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21 May

Parenpathetical

I endured ever-escalating physical and emotional abuse from Reginald Sleeth for over four years. I remember being literally afraid to move sometimes, whether he was watching me or not. I was hobbled by the knowledge that I could do something unexpectedly wrong at any time, and earn a harsh and ugly punishment. It wasn’t like walking on eggshells; it was like the air itself purred with the promise of invisible razor wire, hidden anywhere and everywhere.

I wanted to fade away, be smaller, tiny, unnoticeable. I wanted to disappear. I wanted to somehow become insignificant and non-threatening enough that he wouldn’t need to hurt me anymore. This was living in a kind of poverty of self. Nothing about me seemed to have substance in those years. Everything was transient and flimsy as his ever-changing moods.

When I finally left him, do you think it was because I’d dug down deep and found strength from a vital, indomitable place? Do you think I finally howled “ENOUGH!” to the universe, myself, and that floppy-haired sadist, showed him my back, and slammed the door on the terror that consumed me for so much of my youth? I wish. Want to know why I finally left him? Want to know what the real final straw was? I wasn’t getting enough sex.

Kind of.

I love sex. My sex drive is nigh maniacal. It was the one part of me that I couldn’t shut off, even when everything else was floating. Reginald, on the other hand, didn’t seem too interested in it beyond his ability to control me with it, which was considerable. He was my first everything: my first kiss, my first non-masturbatory orgasm, my first attempt at anal. Until I was well into my twenties, he meant sex to me, and that’s a powerful thing to a horndog like me.

Abusive relationships often function like an addiction, really. The euphoria of the love fable is followed by the punishment phase, which is like a withdrawal or a crash, like coming down off a high. It’s an ugly cycle that hooks you with the highs then slams you against the bottom. While you stay in your broken relationship, you try to get back to the high of feeling loved. I was a fragile, naive and sensitive teenage girl with the hormones of a teenage boy when I met Reginald, and to me the euphoric crest of our wave was always, from the very beginning, wrapped up in sex.

Before we had penis-in-vagina intercourse, he was an enthusiastic partner and lots of orgasms were had. But when we finally “did it”, it seemed like something shifted. I don’t know if he resented me for deflowering him or if by then he’d realized my will was broken down enough that he could control me in non-sexual ways, but little by little the sex dried up.

That’s when I started feeling like my sex drive was disgusting. That I, as a sexual being, was disgusting. Reginald told me as much, and in those days I believed what he told me. When I masturbated he accused me of “raping [my]self” and threw tantrums. I was base, mammalian, and greedy, and I was no longer worth touching.

The guilt was overpowering. I still shyly asked him for sex, but never pressured him into it. I didn’t want him to do something he didn’t want to. But even just wanting sex, I was suddenly repugnant. I even tried going on Prozac, chiefly to dampen my libido, but also because I sort of wanted to die and thought maybe I should do something about that besides, well, dying. But eventually I woke up one day and realized my high was gone. That was how I started gathering the strength to get away.

Despite therapy and personal reflection and triumph of the human spirit and being a basically happy and functional person (I like to think) I still have a few hangups. Maybe, possibly more than a few. I’ve mentioned before that I can’t flirt, don’t ask for things in bed, have trouble admitting that I’m attracted to someone, and am basically a great big chicken. I’m realizing that I’ve never really gotten over the feeling that my sex drive is disgusting and that I, as a sexual being, am disgusting. It’s so deeply internalized I don’t know how to shake it. Maybe I’ll always try to hide my sexual interest from people until they unmistakably initiate. Maybe I’ll always feel like I’m getting away with something when someone appears to be attracted to me. Maybe I’ll never really believe I’m worth touching. Maybe it’ll never be okay to want things.

And lately I’m getting really fucking sick of it.

  1. Mousie00
    May 21st, 2010 at 22:44 | #1

    Wow. That’s horrible. I wish I could make you feel better. In a small way I understand; I just recently asked an endocrinologist if there was a good way to reduce my sex drive, just because it badly outstrips my wife’s (she never tried to make me feel bad about it.) (There is not apparently a good way.) And my first wife didn’t really approve.

    I wonder why the idea that sex is disgusting and it’s best to minimise it keeps cropping up? The Bible flat-out contradicts the idea that there’s anything wrong with sex within marriage and implies the pace should be set by the hornier spouse (1 Corinthians 7:3-5), but the idea that it’s disgusting has appeared in churches again and again. Where does it come from?

    A strong drive is GOOD. Illegitimi non carborundum.

  2. quizzical pussy
    May 22nd, 2010 at 15:16 | #2

    @Mousie00 Just to clarify, I think that sex is a powerful, wondrous, and beautiful thing. I don’t think it’s disgusting at all. It’s possible (okay, probable) that Reginald did, but that’s not something that I internalized. Rather, I felt (and to some extent feel) like I was too disgusting to actively try to indulge my sex drive with other people, waiting instead to accommodate them as they wished. My ambivalence is not with sex, but with myself as someone worth having sex with. So yeah. Either way, it’s not all that fun or healthy an attitude.

    I think that perhaps many religions have framed sex as disgusting because it often comes so close to being a spiritual experience, and those institutions would like to be the only intermediary to those feelings, but that’s just a guess.

  3. May 22nd, 2010 at 20:17 | #3

    I don’t know if this is a helpful comment or not, but a lot of people who haven’t been abused think that way too. I’m not saying that Reginald had no effects on you, the guy was a bastard and you’re strong as fuck for taking back control of your life, but don’t write yourself off as “I’m damaged now” when these thoughts come up, because they may be wrong but they’re not crazy.

    If it helps I think you’re sexy as hell and I’d be nothing but flattered (and turned on) if you hit on me.

  4. quizzical pussy
    May 22nd, 2010 at 22:59 | #4

    @Holly Pervocracy This is a helpful comment! It’s always nice to get perspective and realize that my hangups aren’t too weird.

    Also, awwww I think you’re sexy too!

  5. May 23rd, 2010 at 15:01 | #5

    @quizzical pussy

    I think that perhaps many religions have framed sex as disgusting because it often comes so close to being a spiritual experience, and those institutions would like to be the only intermediary to those feelings, but that’s just a guess.

    I think it's also because big, established religions also were the institutions of social order in an age before birth control and in a time when marriages were based on social status first, economic benefit second, and love and affection maybe somewhere a distant third. Sex you get excited about is so likely not sex with your spouse (though I'm sure there was plenty of that going on too) that it's worth demonizing it all in order to maintain order…

  6. Sarah
    May 23rd, 2010 at 17:01 | #6

    Thank you for writing this. Thank you for your blog. It means so much to me that other people have had similar experiences to mine (what you wrote? could have been about my last relationship), even when I wouldn’t wish those experiences on anyone. Thank you.

  7. quizzical pussy
    May 23rd, 2010 at 19:36 | #7

    @LabRat That sounds like truth to me. As an aside, If I ever get married I sure as hell hope to be excited about sex with my spouse, but from what I know about pre-20th-century-or-so marriage, I doubt that there’s been a lot of that going on throughout history.

  8. quizzical pussy
    May 23rd, 2010 at 19:39 | #8

    @Sarah Part of why this blog exists is the fact that it helps me deal with some of the not-so-fun things I’ve experienced. I always felt that it would be an enormous bonus if someone else found reading about those experiences helpful, so your comment means a lot to me. Thank you so much!

  9. IDiom
    May 24th, 2010 at 21:41 | #9

    This post resonated with me. I second Sarah in saying thank you for writing this. It is gratifying to know that others have had similar experiences; though it is troubling to see that you still can’t shake the internalisation. It is strange to think that despite time I cannot find a way to move beyond the fear and self-hatred that seems to be so closely linked with sex, desire and self-loathing.

    Normally i’d turn to my favourite philosopher for an answer; however ‘What Would Nietzsche Do?’ just doesn’t cut it.

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