Keeping Things Casual
Recently I started seeing this boy, we’ll call him Jerry. He’s cute, smart, and an artist, most
everything I’m looking for in a lover right now. Usually, I’m the “let’s be boyfriends after
two dates” kind of person. I once wrote
a story about my perfect first date in which the characters pretended it was
their three-year anniversary. Needless
to say, I’m not a hug fan of the early stages of dating. This time around, however, I’ve dedicated
myself to keeping in casual. “Fun, sex,
and no drama,” has become my mantra. In my case drama pretty much is either I’m
not attracted but pretending (definitely not the case), saying something way to
personal way to soon (a distinct possibility, but I’m working on it), or them
disappearing (he says he won’t.)
Last night,
I found myself lying in his arms naked having just accomplished the grand slam
of sex, simultaneous orgasm. Into my
head came an idea I don’t really trust my sexuality. I have no faith that however it works in a
given night, it will be fun and safe and rewarding in some way. There is this vague notion in my head that
there is a way sex is supposed to work and mine’s not that. My sex is not well
lit, passionate encounters all the time (thank you Queer as Folk.) Instead it
is awkward groping while constantly wondering if I’m “doing it right” and
having little idea of what that means. The sex I had just felt like luck, and leading
up to the climax I had been quite worried about coming too early, knowing I’m
not a good giver after I’ve taken (apparently that’s part of “doing it right”.)
These
concerns replayed in my mind as we lay there in each other’s arms
afterwards. All things considered it was
actually some pretty decent sex, especially considering it had been the first
time with someone new. However, I was
reminded of the year I turned seven, when my two girl friends and me invented a
game called “doctor.” It was a simple
game, getting caught was not. I have no memory of hanging out with my friends
after we were found in one of their basement, pants down, door locked. Suddenly
there could be real consequences to the interaction of bodies. Suddenly you could be doing something “wrong”
and could loose friends or become a whole different person, a “pervert.”
Suddenly
desire was called into question and I struggled with the duel feelings of
desire and perversion. I had enjoyed our
game and wanted it back. However, there
was also the fear that this might signal some perversion within me. Taking it further, as my young mind was want
to do, I questioned whether I was a rapist for my involvement. To this day, similar concerns compel me to
include that to the best of my memory, these games were totally consensual and
enjoyed by all.
Admittedly these are odd thoughts
to have after sex, lying in a man’s arms, but they reflect the difficulty I’ve
always felt believing in my physical desires.
Sexuality has never been my golden compass, easily pointing me towards
romantic relationships I’d enjoy. More,
it has been a dark, murky pool, with the promise of certainty somewhere deep
below.
In college, I dated almost
exclusively women, even though I would later accept I’m mostly gay. I found myself often being asked, “but are you attracted to her?” My answers were undoubtedly some form of, “I
don’t know,” and this was the truth. I
had no clue how to interpret the interplay between physical sensation,
identity, history, and socialization.
Sufficed to say it was a rough time sexually, in which I made a lot of
mistakes and hurt a lot of people.
I couldn’t figure out the
difference between who society had made me want to be and who my history and
biology had actually created. I’ve known
I was queer for a long time. Around 5th
grade, I realized I was not straight. In
8th grade, I came out to my parents, and by the middle of high
school I was out to everyone. I didn’t
have a problem admitting I was some kind of queer, but I hadn’t given up on my
white picket fence, and back then that eventually meant a wife. It wasn’t just that I wasn’t ready to give up
on the great hetero-dream, more so I couldn’t believe the sexual thoughts I had
about men could be beautiful and loving, could be all the best parts of the
white picket fence fantasy.
To me, Men were gross and violent,
corrupted by our unspeakable acts. I certainly
was. The best we could hope for was to
struggle against the evil that lurked within.
Women, and fences, and kids with dogs were supposed to be the tools in
this super-man struggle. They were both
what made it possible and what made it worth it.
Learning to unpack this has been a
long, slow, hard process. Disengaging my
personal history and what that taught me about desire with cultural narratives
of men (and their desire) as evil and hetero-relationships as salvation, is not
easy. One of the many gifts queer
culture offers is challenging the idea that sex can or should be
deliverance. If sex is going to save
your soul, it’s understandable why getting it “right” is so important.
I’ve had to teach myself to trust
that what I feel can be beautiful, sweet, and nails-down-my-back hot and that
that is plenty. Often still, the best I
can do is some degree of understanding as to why sex isn’t at any given moment. Sex is still very scary, still fraught with
emotions I barely comprehend and can certainly not control, still full of
trauma and triggers.
Last night, as I settled down to
sleep, having just had a wonderful time while setting good boundaries of having
the bed to myself, it came on me like the sneakiest ton of bricks you ever
seen. The closest word English affords
me to describe this physical, guttural sensation of pain is “triggered.” I felt like something dark and poisonous was
trying to fit my entire chest into a tic-tak box. It fucking hurt.
As a survivor of sexual violence,
this was not the first time my body had post-coitally rejected sex so
totally. I have, on other occasions,
found myself clutching my stomach, wondering how in the godess’ name sex could
possibly be worth this feeling. “It’s
waking up alone, in the dead of the night” goes one of my poems, “and knowing the difference between me and the
night by the ach in my sternum.”
Although I have fostered a deep
faith in the value of sex, refusing to give-up on an entire part of life due to
past trauma, I wonder what a casual relationship means in this context. Does it mean simply that I process these feelings
outside of my sexual relationship, turning instead to community, for fear that
sharing would disrupt the easy nature of our interactions? Does intense cancel casual or can we share
deeply while not expecting too much from our sexual partners? And what is too much to expect of a late
winter fling?
The fact that the trigger response
only lasted about a minute or 2 (rather than a few hours) and that I was
instantly able to identify what was happening to me, is testament to the work
I’ve done. Yet it’s also a reminder that
sometimes you have great, no hassle sex with a wonderful guy and shit still
gets complicated. Maybe casual is continuing to explore where enjoyment lies in
the interplay between history, biology, socialization, and desire. Maybe,
Intense essays about sex and violence are part of what it means for a person
like me to “just have fun,” as my mother has often suggested. I’d certainly like to find out.