Saturday, June 16, 2018

Sexual abstinence...whole-body mindfulness (Essay by Clara B. Jones)


Sexual Abstinence as a Form of Whole-Body Mindfulness

Clara B. Jones

Simone de Beauvoir, French philosopher and intellectual, claimed that women are not born but made. I begin the present article about my non-linear path to Sexual Abstinence with a self-disclosure: my self-presentation as a woman holds a very high position among my most valued personal concerns. My focus on womanhood as a category of traits is, in effect, not so much an expression of sensuality in relation to the spaces that I inhabit, but, to a greater degree, controlled projection of my own personal statements, including, my own voice.

Some philosophers have claimed that most lives are boring, not worthy of conversion into personal stories for others’ consumption. I am inclined to agree, primarily because confessional postures seem, often, to reflect self-absorption, if not overt demands for attention. In the present personal statement, I attempt to devise a middle-ground between reserve and arrogance. A concern persists that recounting elements of my life experience will prove uninteresting and disappointing to the reader. There is, also, concern that, following American Indian proscription, sharing private and individual matters violates my own relationship to self. It seems appropriate, however, that sharing personal experiences is productive and justified to the extent that the individual material can be framed to impart lessons with interest, possibly, significance, to others. As a modest goal, this essay is intended to employ the voice of one adult to encourage other adults to consider the topic, sexual abstinence, in novel ways.

Coming of Age and Sexual Power
Many young women of my generation married as teenagers with conventional expectations about family and their roles in it. I did not have customary expectations, but I was certain that I could live as my maternal grandmother, Clara, had, a hausfrau devoted to husband, children, and hearth. I had not yet read the French intellectual, Francoise Giroud and had not yet tested my capacities for independent living. Indeed, the previous choices seemed remote because I had successfully repressed their possibilities and, in particular, had no experience with the skill sets required for personal agency as well as for self-empowerment and self-confidence. Alternatives to marriage seemed, ultimately, more unsettling than the lack of emotion I felt for my new husband who, generously, had offered marriage as I faced expulsion in my second year of college. I imagined a promising and fruitful future, and, besides, our children would be physically appealing and bright.

Knowledge and Sexual Power
At the time of my marriage, I considered myself a social inferior, unable to act with self-definition, to confront living from a “grown-up” posture. It was my fate to marry, to become pregnant with three children within five years, depending, like a parasite, on another’s largesse. Martin E.P. Seligman’s “learned helplessness” experiments demonstrated a correlation between perceived self-potency and freedom. While a woman’s life is embedded in a social network, she can learn, like Seligman’s research subjects, to escape socially-imposed constraints. A female can combine and recombine physical, biological, social, and spiritual pathways towards a future that minimizes poor choices and co-dependence, towards a life that maximizes individual accountability. Helpless states, familiar to many women, may, also, promote social phobias and fear of evaluation by others as well as fear of success. I continue to experience social anxiety as a set of debilitating emotions, leading me to avoid many situations or to tolerate a significant amount of discomfort. .

Power Between Sexual Partners
Men and women write differentially of relationships, men with a concern for the universal and the instrumental, women for “local” relationships. Compare Wordsworth and Adrienne Rich (“I am present and local, but, I know my power.”). Compare Flaubert and Virginia Woolf (“Nothing was so solid, so living, so hard, red, hirsute and virile as these two bodies for miles and miles of sea and sandhill.”). As a graduate student in upstate New York, no book impressed me more than Giroud’s autobiography, I Give You My Word. Her talent for communicating time, emotion, and place and her own role in it revealed a woman wounded by love yet open to future experience, friendship, and change.

My copy of the volume became worn as several other female students read it, each of us making comments in the margins with a pen of a different color. We were captivated by this singular personality, who, from 1974 to 1977, served France as the first Minister for Women’s Affairs and Culture in Valéry Giscard D’Estang’s cabinet. Writing about Alma Mahler in 1988, Giroud observed, “No, she was certainly not just anybody, this young woman around whom men never ceased to buzz. Alma had the feeling that she really was a perfect example of a superior human being. This lofty idea of herself, so rare in women, this satisfied awareness of herself, was one of her striking characteristics.” Giroud might have been describing herself. This virtual absence of female archetypes in my life became a sign of my early self, alone and precocious, and emotionally impoverished. I am less in awe of Giroud today, but I am grateful for her role, or, my idea of it, in my psychological progression to womanhood, self-confidence, and, currently, sexual abstinence.

Sexual Abstinence Violates Cultural Norms
The power of conformity inhibits impulses to define, to name, to act contrary to group norms. As if characterizing females, Shelby Steele wrote of conformity that “amounts to a self-protective collectivism” leading to a “diminished sense of possibility”. Steele advocated “pushing the collective identity out of our individual space” in order to utilize the classically American and middle class profile of “hard work, self-reliance, initiative, property ownership, family ties, and so on”. A problem for many females (including myself), then, is the problem of personal identity.

I recalled Hans Christian Andersen’s, The Emperor’s New Clothes, while reading Steele’s book. The fairy tale, also, was a lesson about conformity. The Emperor’s subjects complied with the opinions of others, praising his non-existent robes, as women in the United States comply with traditional roles, socialization, authorities (parents, partners, labor defined by gender). The subjects of Shelby Steele’s essay conform to a political and social agenda demanding a construction of reality in which women are perpetually victimized by a hostile, dominant culture. In both accounts, individuals modify their beliefs, attitudes, values, and behaviors to match those of people and institutions influencing them. As if speaking of the status of women, Thomas Henry Huxley stated, “If individuality has no play, society does not advance; if individuality breaks out of all bounds, society perishes.” The foregoing ideas highlight states-of-being and challenges facing many women who may envision alternative paths to “compose” their lives.

Costs and Benefits of Sexual Abstinence
Sexual abstinence has offered me opportunities for reflection about my own relationship to self, my relationship to a potential partner, my relationship to my internal and external spaces. As a result, I have acquired the tools to evaluate these relations in an individual stimulating my aroused physical states, feelings, emotions, and thoughts, including, impulses to act on them. These processes of mindful presence facilitate my guided search for quiet observation, whole presence, uninterrupted concentration, and measured focus. These intentional exercises are not, in themselves, a search for “balance”, but, rather, a search for experiential symmetry and congruence, including, harmony of spirit, inside myself and with another person. Extending the philosophy of Perceptual Psychologist, Eleanor J. Gibson, these paths strongly influence my decisions to respond or not to respond to a potentially intimate relationship, however defined.

Since the 1980s, the aforementioned intentions have been immeasurably guided by a meditation technique, and by Paramahansa Yogananda’s teachings. I do not think that meditation or yoga is a necessary or sufficient element for intentional sexual abstinence. I do believe, however, that a necessary, though, not, sufficient, skill for women choosing sexual abstinence as part of their natural toolkit is the capacity to say, “No.”, calmly and believably, to herself and another person, even when strong emotions propel her to a different response. In my experience, this skill required 2 years of conscious and aware self-instruction and self-care, a learning program initiated by loving communication from a valued female acquaintance rather than by subjective insight. The narrative outlined in this essay has comprised multiple stages, leading to intentionality combined with serendipity whereby I surrendered fear of speaking with my own voice, an empowering process yielding self-confidence and, sometimes, overconfidence, a decidedly undesirable consequence.

From my perspective, other costs have resulted from my choices to abstain from sexual congress in any form. Perhaps the disadvantage of greatest concern to me is the degree to which that program requires, not only, physical, but, also, emotional detachment from a potential partner. Realization of emotional and mental intimacy is fundamental to friendship that, at my advanced age of 69, is not as challenging a task as it might have been when I was, for instance, 35 or 45. Nonetheless, I offer the idea that sexual abstinence need not be viewed as a long-term or, even, a mid-range state, but, rather, as an option used to enhance self-exploration and self-agency, similar to the goals of a transformative spiritual retreat. I am not advocating sexual abstinence, per se, but asserting, simply, that, combined with self-pleasure in many forms, this process of conscious and aware forbearance has significantly enhanced my abilities to heighten whole-body mindfulness and time devoted to life events other than sex. This arrangement constitutes the self-presentation that has worked for me for 14 years.

It must be obvious to readers that the skills detailed in this essay require deliberation as well as problem-solving. Many women are likely to view these characteristics as undesirable if they suppress spontaneity and, simply, fun. These issues require adjustment to individual personalities, temperaments, styles, and other factors, but I don’t consider these challenges oppositional to a sexually abstinent lifestyle. To the contrary, challenges can be motivating and intellectually, as well as, experientially, stimulating. It is neat, for example, to redefine one’s expressions of sexuality via individual styles, in, for example, clothing, home design, food, and other civilized alternatives.
Sexual abstinence as a lifestyle will not appeal to everyone. However, the option might be viewed as a new set of possibilities, enhancing a woman’s capacities for intimacy in a variety of forms. In essence, “Sex and the City” folkways and decisions may have their place as precursors to sexual activities, but, so might emotional restraint, reflection, and periods of information-gathering benefit our long-term expressions of pleasure.

Suggested Readings
Giroud F, Lévy B-H (1993) Women and men: a philosophical conversation. Boston: Little, Brown & Company (English translation, 1995, by ©Richard Miller)
Koch PB, Weis DL (eds.) (2000) Sexuality in America: understanding our sexual values and behaviour. New York: Continuum
Rothblum ED (1994) Transforming lesbian sexuality. Psychology of Women Quarterly 18, 627-641
Sobo EJ, Bell S (eds.) (2001) Celibacy, culture, and society: the anthropology of sexual abstinence. Madison, WI: University of Wisconsin Press

Originally published in WNC Woman.

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