RSS Feed
Mar 2

Your cheating heart

Posted on Tuesday, March 2, 2010 in Affairs/infidelity, Honesty, Relationships, Sex/sexuality

We were long overdue for a gals’ night, so we gathered last week and found ourselves lined up at the bar at the Buckeye.

“Don’t look now, but isn’t that Scott?” Mia asked, jerking her head rhythmically  to the right.

“It sure is,” Sara said, her head whipping around to see the action in the booth behind us. “But that sure isn’t Liz.”

Liz being Scott’s wife.

“And, so?” I asked. “For all you girls know, it could be a business meeting, or his niece or a
friend who needs advice. Stop being so
suspicious!”  

They looked at me like I was one of those psycho women all exes seem to become to guys when they’re describing us to their
new love.

I know what it might look like, but looks can be deceiving. There were more than a few times when I was having dinner or cocktails with a male friend and some busybody walked by and assumed we were dating just because I’m a single woman with a guy.

But maybe Scott was cheating. Or maybe he was having dinner with a female co-worker and didn’t tell his wife about it; would that be cheating, too?

Cheating isn’t so black and white anymore.
It used to be if that you weren’t actually cheating unless there were body fluids and cigarettes in a cheap motel.

Now? Well, if you don’t have a dozen
mistresses coming out of the woodwork talking to the media, like Tiger, it’s a little fuzzier.

  • Some women think a guy’s intense interest in porn is cheating.
  • Some women think if their squeeze
    is always checking out other women, he’s cheating.
  • Some women think if he’s sharing TMI (mostly about them) to another woman, he’s cheating.
  • Some women think if he’s a flirt he’s cheating.
  • Some women think sending dirty text messages is cheating.
  • Some women think it’s cheating if their guy friends an ex on Facebook.

So, what is cheating?

I used to think it was fairly simple — a guy’s cheating if he’s shagging someone (and in all fairness, it could as just as easily be if she’s shagging someone; don’t mean to lay all the guilt on you guys. I know women are just as guilty as men).  But the Internet, IM, texting and Facebook have changed everything.

And, I’ve changed, too. My thoughts, that is.

I think someone’s cheating if whatever he’s doing is compromising the relationship because he’s not being honest about it. If a guy can’t tell his partner about something he’s doing and who he’s doing it with (an maybe in the case of watching porn, how often he’s doing it), then something’s wrong.

That doesn’t mean that we have to tell our partners everything; Lord knows her daily minutiae is boring enough without having to take on his, too. And it doesn’t mean he’s afraid to tell her because she’s going to get all bitchy about him having female friends or looking at an attractive woman walking by (or acknowledging that). That’s an insecure woman, which is a much bigger problem (and, ironically, one that may lead to a man cheating).

But if she starts asking you about your day or someone (nicely, of course), and you feel like you can’t quite tell her the truth or start getting defensive, I’d say there might be a wee bit of a problem.

When I discovered Rob’s affair, it wasn’t so much that he was screwing someone as the lies — whenever he looked me in the face, he wasn’t telling me the truth (although, I didn’t know that at that particular moment). That’s just not how people who say they love you treat you. That was hard to grasp.

So, what’s cheating to you?

Photo © Inger Anne Hulbækdal – Fotolia.com

Jan 13

Forget sex, let’s cuddle

Posted on Wednesday, January 13, 2010 in hookups, Relationships, Self image, Sex/sexuality

I feel sorry for teens nowadays; they can’t break into their parents’ bedroom, riffle through their bookcase and look for the books with the “dirty parts.” Because when they open any magazine, turn on any TV channel, rent almost any DVD, or open their laptop, the “dirty parts” are thrust in their face. Why break a sweat to search for it?

I learned a lot about sex from what I read on
those shelves. What would kids learn now?   

Not much, according to journalist Katie Roiphe, writing in the New York Times Sunday Book Review recently. Cuddling, maybe, as today’s generation of male writers are “too cool for sex.”

You’re not going to get David Foster Wallace, Dave Eggers, Michael Chabon or Jonathan Safran Foer to describe their, uh, member like this: “he felt his cashew become a banana, and then a rippled yam, bursting with weight.”

Well, maybe that’s a good thing, no offense to the late John Updike, of course.

But, Roiphe does offer an interesting take on how male authors today write about sex versus those of Updike’s era — Norman Mailer, Saul Bellows and Philip Roth (although, as usual, she’s managed to piss off a lot of feminists):

“The younger writers are so self-conscious, so steeped in a certain kind of liberal education, that their characters can’t condone even their own sexual impulses; they are, in short, too cool for sex. Even the mildest display of male aggression is a sign of being overly hopeful, overly earnest or politically untoward. For a character to feel himself, even fleetingly, a conquering hero is somehow passé. More precisely, for a character to attach too much importance to sex, or aspiration to it, to believe that it might be a force that could change things, and possibly for the better, would be hopelessly retrograde. Passivity, a paralyzed sweetness, a deep ambivalence about sexual appetite, are somehow taken as signs of a complex and admirable inner life. … we are simply witnessing the flowering of a new narcissism: boys too busy gazing at themselves in the mirror to think much about girls, boys lost in the beautiful vanity of “I was warm and wanted her to be warm,” or the noble purity of being just a tiny bit repelled by the crude advances of the desiring world.”

As for the erotic-charged works of Roth, Mailer, Bellow and Updike:

“In contrast to their cautious, entangled, ambivalent, endlessly ironic heirs, there is something almost romantic in the old guard’s view of sex: it has a mystery and a power, at least. It makes things happen. … These passages are after several things at once — sadness, titillation, beauty, fear, comedy, disappointment, aspiration. The writers were interested in showing not just the triumphs of sexual conquest, but also its loneliness, its failures of connection.”

We still have sexual conquests — and a lot of sexual loneliness, even as we flaunt hookups and booty calls — but society doesn’t look like it did back in those days; we are inundated with sexual messages, and porn is so ho-hum it has to get weirder to titillate. We live in an age when, as Tina Brown put it, “everything is known and nothing is understood.” It’s almost impossible for us to be shocked by anything sexual, least of all in a book; all you have to do is Google “lonely naked housewives” and see it for yourself.

But, it did get me thinking about who does write well about sex, who “gets” it.

  • Who does it for you?
  • And, are male novelists accurately capturing today’s sexual angst?

Image © Marek Kosmal – Fotolia.com

Dec 15

How to be good in bed

Posted on Tuesday, December 15, 2009 in Honesty, Relationships, Sex/sexuality

A few years ago, when one of those celebrity homemade porn tapes was making the Internet rounds, I somehow found myself watching one.

Oh, don’t be so surprised: As much as I like porn,
I don’t spend a lot of time actually watching it. modern bed

So the actress (whose name escapes me) was giving her guy a blowjob and I was blown away — it was the worst blowjob I’d ever seen! Not that I’ve seen too many of them in person — still, I’ve seen my share — but she had no style or variation. It was boring! Sure, the guy looked pretty happy; maybe he just didn’t know better. Or maybe he was just grateful to get one from her.

Or maybe he’s one of those people who thinks any blowjob is better than no blowjob, or that there’s no such thing as a bad blowjob, there’re just better blowjobs. (although, let’s not forget the dreaded dry blowjobs …)

Anyway, I kept thinking — I give better blowjobs than that.!

Because I do (and don’t ask me how I know …)

But it made me think about sex (well, I’m always thinking about sex, so that’s a no-brainer) — if you don’t watch porn, go to sex parties or engage in threesomes and you’re not a peeping tom, how do you ever measure up your sexual techniques? How do you know if you’re good in bed?

Your partner may be waking up the neighbors with her screaming or gouging your back with her nails or moaning, “yes, yes, YES!” — and it could all be a show, you know?

Porn can teach you some things, but it’s still a “show.” I mean, how many of us are going to do the double action — you know, front door and, uh, back? And forget about sex advice from the “experts,” which is often ridiculous.We know a lot more about sex, thankfully, but a lot of us worry if we’re “good” at it.

If you have a trusting relationship with your partner, you can ask or tell and feel pretty confident that you’re hearing the truth. But there’re always ways to be better, and you have to learn that — and books can only go so far.

I think that’s why I think amateur porn is so popular — it’s real people having real sex. They look like us, more or less.

So, how do you know if you’re good in bed?