It seems that no one is immune to E L James' controversial
novel, 50 Shades of Grey. Television shows, magazines, popular blogs, even side
conversations outside the school pick-up line are filled with talk about how
hot it is -- and how it may be solely responsible for jump-starting the sex
drives of bored housewives across the country. While I agree that some of the
sex scenes are quite titillating, I find myself annoyed at the overt (BDSM) Bondage/Discipline/Dominance/Submission/Sadism/Masochism stereotypes advanced by the book. Especially since the latest scientific
studies concerning sexual behavior do not back them up.
Handsome, charming and incredibly wealthy, 50 Shades'
Christian Grey is considered Seattle's most eligible bachelor, the kind of man
that no woman can resist. But readers soon learn that Mr. Grey has a dark side:
He is a Dominant who likes to tie up and whip submissive brunettes like his
innocent new conquest, Anastasia Steele. And when Anastasia digs deeper to
understand his strange sexual predilections, she learns that he had a violent
early childhood, was neglected by his "crack whore" mother and abused
by her pimp. Grey tells Anastasia that his perverse desires stem from being
"50 shades of [effed] up" -- hence the provocative title.
Whether we are reading about Mr. Grey, appreciating a young
Mickey Rourke in 9 ½ Weeks or being horrified by the latest potential perp on
Law & Order: SVU, we have, as a culture, hooked into the worst kind of BDSM
stereotypes. We are conditioned to see those who practice the lifestyle as
imbalanced, damaged and potentially violent. We believe they are incapable of
building or maintaining successful sexual or emotional relationships. We think
these are people to be both pitied and feared -- but mostly feared. And most
dangerously, we think these are people who need to be fixed. As one
acquaintance told me, "I admit that 50 Shades was kind of sexy. But I
think that kind of sex is just really, really wrong and dangerous." I've
heard more than a few folks, some of them with lots of letters after their
names, wholeheartedly agree with her.
But is BDSM really wrong and dangerous? While there is an
overall lack in the study of sexuality in general, new studies across the globe
are defying some age-old casts -- and helping us to reassess the way we look at
BDSM culture and what we consider "normal" sexuality. Here are a few of
the most brazen stereotypes seen in 50 Shades of Grey -- and what science has
to say about them.
Myth: BDSM is violent.
Tristan Taormino, a sex educator and author of The UltimateGuide to Kink: BDSM, Role Play and the Erotic Edge, says that 9 times out of
10, media portrayals of BDSM link it to violence and crime. Joe, a friend of a
friend who organizes a BDSM date night for over 100 people, says that is one of
the stereotypes that bother him the most. "The mantra for BDSM is safe,
sane and consensual. With an emphasis on consensual," he told me.
"But there are so many different shades of non-vanilla sex out there.
Everyone has their own flavor -- what my kinks are may not be the same as
everyone else."
Debby Herbenick, sexual health educator at the Kinsey
Institute and author of Sex Made Easy,says that BDSM is a huge umbrella term
for a wide range of activities. "It's important to understand that there
are so many different ways of engaging in BDSM play, from the fuzzy handcuffs
you can buy at a women-oriented sex boutique to the more extreme sexual dungeon
set-up," she says. "Even if you are just using one device, like a
flogger, there are so many different ways to use it. Some may stroke a partner
with it while another person will really whip them with it."
In a 2008 study published in the Journal of Homosexuality,
Finnish researchers found a wide range of behaviors under the BDSM umbrella.
When they gave a questionnaire to nearly 200 individuals who consider
themselves part of the BDSM community, they discovered that the study
participants did not view BDSM as a singular phenomenon -- there were multiple
subcultures with different themes -- even some that did not involve pain play
at all. "For some people, kink is a feather," says Joe. "For
others, it's the whole chicken. You can't generalize."
Myth: Men like Christian Grey are into BDSM because they
were abused as children.
A friend of mine once told a counselor that she liked to be
spanked hard in bed. He immediately asked her, "Were you sexually abused
as a child?" and suggested that she might be working through abuse issues.
As someone who had never been abused, she was stunned. There is a pervasive
notion that BDSM must be linked to past abuse. Again, the science does not
support this idea at all.
"While it is probably true that there are a lot of
people into BDSM that were abused, there are a lot of people who are not into
BDSM who were also abused," says Debby Herbenick. "The sad fact is
that a lot of people have been abused and it's not fair to pin someone's whole
sexuality on that."
In the same Finnish study mentioned above, the authors found
that individuals who practice BDSM are no more likely than those who don't to
come from a dysfunctional family. Similarly, in a phone survey of over 19,000
participants, Australian researchers discovered that BDSM was not apathological symptom of past abuse -- just a kinky sexual interest that is
attractive to around 2% of sexually active individuals.
Myth: Men like Christian Grey lash out because they are
unable to emotionally bond with others.
Christian Grey makes it clear that he is only interested in
a submissive sexual partner -- not a relationship. And his family is concerned
that he'll never be able to form proper emotional bonds. But BDSM practitioners
are not lacking in relationship closeness. In a study of BDSM couples published
in 2009, researchers found that BDSM activities, when performed consensually,
actually lowers cortisol, a physiological indicator of stress, and increasesvarious measures of intimacy.
Myth: Men like Christian Grey are very unhappy and express
that unhappiness through BDSM.
In the book, Christian is a solitary man -- and from
accounts of his family, very unhappy until he met Anastasia. However, data from
the Australia sexual health study suggest that couples who indulge in BDSM and
role-playing activities say they are happier than their non-BDSM counterparts.
Joe says it has made all the difference for him. "This is who I am, this
is who my partner is," he says. "And being able to be ourselves has
made all the difference to our relationship and to our overall happiness."
Myth: Men like Christian Grey have brains that are not wired
to properly process pleasure or pain.
If you are an avid Law & Order: SVU watcher, you've
heard Dr. George Huang explain away kink with the "his brain isn't wired
correctly" argument. While it may make good television, his explanations
are a gross misunderstanding the science. Taormino reminds us that pain is as
much a social construct as it is a physical experience. "The idea that
there's one thing called pain and this one thing called pleasure and they're
opposite, finite and discrete, well, that's false."
Nan Wise, a sex therapist and neuroscientist who studies the
brain at orgasm, agrees. "Nature loves diversity and society abhors it.
There are many, many ways that people are wired for pleasure. We all have
unique erotic fingerprints."
Kent Kiehl grabbed headlines earlier this year by publishing
results that suggest sexual sadists have a heightened sensitivity to pain, as
measured by amygdala activity in the brain. But he was looking at hardcore
criminals who have no interest in consensual encounters -- which is very
different from BDSM.
So what do we know about how pleasure and pain are wired in
the brain? We're still learning--but a good deal of neuroimaging work suggests
that the two experiences overlap quite a bit. That is, many of the same brain
areas that process the perception and experience of pleasure also process the
perception and experience of pain. That's something to consider. And Wise says
that BDSM can leverage the fact that the brain's reward circuitry is primed for
novelty.
"It's unpredicted stimuli that really fires up those
dopamine receptors and gives you all that pleasure," she says. "So by
exploring new things, including role play and BDSM, couples can re-engage the
brain's reward centers, which may be habituated to doing the same kind of sex
play over and over again."
While many people take the need for novelty as a sign of
pathology, Wise argues she believes that more diverse lovemaking and sex play
may actually result in a healthier, flexible brain. "Having a brain that
helps you seek out new experiences and new rewards on an ongoing basis results
in a healthy pleasure system," she says.
Overall, the science to date, though limited, suggests BDSM
is not, as my acquaintance put it, wrong or dangerous, but rather one of the
natural variations found in the complex world of human sexuality.
As I researched my own book, Dirty Minds: How Our Brains InfluenceLove, Sex and Relationships, Julia Heiman, Director of the Kinsey Institute,
told me that sexuality, in all its forms, is incredibly variable -- so much so
that we might do better to consider that incredible variability the norm. Our
genes, our environments, our experiences -- these things are what make us
individuals, with slightly different behaviors, emotions, desires and erotic
fingerprints. "Like many, many other sexual behaviors, BDSM is part of a
normative sexual experience that feels healthy and enjoyable to many
people," says Herbenick. "This is something that is consensual and
involves a good deal of communication, which are both things that are important
to any pleasurable experience."
It's an excellent point. Taormino says that, if nothing
else, she's glad that 50 Shades is allowing more people to talk about BDSM.
"This book has captured the imagination of a huge segment of our society
that hasn't thought about this kind of sex or talked openly about it
before," she says. "And I hope it will give some people a language to
talk about sex, ask questions, explore different fantasies and know that those
fantasies are okay."
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