I Know I’ve Had Orgasms That Chan­ged Me

November 6th, 2009 § 0

A friend of mine who does not like jazz – espe­cially anything that has a saxophone in it – told me once about a con­ver­sa­tion she and her ex-husband, a serious jazz-lover, had over din­ner with a cou­ple, the male half of which also loved jazz, while the female half felt simi­larly to my friend. This second woman defi­ned her dis­like by saying something along the lines of, “I don’t need to sit and lis­ten to a bunch of men mas­tur­ba­ting,” a refe­rence both to the empha­sis in jazz on the impro­vi­sed solo and to the fact that most jazz musi­cians – or maybe most well-known jazz musi­cians – seem to be men. My friend said she felt an imme­diate click of right­ness when her din­ner guest made this sta­te­ment, which led to a long dis­cus­sion about the com­pa­ri­son bet­ween music and sex, bet­ween impro­vi­sa­tion and solo sex – though, of course, jazz impro­vi­sa­tion is not usually done in soli­tude. I have writ­ten elsewhere about the con­nec­tion I made early on in my own sexual awa­ke­ning bet­ween the orches­tra­ting of sexual plea­sure during love­ma­king and music, but what my friend’s story made me think about was how, say, a cer­tain kind of jazz solo, where the musi­cian explo­res subtle nuan­ces of melody and har­mony, or the various ways in which you can slice up a beat to create dif­fe­rent rhyth­mic tex­tu­res, corres­ponds to the kind of mas­tur­ba­tion in which you use the plea­sure you are giving your­self to explore your­self, either through the fan­ta­sies that arise while you mas­tur­bate or through the dif­fe­rent kinds of awa­re­ness your solo love­ma­king gives you of your own body; and then I thought about how rock solos or blues solos or the large solo con­certs that Keith Jarrett once gave all have an ana­log in mas­tur­ba­tion, from the kind that is just a release of sexual ten­sion to the kind that is an affir­ma­tion in deep sad­ness and/or joy – and/or the entire range of emo­tions it is pos­si­ble to feel during sex, which means pretty much all the emo­tions of which human beings are capa­ble – of the fact that you are alive, which for me is what defi­nes the sound of the blues, to the kind that is large and com­plexly moti­va­ted and that you may never fully understand.

Mas­tur­ba­tion is, as all sex is, a wor­king through of who we are and how we feel about our­sel­ves, of what we wish for, of what we wish to avoid, of the his­tory of our bodies, of everything that makes us human in the capa­city of our bodies to expe­rience that huma­nity; and there is a way in which sex is the crea­tion of a sym­bol of that huma­nity: in the plea­su­res we move through on our way to orgasm, not because orgasm is the only and neces­sary goal of sex – though in mas­tur­ba­tion orgasm usually is the point – but because each orgasm, whether we are cons­cious of it or not, is something to which we have to give mea­ning, and mea­ning requi­res his­tory, not only the spe­ci­fic his­tory of the sen­sa­tions that brought you to this par­ti­cu­lar orgasm, but the lar­ger per­so­nal and cul­tu­ral his­tory that each of those sen­sa­tions taps into. I know I’ve had orgasms that chan­ged me. Some were soli­tary and some were sha­red, but all of them cap­tu­red a truth about myself that I nee­ded to face if I was going to grow, sexually and otherwise.

This sym­bo­lic aspect of sex – which may or may not be an accu­rate way of tal­king about these things, but which makes sense to me – reminds me as well of something I read a long time ago in Suzanne Langer’s book, Fee­ling and Form about how music is the sym­bo­lic repre­sen­ta­tion of the pro­cess of human emo­tion and that it is this sym­bol which the com­po­ser crea­tes on the page and that the per­for­mer plays into exis­tence when he or she per­forms; and so it occurs to me that sex, solo or other­wise, is the pla­ying into exis­tence of that part of our­sel­ves that is wai­ting to become, and some­ti­mes we will unders­tand what we are beco­ming in and through sex, and some­ti­mes sex is what opens us up to the fact that this unders­tan­ding is what we need to find.

So I am won­de­ring: What have peo­ple out there unders­tood? What have they found? Which are the orgasms that have chan­ged you?

Cross pos­ted on Alas.

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