The Meaning of Sex
by Marty Klein, Ph.D.
•Sex has no
intrinsic Meaning.
•Almost everyone wishes it
did.
•The desire to give sex meaning is an understandable,
important enterprise. Honestly approached, it can be a valuable
exercise; disguised as the righteous desire to simply appreciate the
meaning sex has, or as the pursuit of restoring sex's "true" meaning,
it is a common source of conflict for both individuals and
society.
•Sex only has meaning insofar as we experience it.
Its meaning is emergent, not objective. We discover the meaning of sex
each time we are sexual, meaning that only resides in our experience.
The meaning of sex changes--is reinvented--each time we are
sexual.
•Most people need sex to have meaning because the
alternative is too frightening: being sexual in an existential vacuum.
Sex without meaning would require participants to float freely in
sexual experience, rather than being snugly anchored in a cognitive
framework.
•This is scary because of our indoctrination that
sex is bad. We learn that we need protection from our sexuality: its
non-linear, open-ended nature, its cacophony of impulses and feelings,
its transcendent possibility of taking us away from ourselves. We might
not, after all, make it back.
•Because sex is ultimately
grounded in the body, it is a right-brain, non-linear experience, not a
left-brain, cognitive one. Of course, sex can be analyzed, evaluated,
and so on, but not as part of the experience. Having sex and
understanding sex are two separate activities, much like eating and
understanding nutrition are two separate activities. Trying to
understand nutrition or digestion while eating undermines the
sensuality and enjoyment offered by the experience of
dining.
•"Sex" is not limited to intercourse; not even
limited, in fact, to genital activities. In reality, "sex" describes a
huge range of activities. This is half of a dialectic: many things can
be sex because sex has whatever meaning we experience moment by moment;
and sex has an infinite range of meanings because the scope of
activities that can properly be called sexual is so
vast.
•People who believe they know the objective meaning of
sex can easily say what sex is and what it isn't. Their dichotomy is
clear, the sexual side predictably narrow. That's one reason such
people can be so self-righteous about what humans should and should not
do sexually.
•"Intimacy," for example, is a common rallying
point for people who need sex to have Meaning. "Intimacy" (which, of
course, means radically different things to different people) is fine.
But setting it up as a standard for "healthy" sexuality creates a
hierarchy of sexual experiences, downplaying or even excluding many of
its most important aspects.
•This must be true regardless of
the particular meaning people decide sex "really" has. In this sense,
Christianity and other sex-negative institutions are not the only
source of sexual repression in our culture. Rigidity about sexual
experience, meaning, and decision-making is the true
culprit.
•Organized Humanism, for example, stands opposed to
religious concepts of sex being inherently evil. But to the extent that
Humanism is attempting to discover some secular "true meaning" of sex,
it colludes with society's conceptual rigidity. Ultimately, it is
different from other sexual dogmas only in content.
•With the
perspective that sex has only emergent meaning, we can experience a
huge range of sexual feelings and meanings. With a different
perspective, much of this range is either invisible, or worse,
repugnant and, by definition, excluded.
•Sexuality, for
example, has a dark side. One can deal with this in many ways, but an
experience-based model of sexuality does not judge this fact. Instead
it accepts it, makes room for it, plays with it or not, but always
respects it.
•If, however, one believes sex has a revealed
meaning--say, it must always "nurture a relationship"--then there's no
room in the model for sex to have a dark side. One has to deny that
it's there, and say it reflects a perverse mind, weed it out, destroy
it--because its existence threatens the model of what sex should be.
This is a primary source of censorship and other repressive
movements.
•The fact that sex has no intrinsic meaning is,
actually, its ultimate positive quality. It gives us the opportunity to
discover an
infinite number of meanings in sex, and to use sex as a
vehicle for self-exploration. And it gives us the chance to play, in
the purest sense of the word.
•But the fact that sex has no
meaning is scary. It means that every time you're sexual you're adrift.
It means you have to take responsibility for your choices and
experiences. If you believe that sex is dangerous, of course, or if you
believe that sex is so powerful that it can destroy you, this is a
terrifying prospect.
•Sex's lack of meaning is also scary
because it means partners are not subject to our control, or
accountable to objective criteria. It means we have no authority to
tell a partner, "you're obviously wrong for what you like or do
sexually, so you should want what I want--sex the 'right
way.'"
•Sex having no meaning requires that we trust
ourselves when being sexual. First, it means making choices from a vast
array of options. Will we make good choices? Choices that reveal things
about us we're defended against? This is far worse than simply being
exposed as having lust in your heart. Will we be attracted to
activities that "good people" are not? Will our choices hurt our
partner, our family, our country?
•Second, we have to trust
sex. Will it take us so far out that we can't come back? Will we have
our eyes put out by its brightness or darkness? It's like reaching into
the back of a cave without knowing what's back there. It takes
courage.
•Third, we have to trust our partner. Can s/he handle
whatever we create sexually? Can s/he go to new sexual vistas with us
as we invent them, or will we find ourselves alone? Will s/he go
further or faster than we do, also leaving us feeling alone? In
reality, sex is almost always an experience of oscillation: of partners
being alone and then finding each other, again and again. Can we
tolerate being parallel and then coming together, then splitting up
again moments later, trusting that we'll find our way back toward each
other?
•Finally, we have to trust that we're adequate--that
is, that our body will respond to whatever challenge sex presents. In
reality, that's redundant, because sex only exists in the body, and so
it can't present challenges our body can't handle. In this sense,
losing an erection, for example, is a perfect response to whatever is
going on at the moment. Only if we have a particular, arbitrary
standard for our body's behavior is a lost erection
problematic.
•Many troubling behaviors reflect how badly
people wish sex to have meaning. To sustain the illusion that it does,
for example, society is willing to persecute some members through laws
regulating consensual sexual behavior or preventing sex education. This
is why people are invested in others' sexuality--because it feels
dangerous to have alternative models of
sexuality floating around.
In this sense, the desire for sex to have meaning makes society a
theocracy, with the government, organized religion, and media its
priesthood.
•This wish for sexual meaning is also behind the
common desire for special rules to govern sexual behavior and
decision-making. This is an example of the wish, as Fromm called it,
to escape from freedom: to avoid taking responsibility for the complex
and (it feels) dangerous richness of our
sexuality.
•Ecstatic sexuality--that is, body-centered
instead of mind-controlled--is possible only if we let go of
socially-constructed,
allegedly ontological boundaries of sex.
People fear this is the same thing as letting go of ethical boundaries,
which is not true. Ethical boundaries regarding sexuality do not
require some arbitrary, objective ontological boundaries being imposed
on the sexual body and mind.
•Progressive people should be
vigorously developing a dialogue that addresses sexuality's ecstatic
nature through a non-moralistic, non-dogmatic exploration. We should be
helping people understand sexuality in its mysterious yet non-mystical,
meaningful (emergent) yet not Meaningful (objective), sacred yet
non-Religious grandeur.
•Ironically, the sanctified meaning
that people want sex to have blocks access to the very transcendent
qualities they claim they desire. By confronting this personal and
social reification, we could give people a chance to have the profound
sexual experiences whose possibilities are wired into both the human
body and the mind's capacity to bond with others.
•So is sex
meaningless? Yes and no. It is meaningless in the objective or
philosophic sense. But it is meaningful on the personal, experiential
level. One reason that people engage in sex is to be periodically
renewed, nourished in their experience of whatever kind of meaning they
expect--whether that meaning involves intimacy, closeness, pleasure,
creativity, bodily perfection, or the promise that life is
OK.
•The desire to pretend that sex has meaning is
understandable. It indicates a desire to be grounded, to depend on
something. But developmentally, we all have to get off the floor and
walk, even though it seems so terribly high up there, and the floor
seems so terribly hard, and falling is so terribly scary.
•As
with all fears, how we respond to this one is a clear statement of
where we are. Pretending we don't have this fear is immature, and it
prevents us from moving forward. Acknowledging this fear is a
prerequisite for constructing a mature universe.
•So we need
to deal with this fear by confronting it: by looking sex straight in
the eye of its deep, black maw, and walking straight in--whistling a
happy tune, if necessary --trusting sex and ourselves, knowing that the
worst thing that can happen is merely that we'll have an experience we
don't want to repeat.
•Because we can't learn to walk without
falling a few times. The question is, what's more important--learning
how to walk, or preventing a few bumps along the way?
August 10,
1998