Tuesday, July 15, 2014

The Hidden Truth About Casual Sex



There is a certain disturbing truth about casual sex that is being kept very quiet. I want to introduce myself to this web site, and to you, by making that truth public immediately.

It is this: Casual sex is as near to 'authentic' and 'real' as sex can get. All other forms of sex are imitations of casual sex.

This, of course, is contrary to popular belief. The conventional feeling seems to be that 'real sex' is that which takes place between partners who are familiar with each other, committed to each other, who have had lots of practice having sex with each other.

People who uphold this view have, however, to deal with a couple of problems. If this kind of sex is the 'real thing', why the prevalence of masturbation and casual sex as practices? These practices, when played out by people who are in apparently happy, stable relationships, are the source of a good deal of distress to proponents of the conventional view, who feel 'cheated on' and are ardent in their failure to understand how something so 'cold' and 'arbitrary' could be 'better' than what is being offered at home.

There are not many explanations offered by adulterers and other infidels for the appeal of these practices. The most that is said is something about 'variety' and 'novelty' being a desirable and even necessary feature of a 'live' sex life. And, moreover, the infidel has to deal with a problem posed by the aggrieved partner: if married sex is 'boring' and 'samey', how is it possible for those hurt partners to maintain their own interest in marital sex? How do they manage to stay enthusiastic about it? This may often be a complete mystery to the infidel.

A possible answer suggests itself through theories of desire as a 'lack'. Taking the second question first, the reason that aggrieved husbands and wives manage to stay interested in marital sex is precisely because the infidel has lost interest in them. The possibility of wholehearted sexual union has evaporated, and so the conditions are created for the faithful partner to ongoing experience desire - in the form of sexual hunger, an absence - for their infidelitous partner. However, for the infidelitous partner, what started out as desire, in the early stages of the sexual relationship when the couple were still strangers to one another, was long ago fulfilled. Hunger satiated is hunger no more. In giving themselves to their partner, the faithful partners inadvertently extinguish the infidelitous partners' desire. The infidelitous partner, once satisfied, withdraws, and so desire is re-stimulated and maintained in the faithful. For the faithful partner, then, marital sex IS casual sex, in the sense that they are doing it with someone who is (once again) unknown to them, i.e. absent.

The answer to the first question now becomes apparent. Since the possibility of desire for the faithful partner has been extinguished, the sexually interested man or woman must look outside that relationship for new partners who are relatively unknown to them. These infidelitous relationships, because they typically feature people who do not know each other well and who are not committed to each other through emotional or domestic bonds, are both absent to each other and hence may experience desire for each other simultaneously - at least for a short while. This is what makes extramarital sex so exciting, particularly when both infidels are married.

The long-term prognosis for an extramarital relationship will also depend on each party's marital status. For example, a happy outlook may particularly characterize those extramarital relationships in which both parties are married. This is because when they are both married the fact of their dual married status makes them perpetually unavailable (absent) to each other, and so mutual desire can be sustained over time, even past the obstacles of knowing each other well, sheer repetition of the sexual act, etc, that can seem to destroy the pleasure of marital sex. When the third party is single, a different outcome may prevail. On the one hand, it may be the case that the married status of the infidel is sufficient to keep them both perpetually absent. However, on the other hand, a 'problem' for the infidel of relationships with an unmarried third party is the possibility that the single person will fall in love with them. The married status of the infidel creates ideal circumstances for this to happen to the single third party. However, for the infidel, the fact of his or her own unavailability or absence may not be sufficient to keep them from feeling that the extramarital relationship has turned into another marriage. The single third party who has fallen in love with his married lover has (against the 'rules' of infidelity) made himself over-available and 'present' and the opportunity for desire on the part of the infidel is once again extinguished.

Perhaps the most favorable prognosis for an infidel and a single third party is when the third party loses interest in the infidel (not through the simple satiation of desire but for some other reason - eg through the suppression of sexual appetite with drugs, through an apparently better offer from someone else, or whatever). The third party then becomes absent to the infidel in the same way that the infidel is absent to the faithful partner, and so desire - at least on the part of the infidel - can be sustained.

Infidels who experience great desire for their lovers - especially the 'absent' single lover - will know that masturbation and marital sex become imitations of the 'casual' sex experienced in the extramarital relationship.

Casual sex and 'serious' (marital) sex may share many of the same conventions in terms of actual sexual practices - words uttered, gestures performed. These words and gestures are assumed to have something to do with 'love' and so when they are performed in the context of casual sex, they look like a masquerade - an attempt to recreate the 'authentic' experience of 'real' sex. But the notion that these words and gestures have to do with love is a political notion, emergent from a system of political thought about relationships that dictates (eg) that affection arises from mutual knowledge and familiarity, that sex is somehow the 'deepest' and 'closest' act that can take place between two people who already have affiliative and economic investments in one another. However, there is another possibility (which is, of course, also political, but in a different way). This possibility is that the words and gestures of sexual practice have to do with desire - with searching, hungering, needing - in short, with the pursuit of something that is not there (whether not yet there, or withdrawn). If this is the case - if conventional sexual practices have to do with desire and not love, then when they are performed in the context of a marriage or other 'stable, loving' relationship, they look like a masquerade - an attempt to recreate the more authentic experience of 'casual' sex.
There is some corroboration for this thesis in the observation that, on the whole, people's sexual fantasies do not seem to be fantasies about familiarity and emotional commitment. They do not involve the words 'I love you' and they do not feature people running hand in hand through fields of wild flowers. More often (if the psychological literature is to be believed), they involve rape and other kinds of abuse, masked strangers, animals, and all manner of characters and scenes that violate conventional understandings of what real love (and real loving sex) ought to look like. When it comes to fantasies used not in masturbation but in marital sex, even the most faithful partners will admit to fantasizing about someone else - usually someone paradigmatically unknown to them, such as celebrities - and the infidels will, of course, fantasize about their lovers.

Further support for the thesis that casual sex is the 'real thing' is found in the techniques that married couples use to try and 'put the romance back' into a routine sex life. Faced with the satiation of desire on both sides, they begin to play outlandish games, adopt different sexual roles, dress up in costumes that make them look like children or prostitutes. This is entirely recognizable in terms of a theory of desire - what they are doing is trying to make themselves strangers - absences - to each other once again. However, in terms of a traditional theory of love, these very usual practices are problematic. According to the conventional wisdom about loving sex, there should be no need to 'spice up your sex life' in the first place, and certainly no need to do it in such a way that actively alienates the partners from one another.

This problem may be dealt with and rationalized in terms of a loving married couple becoming 'adventurous' together. A progressive, up-the-mountain account may be produced in which the married couple is depicted as going on a journey of discovery into the depths of each other's sexuality, doing and learning things that are positively enabled by their enduring familiarity with each other and the longevity of their relationship and mutual commitment. This may be a comforting thought to those anxious to hold on to traditional notions of love, but it is not very plausible, given what I have already said about the tendency of these practices to resemble and recreate alienating, anonymous and even abusive sexual situations. What they are actually doing is trying to re-stimulate desire by imitating casual sex. It is, of course, no substitute for the real thing.   ©

No comments:

Post a Comment