis did this to me with her book Against Love: A Polemic, too. If you read nothing else in the new year, you might want to read this book. Then let’s discuss.

While Kipnis has her disagreements with Dworkin, she acknowledges the “alarming extensive” literature of bad sex — the kind that dissuades women from “having sex, or sex of the wrong kind, or with the wrong people” — that has gotten replicated, repackaged and reinforced for decades.

Any of this sound familiar?

  • Women can’t have or don’t enjoy casual sex
  • Women only have affairs for emotional connection
  • Women don’t enjoy, or are hurt by, hookup culture
  • Women don’t care as much about sex as men do
  • Women lose interest in sex as they age

I could go on and on but those are probably the top five.

So what are we to make of this?

It’s the anatomy, stupid

For Dworkin, it isn’t that women are doing anything wrong, it’s that anatomically we are “unspeakably vulnerable in intercourse because of the nature of the act — entry, penetration, occupation.”

Well, if you put it that way …

But, as Kipnis notes, doing away with intercourse, an act of dominance or not, would “implicate marital sex, too, and marital sex is supposed to be the reward for virtue.”

Because many still hope that the end result of sex while dating will lead to marriage.

Even though women are delaying marriage and living together with their romantic partners for longer periods, a lot of women still want to be married. And in order to attract a man, Kipnis notes:

(W)omen transform themselves into pathetic sex scavengers, wanting sensuality and tenderness but settling instead for ‘being owned and being fucked’ as a substitute for the physical affection and approval we actually crave from men. Women need male approval to be able to survive in our own skins, and solicit it through sex; but obtaining sex means conforming in ‘body type and behavior’ to what men like. Given the vast amount of time, energy, and disposable income many of us invest in achieving and maintaining whatever degree of sexual attractiveness is feasible (sometimes known as ‘fuckability’), again, it’s hard to argue.”

Rough, but, yes, it’s hard to argue with that. Again I ask, what are we to make of it?

Relentless messages

I agree that the relentless messages from books, women’s magazines and so-called relationship experts geared toward women trying to stop us from having so much sex, or having the wrong kind of sex or having sex with the wrong people is not only making a lot of women unhappy and anxious, but also leading us to accept a lot of bad sex. We’re getting a raw deal. Not with intercourse per se, but with what’s expected of us (or what we think is expected of us), and because everything’s geared to pleasuring our man (or men) and not ourselves.

Are women having pleasure in sex? Not really, according to studies by sociologist and American Hookup author Lisa Wade. “Women were dissatisfied with the sexual skills of their partners, but they also often deprioritized their own pleasure, ” she writes. “Overall, in first-time hookups, it turns out, women have orgasms less than half as often as men.”

Evidently, it’s not just college-age women walking around without having sex be pleasurable. A number of women of all ages never orgasm. Of course, you can have pleasure without orgasms, but still …

Why do we accept that? Why shouldn’t we expect and insist on the same kind of pleasure we’re giving our male partners. As Nicki Minaj states, “I demand that I climax. I think women should demand that. And why not?

I don’t think sex is bad for women. But bad sex — and bad sex advice — is never good.

Why do you want to marry? Read The New I Do: Reshaping Marriage for Skeptics, Realists and Rebels (Seal Press). Order the book on Amazon, follow us on Twitter and like us on Facebook.



4 Responses to “Is sex bad for women?”

  1. Sam says:

    Ok, let’s just clear up the orgasm thing. Woman don’t often have orgasms during first time encounters with a new partner but men do. Very simple to answer this. Woman have a custom made hole that is designed to host a penis, has tiny ridges to create sensation and self lubricates to provide the perfect balance for a penis to ejaculate. In other words woman need to do very very little/nothing other than take their knickers off and say I consent and like magic, he orgasms. Make no mistake, that is not skill!. Men however are confronted with with a clit which maybe entirely different to the last one they encountered or a g-spot which may not respond at all! They can use their fingers which are actually designed to grasp or their tongues which are designed to aid speech and taste. Men can’t feel whether what they’re doing with their fingers or tongue feels good or not to the recipient, they have to rely on judging her reaction. Woman need not worry about that as their magic hole takes care of everything. Hmm, this is really tough to think why this happens – not! And if woman are disappointed with their partners skills, try putting out a little more often and allow the skills to develop? it makes me laugh but also a little angry to hear woman who claim their men are inadequate in the bedroom. Like they are some sort of expert. What a joke that is! If it wasn’t for your customed made hole you would have just as much difficulty as we men.
    Now if he makes no effort to pleasure her that is different. If after multiple occasions of trying he still isn’t listening, that’s also different. If he is trying but not getting it a little coaching maybe in order. It took me about 5 occasions to get my wife there when we first started dating but it wasn’t lack of effort I can assure you. And now nearly every time. I dread to think that some woman would have encouraged her to move on as a result of not having an orgasm the first few times. Finally, is sex a bad deal for woman? No, they have whenever they want and they use it to gain advantage in life and with their spouse. It’s a way of maintaining total control in the relationship and they take full advantage with any sense of guilt.

  2. Jono says:

    While it’s mostly true than women can have sex anytime and men can only have sex when someone will let them, it is up to the woman to teach the man what she likes. While many things are somewhat universal there are particulars about individuals that need to be learned. It makes me happy to make her happy. While much of what Sam says is true most things can be worked out. The first time may or may not be good for her, but with a little work (or pleasure depending on how you look at it) it all gets better. Keeping from getting complacent in the long term is a different matter.

  3. Like, you know says:

    OMG, like this is sooo amazing.

  4. Rob says:

    Women can “demand orgasms” all they want but some of them just can’t no matter what the guy does. Most of the women I date, especially the younger ones, have no problem in that department so I know my technique is good. The ones who don’t orgasm easily tend to older, prone to depression, and self-absorbed. It’s on them if they can’t orgasm, not me.

Leave a Reply