Posted on 06/23/2013 10:56:25 AM PDT by rickmichaels
Isabel, a New York City lawyer, has a fiancé who appears a perfect catch. Eric is sensitive, smart, kind and handsome. Hes an attentive lover, the sort of man who, on Valentines Day, draws her a bath surrounded by candles and arranges rose petals into a heart shape on the bed. Isabel loves Eric, even though her passion for him dwindled months after they became involved. She misses her erotically charged relationship with her ex-boyfriend who, though not marriage material, made her feel desired, his possession. Still, Isabel tries to rev up her low libido for sex with Eric, buying massage oil and a blindfoldwhich also lets her pretend shes with someone else.
Isabels story may read like an outline for the next wannabe 50 Shades of Grey franchise, but its actually one of several personal accounts punctuating journalist Daniel Bergners bold new book, What Do Women Want? Adventures in the Science of Female Desire. Bergners account of myth-shattering research into female sexuality arrives amid a publishing landslide on the topic, joining Bella Ellwood-Claytons Sex Drive: In Pursuit of Sexual Desire and Katherine Angels Unmastered: A Book on Desire, Most Difficult to Tell. Together they offer startling revelations about female desireor rather its absence, a fevered debate of our time.
Low female libidohypoactive sexual desire disorder as its been medicalizedhas been the subject of hand-wringing for decades. Its the Wheres Waldo? of scientific research, as drug companies desperately seek a female Viagra. Theres big money to be made: a 2005 study in the Canadian Medical Association Journal claimed between 35 and 40 per cent of women have low libidowhich suggests low is in fact closer to average. Ellwood-Clayton spells out the problem in Sex Drive:Once in a secure relationship, womens sex drive begins to plummet, she writes. The Canadian-born sexual anthropologist cites a German study that found that four years into a relationship, less than half of 30-year-old women wanted regular sex with their partners. After 20 years of marriage only 20 per cent of women did. Mens libidos, on the other hand, remained pretty constant.
The issue, weve long thought, is that women just arent interested; female desire is simply weaker, and stoked by intimacy and familiarity. But scientists are now wondering whether commitment itself might be the problem. In other words, its not a libido deficit, its monogamyan unspoken two-year itch. As Bergner puts it, the female drug were really seeking is monogamys cure.
Female desire is a relatively new field of research. Until the late 1970s, the male-dominated field of sexology focused on documenting male behaviour and performance. The more complex, discrete mechanisms of female lust were inconsequential. Anatomical drawings of female rats didnt bother to include the clitoris, Bergner reports. Even today, a peep-show stigma remains attached to sexology in academe, particularly in the U.S., which is why many of the scientists he interviews are Canadian.
Psychologist Lori Brotto of the University of British Columbia cuts to the chase: Sometimes I wonder whether [low female desire] isnt so much about libido as it is about boredom, she says. Ken Wallen, a psychologist and neuroendrocrinologist whose work at Emerson University outside Atlanta has revealed that female rhesus monkeys are the sexual aggressors, echoes the sentiment: The idea that monogamy serves the natural sexuality of women may not be accurate, he says. Bergner also cites an Australian study of women over age 40 that correlated low female desire to the length of time a woman had been with her partner, not hormonal changes. Once those women were with new partners, libido returned.
American psychologist Marta Meana routinely sees women whose white-hot lust for their partner has turned to ash. She theorizes that, within monogamy, womens narcissistic need to feel desired is not being met: they feel their partners are trapped and that a choicethe lust-propelled selection of herwas no longer being made. One of the women interviewed in In What Do Woman Want?, Sophie, reveals how she compensates to summon lust for her husband: by fantasizing about being ravaged by Yankee shortstop Derek Jeter.
The you complete me, best-friends model held as the marital ideal and routinely joked about as a turn-off for men may actually be even more so for women, says Meana: There has to be an other for there to be sexiness.
The idea that women might be ill-suited for monogamy flies in the face of entrenched thinking that women use sex to bond while men use intimacy for sex, as enshrined in the intimacy-based sex-response cycle pioneered by Rosemary Basson, a professor of psychiatry at UBC. It also upends the parental investment theory, the notion that mens seemingly limitless reproductive capacity is why they fling seed far and wide, while women maximize limited reproductive resources by being choosy. Societies have long used the low-libido explanation to maintain order: it discourages female infidelity and has freed womens energy to focus on home and children.
But that doesnt jibe with the new thinking that a big part of what triggers female desire is to be desired. Some of this is conditioned: the idea that womenor good womenmust be pursued and coaxed into sex. But women also expend a lot of energy on the hunt, Elwood-Clayton points outmuch of that also focused on being desired. The stakes are even higher for women in the current hypersexualized culture, she writes: Our desire to appear desirable exceeds desire itself. Jim Pfaus, a Concordia University psychologist and neurobiologist, sees the double standard surrounding female sexuality rooted in fear: We men are afraid that if we open the box, open her control, were opening ourselves to being cuckolded. Were afraid of whats inside. A glimpse of the boxs contents was provided by Natalie Angiers 1999 book Woman: An Intimate Geography, which describes the clitoris as the only organ designed purely for pleasure; it has 8,000 nerve fibrestwice the number in the penis. Who needs a handgun when youve got a semiautomatic? Angier writes.
At Queens University in Kingston, Ont., psychologist Meredith Chivers is working to expose the animal truth of female desire. Her research, which uses a plethysmograph, a miniature bulb and light sensor placed in the vagina, suggests womens desire is as omnivorous as mens; theyre equally aroused by a range of pornography and are far more responsive to stories involving strangers than long-time lovers. Yet when asked to rate their arousal, women downplay it, particularly when the stimuli arent socially acceptable.
Chiverss findings suggest that women buy into the zipped-up model of their own sexuality. Yet as Katherine Angel makes clear in her sexual memoir, Unmastered, female desire is a tangle of complex, often contradictory impulses fed by the mind, the heart, the images we see, things weve read and been told. Angel, a post-doctoral fellow at the Centre for the History of Medicine at Warwick University, writes of processing her first erotic impulses: The words I would have put this into, had I felt the urgethe words I still put this intoare these: I feel like a man. She understood, even then, that as a woman she had to tamp those impulses down.
Fittingly, Angels lyrical, explicit meditation on her own desire, a ferocious and vulnerable thing, defies traditional narrative structure. She weaves trenchant social observation throughout the book, exploring seeming contradictions like being a feminist who enjoys sexual submission. She calls porn misogynistic, coercive, tacky, but, like Chiverss subjects, can be turned on by it: I imagine sex with heror is it me?through his eyes. I see myself as he might. I allow myself desire for her through my desire for him. Awareness of her capacity for pleasure feeds her desire, she writes.
Pfaus believes the new spotlight on female sexuality will make way for a revolution among women in the next generation: Were going to see more supposedly male-like behaviour, more women picking up men, more women getting laid and leaving, having sex without wanting to bond, more girls up in their rooms clicking on their computer and masturbating before they get started on their homework. Its a tableaux destined to horrify many. But, paradoxically, it could also pave the way to more aware, realistic marital expectationsand that includes new ways of scratching the two-year itch.
makes sense to me
no flames!! A little simplistic, but ...yeah...
I feel the same way about these manufactured holidays!
More power to you if you and your partner think it is, but my wife and I get along just fine without acting like fevered rabbits. Of course, we're a little on in years and know there's other things in life than jumping in the sack several times per day.
My sweetie is definitely an alpha male! (swoon) ;D
That’s kind of the point, that many women are simply unaware of or ignore or are not being completely honest about what turns them on. There are a variety of theories about this, but the low correlation is seen as less about the apparatus and more about female psychology.
This article is Bull. Poop.
Ask anyone who’s been through IVF hormonal supplementation.
Libido is wholly hormonal! Get her hormones aligned, guys, and if she’s into you she will want you!
Famous underground cartoonish Robert Crumb wrote one of his cartoon stories about females and bad guys. Since he was a skinny wimp, he never got the women despite being artistically talented. The good-looking girls he craved always went for the biggest louses. After he became famous, he got all the women he wanted. But he never got over his feeling of how hypocritical females were concerning desirable men. My own feeling is many young females crave excitement...something they're more likely to get with bad boys than with wimpy good guys.
Some years ago they took a poll about the priorities between men and women. For men, sex was the number one priority in life. For women, sex was down the list behind cleaning the refrigerator. I’m only slightly exaggerating. Sex was about no. 37 on the priority list for women.
Nice.
I’m sure Christly women are just lining up to have this device shoved into their nether parts.
Like I said, you have never been tired.
I agree wholeheartedly. I quit reading this thread after your comment. Enough said.
She hopes.....
She does indeed look pretty horny...
Well, I'm not much of an artist, but I'll give that a shot.
Can you imagine what she will look like if she makes 70?
Honestly I don't understand what people find so unbelievable about running a bath. You put in the plug and turn on a faucet. Maybe throw in some bath salt and light a candle. It takes all of a minute if you move slowly. And you get major points for doing it.
Is there something here I am missing?
fat ugly professor women studying normal women.
like the grotesque women who think they had a chence at living the movie “indecent proposal.”
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