If You Want a More Thoughtful Boyfriend, Try Pegging Him
Expand
Want
to make straight men better in bed — and better feminist allies? The
path may be simple: fuck them up the ass. According to one brand new
book, the path to making men more compassionate, appreciative and
playful may be straight through their butts.
In The Ultimate Guide to Prostate Pleasure: Erotic Exploration for Men and Their Partners,
Charlie Glickman and Aislinn Emirzian make the case that straight "men
who get into anal penetration are among the most secure in their
masculinity: because they've examined themselves, faced their fears."
Despite the title of the book, the authors make the case that the payoff
for prostate play — specifically by a woman using a dildo or other toy —
isn't just pleasure. It's liberation from the masculine straitjacket,
with happy consequences that extend well outside the bedroom.
In a deeply
misogynistic culture, there are few greater fears with which men are
raised than the fear of being labeled as someone who acts like a woman,
allowing himself to be penetrated. There's a reason why insults like
"pussy" and "cunt," when thrown at men, are so much more inflammatory
than "dick" or "prick." Reducing a man to what he already possesses is
mildly insulting at best. Calling him a female body part that men
penetrate with their penises: fighting words. (Never mind that many
women never have heterosexual vaginal or anal intercourse; our cultural
myths suggest that all do, or at least should.) In his Myth of the
Modern Homosexual, historian and cultural theorist Rictor Norton
explains that the term "asshole" developed as a homophobic (and thus
woman-hating) slur; while women and men both have rectums, a man who is
anally penetrated has lost his manhood, and thus become feminized.
Norton implies that this is why we don't often call women assholes: the
word has no particular power to wound someone who isn't anxious about
preserving masculine status.
Glickman
and Emirzian acknowledge that this myth is persistent: "The idea that
penetration is an act of dominance is almost certainly tied in to sexism
and the notion that the woman's role is inferior. Plenty of men have
absorbed these ideas at a subconscious level. Even if a man doesn't
think it is an act of dominance when he penetrates his (male or female)
partner, he may still hesitate to switch roles because he is afraid that
it will mean losing his masculinity if he takes a turn catching instead
of pitching." Women absorb these ideas as well. "Quite a few women
discover that they've absorbed judgments about how men, especially their
partners, should behave," the authors point out. In other words, your
guy may want you to do him in the ass — but you may have to contend with
your own doubts. Does it mean he's secretly gay? Or worse: can I still
be attracted to him — or respect his masculinity — after I've pegged
him?
As real as
these anxieties and stereotypes are, they're eroding fast – "more and
more male–female pairs are discovering prostate play and having a grand
time doing it," Glickman and Emirzian write. One obvious question is
demographic – who's making this "discovery," younger or older couples?
In an email interview, Glickman told me that "more younger men are
curious about it than in previous years, perhaps because of less
homophobia and perhaps because there's more discussion of male sexual
pleasure, rather than performance. But other younger men often have more
resistance because they haven't yet shed their ideas around
masculinity." In general, men are probably "more willing to explore
(prostate) pleasure at 50 than they might have been at 25. Older men
generally have more experience with ‘don't believe everything you think'
so although they're more likely to have hurdles to overcome, they have
more practice with it."
The payoff
for clearing those hurdles, Glickman says, is nothing less than the
radical transformation of heterosexual sex. In 2011, Glickman wrote a column
entitled "How Pegging Can Save the World," arguing that no other erotic
experience a man can undergo can create greater empathy with women than
being penetrated by his partner. "For men who have never been on the
receiving side of penetration, sex is something that happens outside the
body. And when sex is external to your body, it can be easier to do
when you have a headache or you're not quite in the mood. A lot of men
discover than when sex is about catching rather than pitching, their
mood, their emotions, and their connection to a partner can often have a
bigger influence on what they want to do and how it feels." Men,
Glickman and Emirzian suggest optimistically, will be a lot less likely
to rush foreplay once they've experienced how long it takes to relax
sufficiently in order to comfortably take a dildo (or other sex toy) in
the ass.
For women,
Glickman and Emirzian write, the experience of pegging a man can be
equally revelatory, suggesting that "many women who use strap-on dildos
discover how much work, responsibility, and (sometimes) power can be
part of fucking someone." It's intellectually reckless to impose
political meanings onto private acts, but it seems telling that in an
"End of Men" era where exhausted and stressed-out women already are
shouldering so much more "work" and "responsibility" than ever before,
those burdens are extended — in a novel way — to the bedroom as well.
"There's a
common myth that anal sex only hurts the receiver," they say; it's too
often assumed (especially when it's a man doing the penetrating) that
he's taking pleasure in causing discomfort, while the "bottom" (usually a
woman) gets pleasure only out of making her guy happy. "We suspect this
is also why some straight guys may fear that their female partners want
to penetrate them not for mutual pleasure, but as some kind of
passive-aggressive payback." That's just not true, Glickman and Emirzian
insist, and the sooner men get over their anxiety and guilt, the more
fun they and their partners will have. And maybe, just maybe, we can peg
our way right out of sexism itself.
No comments:
Post a Comment