
Sex:
What It Could And Should Be
Sex
is everywhere. It is almost impossible to pick up
a magazine, listen to music or watch a movie without receiving
sexual messages. Advertisers use images of women and men
in suggestive poses to sell their products. There are
sex chat rooms on the Internet and condom machines in
public washrooms. Some messages are merely suggestive,
while others are explicit portrayals of sexual acts that
leave little to the imagination.
Has
pushing sexual expression to the limit made sex any better
for women? Have the past three decades of increasing sexual
freedom given women more of an opportunity to experience
the kind of love they really desire? Or has it created
a generation of women who are out to get the most out
of life, but are settling for the least in the area of
sexuality?
Most
of the messages I have come across seem to present a one-dimensional
picture of sexuality. Sex is primarily portrayed as an
activity designed for the exclusive purpose of giving
physical pleasure. That notion may fuel our drive for
nights of passion, but, unfortunately, it also reduces
our expectations of what sex could, and should, be.
Psychologists
tell us that women typically hope for a relationship that
involves commitment, love and pleasure all at the same
time. My friend Sharon says, Commitment is the glue that
gives a heightened pleasure to the activity and a sense
of peace that my husband is the only person whos going
to see and touch me in this way.
Yet
for many women in the 1990s, that remains an elusive dream.
Why? Because society has given them the message that such
a relationship is unattainable and so, many women have
simply stopped looking for it.
Joyce
Grunau is a counsellor who says that a womans deepest
sexual longings are for physical intimacy in the context
of emotional intimacy and commitment. But society often
tells us this is not a realistic goal. Sex is just a feeling
and at best you can make each other feel good for a few
moments. As a result, many women tend to repress their
longings for a sexual relationship with a man who deeply
values them and is committed to developing emotional intimacy
in a lifelong relationship.
For
a long time, a friend of mine thought she would never
experience the kind of relationship that she wanted. When
Pam first had sex with her boyfriend, she expected intercourse
to add the element of commitment to their relationship.
Instead, she says, It didnt solidify our relationship.
Sure there was pleasure, but that pleasure became a drive,
an addiction driven by fear and insecurity - fears that
I wouldnt be accepted if I didnt have sex. I now know
that it was an act that was related to what I looked
like on the outside. He wasnt really interested in who
I was.
Is
this the best that sex has to offer?
In
its truest form, sex is not only connected to a sense
of pleasure, but also to love and commitment. The ultimate
sexual experience is a deep and satisfying union that
is emotional, spiritual and physical.
One
way of thinking about the richness that can be experienced
through sex is to imagine a pie that is cut into sections.
In its entirety, the pie represents the most wonderful
and complete sexual experience that we can ever imagine.
It is made up of individual pieces that represent commitment,
love, union (physical, spiritual and emotional), pleasure
and the possibility of
procreation. If you want to experience the best sex, you
need to taste each of the pieces. If any of these essential
pieces is missing from a sexual experience, then you are
settling for second best.
Does
our society really encourage us to settle for second best?
Consider
the advice given in one of the most popular guides to
sex and relationships. The Rules: Time-Tested Secrets
for Capturing the Heart of Mr. Right provides women with
a list of rules intended to lead them to the healthy,
committed relationship they really want. The book has
some valuable insight, but this is the advice given with
regard to sex:
First
and foremost, stay emotionally cool no matter how hot
the sex gets. Dont use the physical closeness of sex to
gain emotional closeness, security and assurances about
the future. Dont bring up marriage, kids or your future
together...try to relax and think about nothing.
Think
about nothing. Dont get emotionally involved. Dont talk
about sex in connection with emotional closeness or security.
That is the exact opposite of what sex is meant to be!
In truth, sex should be a celebration of commitment, marriage
and emotional security. Telling women they should try
to shut themselves off from these natural and legitimate
longings actually encourages them to fragment the sexual
experience and to settle for a small piece instead of
feasting on the whole pie.
Author
and scholar C.S. Lewis says, We are half-hearted creatures,
fooling about with drink and sex and ambition when infinite
joy is offered us, like an ignorant child who wants to
go on making mud pies in the slum because he cannot imagine
what is meant by the offer of a holiday at the sea. We
are far too easily pleased.
Are
you making mud pies in the slum because you cant imagine
ever having a seaside vacation? Have you been fooled into
thinking that you have found fulfilment by having just
one piece of the pie? If you are far too easily pleased,
maybe its time to re-evaluate your sex life. Consider
what you want out of a relationship, and then make a commitment
to settle for nothing less. After all, why settle for
just one slice when you can have the whole pie!
Susan
Martinuk is a freelance writer and speaker. She was formerly
a medical researcher at an infertility clinic and now
uses those experiences to speak and write on sex-related
issues.

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