I had sex
last night.
I
blurt the sentence
into my laptop like
I’m a sixteen-year-old
or, at the oldest,
a college
freshman.
There’s
an initial “hee, hee”
and then
a sobering
“huh”. Is that really
what I’ve been
missing?
To
be honest,
I don’t think I’ve ever
figured
out sex.
I guess
things didn’t bode well
when,
in the upper
grades
of elementary
school, guys started
laughing at every
reference
to the word
“balls” and I didn’t have
a clue
what was going on. My
confusion only made them
laugh harder.
By high school, it was all part of the
routine.
We’d
assume our
regular
table in
the cafeteria,
someone
would crack a sex
joke and
then
all eyes
would be on
me. Finally,
I’d say, “I don’t get
it”, someone
would fill me
in and then,
at last, I’d laugh. More
often
than not, I still didn’t get
it.
The
same
goes
for sex
itself.
None of
it in high school. By senior
prom (a ridiculously big
thing in East
Texas),
I felt
incredible
pressure
to actually have
a date
rather
than being
the perennial
third wheel.
After
a couple of
crushing “no thank yous”, Lori Bancroft startled
me with,
“I’d love to.”
With a couple of
weeks
before
the
big do, we
were
officially dating. Or maybe
“technically
dating” would be the
more
accurate
label.
I’d pick her
up in my very
old silver
Plymouth Duster,
we’d
go for pizza and then
I’d drop her
off again. No contact whatsoever.
An hour into prom, she’d
dumped
me for
the brainier
and hopefully
handsier
Jeff
Hall.
I don't know if this is the album I chose but
I had this oversizeed poster tacked above
the bed in my dorm room.
|
University
was another
period
of what I’d described
to a relentlessly
prying roommate as
“voluntary celibacy”.
There
was one
night during the
spring of my freshman
year
when
I took a very
drunk Karen
Wysocki back to my
room—mostly so my friend
Michael
could hook up with her
friend
Lynn—and I tried
to put things off deliberating
on what
album to play on my stereo.
Somehow
we ended
up kissing on my bed
and she stripped
down to her
bra—not my doing, to be
sure—before
she
pulled
away and vomited.
Thank goodness.
That was it for college
sex.
Four
years
after
graduation, I was still hopelessly
celibate,
although I’d placed
the word
“involuntarily” in front of it, at least
during moments
of self-reflection.
The most
I allowed
myself
was a few
guy crushes
and a lot of lusting over
the covers
of GQ, back
when
the
magazine
still
led
with male
models
instead
of celebrities.
I
wisely
moved
from Texas
to Los Angeles,
hoping a less
stifling environment
might loosen
me
up.
After
being
in Malibu for a month, and a couple
of
weeks
shy of my twenty-fifth
birthday, sex
finally happened. It wasn’t much. Truth be
told,
that would describe
most every
experience
since.
I
wonder
if I’ve
evolved
at all since
being
that clueless
kid decades
ago. More
than
that, I wonder
if sex
is overrated.
Is it overhyped
on sitcoms and overdone
in
movies,
an act of such urgent
carnal desire,
that
minds are
blown
and
suddenly
there’s
a whole
new
perspective
on life
itself?
But
then
I have
to make
sense
of
reality,
too. When
partners
in my past talked
about some
of
their
most noteworthy
sexual
experiences,
what they
described
far exceeded
anything we
ever
did. Why not me?
Why
not us?
I
blame
myself
for what I’ve
felt
has been
a lifetime
of
infrequent,
ho-hum sex.
My own wants have
been
marred
by fear
and insecurity.
The
fear
began
with the
notion
that I was going to hell.
With the
AIDS
crisis, the
ticket
to hell
seemed
to be
printed
with my name
on
it, ready
for pickup. Surely,
if I did anything at all, I was going to die.
Thankfully,
fear
has subsided
in recent
years.
It’s just a generalized
feeling,
something
habitual that seems
to have
morphed
into hygienic
worries
and
a resurgent
introverted
personality.
I try to shoo the
fear
away.
The
insecurity,
however,
remains
as strong as ever.
I don’t feel
good enough,
not in terms
of my body, my performance,
my
worthiness.
This feeling
is affirmed
during almost every
sexual
experience.
Typically, things feel
very
much one-sided.
As
we
lay
beside
each
other
last night after
it was all over
(That’s it?! I
wondered), Darian started
sharing all sorts of pics on his phone—vacations
and such. As he
is
significantly younger
than I am, I recognized
the
routine,
a
sort of emotional
catch-up after
physical intimacy. While
scrolling,
he
asked,
“How come
you
finally responded
to me?
I’ve
been
trying to get
your attention
for years.”
Sure
enough,
when
I logged
back into the
hookup
site
I
rejoined
two years
ago after
a breakup,
there
were
at
least
a dozen
nudges
from him spanning the
entire
period.
They
hadn’t stood out. A random profile
pic
of one’s
chest,
however
nice,
does
not make
a
lasting impression.
At
fifty-five,
I’m
bent
on defying
that saying, you can’t teach
an old dog new
tricks. My New
Year’s
resolution
is to find sexual
liberation.
It comes
after
going through all of 2019 without sex.
(Heck,
I once
went
through a fourteen-year
dry spell
in my thirties
and forties,
a
punishing period
which reinforced
my thinking that I was a repulsive
pariah.)
“I’m
moving in three
months,”
I told Darian.
“But
we’ve
just
met.”
It
was an odd response,
being
as he’d
just told me
about
the
partner
he’s
had for
the
past
year,
a decent
enough
relationship
except
for—wait for it—the
sex.
The
way
I see
it,
now is the
perfect
time
to
attempt
to finally shake
old
sexual
demons.
Intent
on selling
my place
and
finally leaving
Vancouver, this is a rare
time
in
my life
when
I’m not yearning
for a relationship.
I don’t need
anything complicating my resolve
to
move
on.
It’s
the
perfect
time
for
casual sex
when
“no strings attached”
has no asterisk
floating about in my mind.
I
don’t know how this will play out. Things may fizzle
quickly,
just like
most
resolutions.
Still, if I can explore
a
little
more,
perhaps
I can temper
the
chronic
fear
and insecurity. Maybe
by
the
time
I
settle
in
Toronto in early
summer,
I can bring a healthier,
freer
mindset
to sex
if I should find myself
in a new
relationship.
Maybe
I’ll
become
more
assertive
in
having more
of
my needs
met.
Maybe
I’ll
finally feel
like
I’m
doing “it” right.
As
I sat up in the
bed
and started
to get
dressed,
Darian asked,
“What are
you
doing?”
“I’m
heading
out,” I said. “We’re
done,
aren’t
we?”
My
feet
were
getting
cold and I didn’t want to overstay
my time.
I
could see
one
of
my
friend’s
photos of Hawaii if I really
wanted
to. As I boarded
the
elevator,
I smiled.
It was only January 2nd
and I’d dipped
into acting on my resolution.
I’m
ahead
of all those
smokers
who’ve
gone
off
and bought another
packet
of cigarettes
and the
dieters
who’ve
scarfed
down an oversized
Hershey’s
chocolate
bar,
“hidden”
away in a kitchen
drawer.
Let
the
resolve
continue.
3 comments:
Well good for making and following resolutions. I'm a bit surprised as I thought this was going to be a post about asexuality. No matter, hope the journey is affirming!
Well, based on the way things went last year, it could definitely have been a post about asexuality! It does feel like sex is on the way out as something to be thinking about as I grow older. Still, it's an area in life where I feel I've failed miserably and, with a sense of urgency and opportunity, I'm wanting to see if I can gain some insights into a healthier, happier sex life. Then, maybe, I'll be able to let it go for good!
Actually, I could be wrong, RG, but meeting someone right now and really connecting, sexually and otherwise, may be exactly what you need. I'm sure I don't have to tell you, that's how it goes sometimes. Just as you're about to close the door on your experience of the West Coast and Vancouver, the universe might have other plans. Inconvenient? Sure. Life's like that. But could be the best thing that's ever happened to you. Consider the possibility.
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