L o v e , S e x & H e a l t h
Risking marriage and dignity, we examine methods of...
Spicing It Up
By Joel Stein
January 19, 2004
Health
Don't try to spice up your marriage. If you've got one maybe one
and a half chili peppers on the Mexican menu of sex, just be
happy with that. Because trying to spice up your marriage is one
of the most depressing, sex-drive-suppressing experiences
possible. Being assigned this story was the best form of birth
control I have ever tried.
Perhaps I made things even worse by talking to my mother, who is
a family therapist and therefore, I figured, must have great,
sensible advice she doles out to struggling clients. I
approached the subject gingerly. Mom did not. She apparently has
a whole list of things she recommends: a book called 52
Invitations to Grrreat Sex, two Nancy Friday books (My Secret
Garden and Forbidden Flowers), the movies 9 1/2 Weeks and Swept
Away, and two "instructional" tapes from the Better Sex video
series: Making Sex Fun and Advanced Sexual Techniques. Her final
suggestion, "renting pornography or whatever works," was
followed by the advice: "Women relate less to the hard porn,
while men tend to be turned on by visuals and Deep Throat." I
estimate that this conversation postponed her becoming a
grandmother by seven years.
I ordered Mom's recommendations from Amazon, which, upon
checkout, asked me if I wanted "to let my friends know about my
order." Amazon is as sensitive to my embarrassment as my mother.
Feeling brash, I began with the Advanced Sexual Techniques tape.
Even if I hadn't known that my mother had seen this barely veiled
porn tape, I would have been grossed out. The idea of showing
average-looking people having real sex sounds admirable until you
actually see bald, fat people from the '80s going at it like
quaaluded marsupials in bad lighting. While it made my lovely
wife Cassandra feel good about her body, it made me feel bad
about bodies in general. The academic experts' voice-overs
backfired to make sex seem even more animalistic and desperate.
Furthermore, the term advanced sexual techniques was being used
loosely. There was an entire scene on male masturbation. If
masturbating was advanced, I wondered what the simple sexual
techniques were. Rubbing up and down on someone's leg?
I threw the rest of the Amazon package into the garbageexcept
for the Nancy Friday books. At least once a week from when I was
13 until I turned 15, I used to remove My Secret Garden from the
family-room bookshelf, peruse the jaunty literary tales of
women's sexual fantasies and carefully replace the book in
exactly the same spot. Rereading the book, I realized that Friday
was the one responsible for my inability to judge what is
appropriate, by nonjudgmentally equating all sexual behavior. At
one point, Friday writes that not thinking about bestiality when
seeing a large animal is "like looking at a racing car and
ignoring the thrill of speed." As far as heating up a marriage,
this woman is the whole spice rack.
Friday may be the only smart person to take sexuality seriously,
the only one who could give me marital tips without all that
cuteness and overanalysis that depress me by outing just how
difficult it is for most couples to communicate. But
unfortunately, Friday is the wife of my boss's boss, Time Inc.
editor-in-chief Norman Pearlstine. A smarter man would not call
her and confess her role in shaping my sexuality. Then again, a
smarter man wouldn't have called his mom for sex advice.
Friday told me I was "funny," which I was psyched on until she
told me I was "self-accepting," at which point I realized she
didn't know what she was talking about. But she did have some
great sex advice. She thought the books of "sex coupons" and
grrreat invitations I saw on Amazon were stupid. "The minute you
start playing games with sex, what do you do the next night? If
it works, she is going to say, 'What do you have in mind next?'"
Just the idea of that kind of pressure scared me, mostly because
it sounded suspiciously like tricking me into foreplay. Instead,
Friday suggested that I read Cassandra some of the stories from
her book that had given me the most Aristotelian catharsis in my
youth. She even suggested that, as my wife's birthday gift, I
read them to her while I was naked.
Page 1 of 2 1 | 2
Next > >
|