Wednesday, June 22, 2016

"Mating in Captivity" Ester Perel



I had this very erotic dream a while back.  During that half awake period when vivid dreams form themselves.

There was a bed, and on the bed was a woman I do actually know, older than me, laying on the bed, on her back, wearing a pajama top of some kind.  I felt a strong desire for her.  I wanted to make passionate love to her, to penetrate her and her mystery.  I hovered over her.  Without my doing, her top was open, in the way of dreams.  First it's this; then it's that.  Her bare chest was revealed to me, an older woman’s chest, but in a kind of half-half, like yin and yang.  One side was slack skinned and wrinkled. The other half was pink and smooth as a young woman’s.  I knelt over her,taking in the sight of her bare chest, with its odd mismatched halves.  Gently, fearfully I settled over her and laid my head on that maternal space between bare breast and bare shoulder where I could hear faintly her heart beating under my ear.  I was afraid.  With each second, more so.  Then suddenly she laid a gentle hand on my back, and pressed me to her.  Her breath rose and fell, and I breathed warmly and gently into her neck, feeling at peace.  I woke up.

And why was this erotic?


Mating in Captivity is about that vulnerable abyss, that fearful moment of anticipation and revelation whether we will be accepted in our need, or pushed away.  I haven't finished the book yet, I’m reading it slowly, finding in each page and case history a fascination with the nature of eroticism revealed.

Though this is a self help book for long married couples who have lost the spark of lust and maybe sex altogether - and though speaking for myself I think that's probably most of us -  it isn’t really about sex.  Erotica writers know, or should know, that sex is what you do, erotic is who you are.  Conventionality and eroticism don't go well together.  Eroticism is that which wants to get out.  To express.

The book makes the point, several times so far, that what kills the heat in married sex is this conventionality, this doing things by the rules of safety.  Married sex usually becomes what I’ve begun to think of glumly as “Mom and Dad” sex.  Its the last thing before bed.  Its quiet, hidden, because the kids might still be awake, just down the hall.   And then only if you have at all the time or energy.  Initiated by one partner, the other partner glances at the clock on the nightstand.  Then its on to some pattern of foreplay, one of four positions - man on top. Woman on top, side by side, and if one is feeling adventurous maybe a rear entry.  Maybe the lights are on, maybe not, then its a run to the bathroom to wash and off to sleep and up at six.  Getting up early in the morning.  Night after night for years.

The man looks for porn on the internet where he may find what he wishes he could have.  The woman maybe remembers those illicit and wonderful sticky fumblings in the back seat, parked in her parents driveway in early morning hours while her boyfriend labors frantically (”SHHHH!!  My dad will kill me if finds out we’re doing this!”)  And oh - that possibility of dad finding out, of looking up and seeing his shocked face at the rear window your legs are dangling out of, staring at you over your guy's bobbing shoulders - just makes a woman wants to ask - Honey?  What if we did this in the car tonight instead?  Wants to, somehow never does.

Ester Perel makes the case, over and over, that Erotic is about that abyss, that exposure and vulnerability, that leaping off into the unknown and unconventional.  Trying to get away from the Mom and Dad sex and finding out what used to, and maybe does, still turn you on.  Because we don’t covet what we have.  We covet what we observe and don’t have and are afraid to ask for.  Love has so much to do with trust, with tenderness and emotional caring. These are the things a loving relationship are made of.  But, she argues, too much of this can be a killer to the erotic energy of a committed relationship.  Not that the relationship needs to end, ot that there is no place for trust, but when did sex become so safe?

I found this book fascinating, not so much for her practical advice on married sex, but for her speculations and explorations on the question of what is Erotic.  It is as though Anais Nin had written a self help manual.

My dream, from which I woke up erect, was to me profoundly erotic even though no sex act had taken place.  The erotic was my abject need, my humbling, revealed vulnerability of reaching out to a woman, the animal laying of my head, almost begging for love, not knowing if I would be shoved off and scolded (this has also happened in dreams).

The warm touch of her hand on my back, holding me there was as deeply soothing a release as an orgasm.  Maybe better. None of that messy clean up after wards.




10 comments:

  1. For me, sex dreams are seldom consummated. What does come across is often a bungling of a failed attempt so just the desire and frustration remains.

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  2. Yes, I feel like sex dreams so often point to the importance of things besides/beyond orgasm. Your example here, Garce, illustrates that beautifully.

    The most erotic dream I've had in recent years involved me standing in a greenhouse (the location feels appropriate, though it makes little logical sense), surrounded by naked women, watching fluids of arousal drip down their inner thighs. No touching, no orgasm. Definitely woke up panting, and I think that dream, like yours, was about desire more than about consummation.

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    1. So often the consummation doesn't live up to the desire. Your room full of women sounds like a room full of unresolved desire and anticipation.

      Garce

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  3. When we played a sexy board game many years ago, my husband was surprised when I said the sexiest part of him was his brain. But that's what he used to think of all of the naughty things we did, even after we had 4 kids. It's all about timing, and making sure they're all heavy sleepers.

    And yes, Daddy X and Annabeth, I'm often upset when I wake up just as the orgasm was going to start. Sometimes I'm lucky and I get that familiar warm feeling, then I wake up happy and smiling. Since I'm not a morning person at all, my husband will ask me if it was good for me. And I nod.

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    1. I haven't had dreams like that for a long time. I miss them.

      Garce

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  4. Dreaming isn't all that far from fantasizing, and both can build desire more intense than than physical stimulation even if the latter is more likely to result in orgasm. Sure can be frustrating, though.

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    1. I think also dreams offer a freedom to takerisks we don;t have in real life. Its the risk taking that is the soul of erotic.

      Garce

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  5. My most explicit erotic dreams frequently don't make physical sense. For instance, I may dream I'm sucking a man's cock at the same time as he's penetrating me.

    However I do have many dreams where the eroticism is entirely in the anticipation. No sex at all, just the sense of mutual desire. I find that delicious, not frustrating.

    (Sounds like an excellent book, too!)

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    1. Its that mutual desire, the awareness that someone would desire us, which is so powerful. To be desired. Who doesn't want to be desired? It s the most validating thing there is, even if we can;t always consummate it.

      garce

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