Sex and Other Discontents
Monday Night After Soccer
You said you couldn’t sleep with me
But it was I who lay
Awake
Weeping
You called me that night
And asked me to
Share watermelon with you.
Afterwards
We sat
Spitting seeds
Oh how I tried
Buying
White lace negligees
Black silk Teddies,
A chemist’s experiment
Books on Turkish cooking
And erotic massage
Once
After the phone’s
Three-week silence
You wanted to know
Why I
Knew no new massage
But how could I bake bureks
Or study sex
Not knowing when you would call
Not knowing if you would call
Knowing only
What was it you wanted
Not me,
Not me.
I wrote that poem after the end of a relationship, if you could call
it a relationship. The man (slightly fictionalized), was Mehmet, a Turkish Post
Doctoral Fellow in engineering at the University of Washington. He had
earned his Ph.D. from Humboldt University in Berlin. He was an
interesting mix of liberal German and conservative Muslim Turk. It was
not a good mix, at least not for me. He liked casual sex. He didn’t
want commitment, but if I showed the slightest interest in another man... well
he took a very dim view of that.
The problem I had with Mehmet was that he was a very good lover.
He really knew what to do. Before me, Mehmet had a German
girlfriend who had taken “how to” sex classes and taught him what to do.
The reason that was a problem was that the next man I dated was my
husband. My husband never had a girlfriend before meeting me. He
had never had sex before meeting me. But he had a buddy who told him that
something was wrong if I wasn’t having sex with him by the third date. My
husband pressured me. I told him about having been sexually abused at age
four and raped on a date at age 22. My husband was a medical student when
we met. He had female patients who had been sexually abused and raped and
had stopped having sex. But with me it was personal.
My husband told me...if I could just change my thinking about sex,
things would be great.
He said, “I want to let out the inner whore in you.”
But I felt like a whore after the date rape. I didn’t want to
feel like a whore again.
My husband was always saying things that were completely wrong.
He’d say, “I want to feel my hot cock in your pink, wet, pussy.
I told him to go read a romance novel and come back to me with
different language. All he managed to do was to make sex sound a little
more clinical.
“I want to feel my throbbing penis inside your wet vagina.”
Sex with my husband just never worked. There was always the
memory of Mehmet, with whom sex worked much better.
But even Mehmet asked me, “How come you don’t have orgasms?”
I had already given up on feeling pleasure during sex years before, after
I was raped on a date at age 22. That’s why my husband’s lack of skill
didn’t seem important. I could like sex less. I could like sex
more. Rarely did I like it very much.
At 18 I fell in love with Danny, who left me adrift, half conscious,
with pleasure only by kissing me and caressing me. But Danny was in love
with Kathleen, and Kathleen was engaged to Seamus. Danny had only started
things with me to help him get over Kathleen. It didn’t work.
Within four weeks Danny abandoned me. Several months later I ended
up in the college campus hospital after a suicide attempt. I never
told the psychiatrist about being sexually abused at age four. I didn’t
know sex abuse survivors had trouble with abandonment and depression and
suicide. I didn’t even know what
sex abuse was. The year was
1978. Society had barely begun to
talk about such things.
Then there was Sean the summer I turned 21. Sean was very
funny. For me, I guess, humor is very sexy. I fell in love with
Sean too. Sean was an art student and an athlete. He was inexperienced,
but he was very graceful. Sean could leave me limp with pleasure. Sean promised to write, but when the
summer was over, Sean’s promises disappeared like bubbles popping on a breeze.
Once again, depression and thoughts of suicide followed.
So where did love get me? How could I trust love? Love
only brought me years of pain.
I didn’t love my husband. I liked him, cared for him, enjoyed
his company. I even loved him as a
person. He loved me as no man had loved me before. I wanted a man
who would love me so much he would not abandon me. I had no intention of
dumping my husband the way Danny and Sean and others had dumped me.
But there was the problem of me not liking sex.
After Sean abandoned me at the end of my 21st summer, I tried casual
sex. If Sean didn’t want me, other men wanted me for at least one night.
I dated a young man I never should have dated. It was against my
better judgment, but the young man pursued me. I was lonely. I
wanted to be wanted. Finally I said yes. The young man had a friend
who wanted a ménage a trios’. I said yes again. As the two guys
sucked on their bong and ignored me, I got to thinking that sex wasn’t such a good
idea. But my ever-present depression and low self-esteem kept me rooted
to the bedroom. How could I give up the crumbs of attention promised to
me? After putting down the bong, the young man’s friend, a former high school
football player over 6 feet tall, went first. I am a small woman, five
feet two inches. At age 22, I weighed only 105 pounds.
The football player was rough. He was hurting me. I told
him he was hurting me.
I asked him to stop. He ignored my pleas and continued.
After the football player finally rolled off me, he said, “I’ve had
better.”
I next morning I wrote in my diary, “...I feel degraded, like dirt,
a whore...”
I never reported the date rape. Who would believe me? I had
consented to sex and then changed my mind. In recent year I read about a similar cases that a woman
reported. She lost in court. I
felt overwhelming shame and guilt.
Months passed. I wrote in my diary, “ I hate men and sex, I hate
men and sex. I am just a number, a trophy. If they could cut the
insides of me out and hang them up on a wall, they would.”
I wasn’t depressed. I was numb. When men asked me out, I
felt nervous and made excuses as to why I could not go out. I preferred
to stay home and read or watch Kung Fu
on television. I went hiking by myself. It was years before I would
go out with a man again.
When I did, I didn’t like the sex. Every man I dated after the
date rape remarked on my response to sex.
A Russian man I was deeply in love with told me in broken Russian,
“Virginia, I have a problem. I can’t tell if it is good for you or bad
for you.”
My most skilled lover said, “Virginia, I can’t move you.
You’re a cold fish.”
What was I supposed to do? My husband and I tried sex therapy.
The therapist suggested going without sex until I wanted sex. It
couldn’t work. I never wanted sex, and my husband felt he couldn’t live
without sex. In the end, even in marriage, sex felt like rape.
Afterwards, I would go into the bathroom and cry.
I thought, “How can I live with having sex for the rest of my life?”
So I am not married anymore. For years I felt lonely, but I
didn’t date. Finally I began to
date again, but I still sleep in a twin bed. Maybe there is something subconscious
to that. I could share my bed if I
really had to, but it wouldn’t be very comfortable. How can I feel any
other way? I am a thoroughly heterosexual woman for whom sexual and
romantic relationships with men never worked out. Men are great as
friends. Mix in sex....
At age 41, I converted to Catholicism.
Sometimes I think the Catholic Church should hire me as a sex
educator for young girls.
“Casual sex is like playing with fire. Don’t do it!”
But it is true. Sex outside of the right place, outside of a
committed, loving, and completely consensual relationship between two adults,
can be very harmful.
In the end, the Catholic abuse scandal awoke me to what had happened
in my own past. I was baptized by a priest who was later removed for
abusing boys. To deal with my pain, I read about the abuse scandal.
I ended up connecting with clergy abuse survivors.
“Get therapy; get help,” they advised me.
Try to heal on your own from sex abuse and rape alone -- the way I
did most of my life – is very difficult.
Don’t try to go alone. Psychologists
may help you explore your wounds form the past and how they affect your current
thinking. A Licensed Clinical Social
Worker may try to help you improve your coping skills. A psychiatrist can prescribe
medications to ease your pain as well as offer talk therapy at a very high
price. If you can’t afford
therapy, many rural counties have Domestic Violence services that also work
with sexual abuse and rape victims.
Many have support groups for survivors. Some even offer classes on relationship skills. Spiritual retreats can also help heal
wounds of abuse. Connecting with
other survivors, particularly those who have been working on their own healing,
helps us both know that we are responding normally to profound wounds as well
as point us in helpful directions for healing.
I still have hope for a healthy physical relationship with someone I
love. I am dating again, taking it
slowly, step by step, valuing myself in ways I never valued myself before.
Post Script: I wrote
this back in 2006. I went through
a family crisis from the Summer of 2012 until Spring of 2014. My children need me too much. Dating
has gone by the wayside since then.
I belong to the Jackie Kennedy school of parenting. If you don’t do a good job of raising
your children, not much else you do that matters. My children need me right now so I don’t have time for
dating.
Tips for resuming
dating after abuse and rape:
Give yourself lots of time and space to heal before dating again. Not that I really know about that. I don’t.
Take things slowly, step by step. Set boundaries and limits you won’t go beyond
Know that you are valuable, deserving of only the best treatment.
Remind the guys and gals that commitment is sexy, and sex without
commitment is kind of boring.
Commitment means he or she takes you out and tells others how
special you are and then treats you that way in private.
If the guy or gal calls after 10 PM and wants to come over, tell him
or her it is too late. Or don’t
even answer the phone. You are too
valuable to be treated with such little concern for your needs.
If the guy or gal only comes over for sex, tell him or her to
consider taking you out to dinner or a movie or coffee or a picnic or just to
sit on a bench and talk is foreplay and that you won’t be ready for sex without
proper foreplay.
If you are like me and don’t like sex and don’t have time and money
for a sex therapist, try reading books to help you figure your way back to
enjoying sex again.
You will need more than therapy and reading a book or two or ten to
recover. Honestly, therapy only
took me part way to healing. I
learned to trust the therapist, and the therapist took me in the right direction, but I needed to learn relationship and communication skills as well as how to
calm and soothe myself through bad times.
I learned these skills first at a retreat with The Compassionate
Listening Project, which does not work with survivors sex abuse and rape but
nevertheless teaches valuable skills for healing. Later I learned Non-Violent Communication developed by Dr.
Marshall Rosenberg and Dialectical Behavioral Therapy developed by Dr. Marsha
Linehan. All three disciplines are related in what they teach. Compassionate Listening focuses more on
helping others heal but helps you heal too. Non-violent communication focuses on communication skills to
heal relationships. Dialectical
Behavioral Therapy focuses more on healing oneself but also helps heal your
relationships.
© 2016 Virginia Pickles
Me, the summer I turned 21, the year before the date rape. I am holding two baby Red Tail Hawks I helped to band for my wildlife biology internship with the Bureau of Land Management.
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