SAME LANGUAGES DIFFERENT DIALECTS
By Dr. Pega Ren
Sometimes a thread
weaves through one’s life for a while. So I
have found it lately with the theme of male/female
eroticism. I thought this was complete with October’s
Hot Topic, which told of my unsuccessful search for
heat at The Lusty Lady. But I was not yet finished.
The same message kept coming at me in different forms
until I was compelled to pen this month’s column,
too, largely informed by my reading of Max Valerio’s
excellent book, The Testosterone Files. The
theme is similar: the disparate erotic dialects of
males and females.
I use the term dialect
and not language intentionally, for I believe we
are more alike than different in our quest for sexual
fulfillment. I believe, too that homosexual couples,
whether male or female, have an advantage over their
heterosexual counterparts in that they are not only
making love with similar bodies but also with minds
that view sex similarly and bodies that dance to
similar rhythms.
How often I hear women
complain that they would welcome their husband’s
sexual advances if only he’d romance them first,
while that same man complains that if he simply got
a little now and again he’d be more inclined
to woo his wife! These are not stubborn thoughtless
people unwilling to give their mates what they want.
It is beyond each of them to understand what the
other means.
Transsexual Max Valerio
becomes ‘bilingual’ in the language of
gendered sexuality as he crosses over from living
in the body of a lesbian who enjoys sex just fine
to inhabiting the body of a testosterone-driven male.
He explains how sex shifted from important to primary,
from a craving to a drive. He clarifies how sex and
relationship no longer necessarily co-mingle, but
are now distinct and at times separable.
Women would be wise
to listen to these lessons from a former sister.
There is great relief in the message, for if men
can be sexually attracted to others without any emotional
connection (just as they’ve been saying all
along), there’s really no harm done, is there?
We needn’t be threatened by Internet images
or ogling. Maybe we can even encourage our men to
rev up visually outside and bring the good sex energy
home. If we want them to begin the romance in the
morning, maybe we can start the titillation then,
too (“Go ahead and stoke your fires all day,
Honey, cause tonight I’ll be taking care of
all the heat you can build!”)
For most males, the
romantic or emotional connection part of sex is distinct
but not absent. Orgasm releases a cascade of brain
chemistry, particularly oxytocin, that floods us
with the desire to bond. Presto! Intimacy. (You can
see where this is going, can’t you?) The more
we encourage the men in our lives to express their
sexuality freely and openly, either by themselves
or with us, they stay sexually satisfied, oxytocin-saturated,
and well bonded with us. In post-coital reverie we
get our relationship needs met while they get their
sexual needs met. Symbiosis.
The trick here is
in believing that there is no threat to us when the
man we love is aroused by another woman. That could
be true only if he felt differently about love and
sex than we do. Max Valerio, who knew love and sex
first as a woman and then as a man, tells us this
is true. It is in our own best interest to believe
him. How this frees us all!
But, you say, even
if Max’s experiences do prove something, can
his experiences apply to all men? Who cares? The
goal is to improve our relationships, isn’t
it? If we are given the gift of understanding these
different dialects of gendered sexual communication,
would we refuse it because it might not be a perfect
model? How silly! Let’s take this gem of experiential
knowledge and use it to close the gap between the
genders. The result? Everybody’s happier!
© 2006. Pega Ren, Ed.D. All Rights
Reserved.