When
I was 12, my Mum decided to give me the ‘facts of life’ –Yes! the ‘facts’.
After the mechanical details she added an extraordinary admonishment ‘if a
woman or a girl asks you to do this with her, you say No!’
Dad
just drew up his newspaper, so no comment from him, so I checked out these
revelations of the mechanics of sex at school, some disputed my Mum’s account
in favour of the bellybutton hypothesis, but that did not hold for long, and a
consensus soon settled around the conclusion- ‘Yes you put your willie into her
fanny –but then what?’
When
I told my friends my Mum’s ethical rider, they looked astonished ‘what is the
point then if you’re not supposed to do it’. But it stuck and it wasn’t until I
was 22 and away from the UK in a kibbutz in Israel, that an uncomplicated Swiss
female, showed me how the mechanics actually worked and insisted that we didn’t
have to be married to do this.
That
was it; I was a fan of penetrative sex with a woman, regardless of marital
status. I was also a fan of European women, it seemed such a direct approach
hadn’t crossed the channel, imagine my surprise then, when I returned home a
year later to discover that a revolution seemed to have occurred. British girls
were now up for it as well.
Or
was it my mind had part-cemented Mum’s declaration; her contractual demand for
me to refuse sex, only actually applied in the UK?
Once
Eros was tasted abroad, Mum’s ethics were put aside. It was too damn
pleasurable, it was in fact bloody fantastic; I was a committed fan of lustful
relations with women.
And
there were those I fell in love with, and of those, some would, some wouldn't.
The beautiful girlfriend I had before I went to Israel, kicked me out of bed
when I tried to fondle her breasts ‘How dare you!!’ Kissing and cuddling
through the night in the same bed was fine, in fact demanded, but none of the
dirty stuff. Not until at least we were engaged.
Customs
and practice, women looking after their reproductive rights, preserving their
virginity for the one they will eventually marry –all reasonable positions.
After all, we men are only after one thing, but some are romantics, and will not
push it, (so to speak), but most would dump their newly acquired girlfriends,
if they didn't put out.
As
I went through my twenties, love, romance and sex were the main contemplations,
the main desires, the most constant obsession, how to get it, then how to keep
it, without being ‘tied down’. But my first marriage happened anyway, although
helpfully, neither of us wanted kids, we had both strayed, had separate social
lives in our separate social work social networks. When she left, I was
astonished to learn that in the ten years we’d managed to stay together she’d
had six affairs to my one. Damn.
My
second marriage proved better in many ways, the sex was far better, we had
kids, we stayed faithful to each other, we felt our love deeply, and we were
soul mates. But even the most promising ‘happy ever afters’ have to deal with
the vicissitudes of a long term relationship. Twenty two years in and I
discovered Twitter, and through that I had in fact, unsown oats. There was a
need, (or just a want?) -To have an
extra- marital affair. But while I had an inner block to do that in reality, Twitter
afforded the opportunity to do this in the virtual, at a distance of thousands
of miles, as well as with local married and single women.
So
on Twitter, I had become a minor ‘Don Juan’, a serial adulterer, having only
emotional affairs in the first year, then subsequently sext, phone sex, involving
several relationships running concurrently. My mother’s admonition was so dead
and buried it had been transported to the centre of the Earth, and held there
with gravitational certainty, that no matter the ‘wrongness’ of these affairs, my
Twitter partners in sin, had also put aside any moral concerns, whether married
or single they wanted what I wanted, romance, love and sex.
But
in fact most on Twitter have been lovely friendships, an exchange of minds, of
poetry, a knowing without saying that this was enough. Only rarely the romance,
that was a crushness, falling into the pit of obsessional ‘love’ with all its
bitter sweet, helter- skelter, red- hot, green jealousy, and exhausting hours
of obsessing the relationship.
My
wife found out about an important affair I was having, but then I fell into a
depression, and came out to find that she too had taken my lead, but on a
different media platform (yeah, Facebook). It prompted us to look at our
marriage, realise that in our relentless life pattern of work and child rearing
we had both changed. The unspoken contract had needed to be spoken anew. And so
we have.
Perhaps
my case is a lucky one, my partner and I have stayed together when many
divorces and separations have been blamed on social media. Twitter followers
have flown thousands of miles to meet their crushes, in some places having an
affair on twitter is grounds for divorce, in ‘Second Life’ the story of the
woman that divorced her husband when discovering his secret bigamous life
there.
‘Are
we humans or are we dancers…?’
There
is the dark side of Twitter.
I
once had a crush on someone from somewhere in mid USA. An ex- soldier, she was hard
and finally brutal in her rejection of me, but then her background her apparent
emotional chaos, her promise to evict her boyfriend should I get over there,
then finally exiting abruptly from Twitter proclaiming ‘You’re not my type, I’ve
discovered’
Her
life? Barely scratched the surface, but through her I discovered that every
year, 25,000 American women soldiers are sexually abused, with little apparent
redress on their abusers. In the UK recently the case of a woman military
police corporeal, who killed herself when her two attackers were never
prosecuted.
The
ugly dark side of Twitter, fucktards abuse DM access, harass, even attempt to
blackmail on the basis of images shared in good faith. Pose as young handsomes
when they are anything but, some posing as women, some women as men. Perhaps
Twitter should come with a warning, the worst of men here, comingle with the
best, so discern and discriminate, because it’s very difficult to get the
slimeballs to cease and desist.
Are
we men the problem?
War
often brings out the worst in men, some ‘ordinary’ chaps will take the
opportunity to rape, presumably because they can get away with it, or that the
effect of combat shatters what moral control, that only works in a peace time
setting. Men are dangerous. We are. We start wars, we visit hideous punishments
on each other, also on women children, sick and older civilians.
Twitter
can be dangerous. Here are un reconstructed monsters, like pirates, they raid,
hurt and abuse, with impunity it seems.
And
also it can be wonderful. In the three years, I’ve had my emotions hammered
formed charmed, worked like raw steel on an anvil. In a very real sense, having
serial crush affairs on Twitter, has and still is like being in an emotional
gymnasium.
But
friendships can turn into love, or they can happily remain in a friendship
zone. One of the dyad may want to change the deal toward hotter transactions or
remain unrequited. I know, of one example where two twitter accounts, met here,
then married in real life.
Has
social media, by increasing such opportunities, corrupted people, undermined
social morals, promoted such amorous behaviours that otherwise wouldn’t be
performed in real life?
Durkheim
found that migrants coming from the country to Paris, changed their faith
abruptly at the train station –a case of –
‘how
you gonna keep them down on the farm, now that they’ve seen Paris?’
Substitute
Paris for Social media, and there you have it.
“They
fuck you up your Mum and Dad” (Phillip Larkin), at least mine taught and
modelled me an non-abusive loving relationship, they never strayed, they got
bored with each other, but when Dad got ill with cancer they renewed their
closeness, Mum never recovered his passing, but found joy in mine and my
sister’s children.
But
I was never like them. I lusted and flirted, while refraining from physical
affairs, I dreamt of them. I have burnt throughout my life, whether single or
married, the desire to have as much sex as possible, but even now from her
grave my mother’s admonition (say No!) has force over my libido, but in some
sort of virtual sexual sublimation, Twitter has helped me side step that.
There
is no guarantee of anything, but I guess if my partner and I can navigate the
opportunities to explore our promiscuous sides, then all is not lost, and what
is avoided is the end of our relationship from extreme boredom and frustration,
avoiding a life together in a quiet desperation, something of the lot of my
Folks, but I choose different. Sorry Mum, maybe you would have liked Twitter
too? Forgive your son his difference..
So brilliantly said! For some reason, Twitter is a strong conduit for energy and emotions. We seem to all dig deeper to express ourselves profoundly because it's such little room for text. I too had crushes and love on there. It became almost healing at times. The friends and loves I met on there has changed my life. Kudos my friend for putting this so honest and eloquently.
ReplyDeleteI am very grateful to you Reine, clearly your experience is very similar to mine, it is great your acceptance of my 'maleness' I fear others will judge, but that's what public statements are for, my 'gift' I guess. Thanks again Reine:)) xxx
ReplyDelete