Written by Macaela Mackenzie, for Glamour. Originally published on September 24, 2019.
Sexual pleasure is power. So why the hell is it so hard to talk about?
For the past several weeks, whenever anyone—friend, parent, therapist, in-law—has asked me which topic I’m working on these days at Glamour, I’ve taken a deep breath, looked them in the eye, and said: female pleasure.
There have been a lot of awkward silences.
We’re more sex positive than ever as a culture. But we still haven’t erased some fundamental wrongs: women’s bodies are still policed, sex education is still lacking, and talking about sex still carries a stigma. “We have never, ever, in the entire history of the world, been enabled to bring the female lens to bear on sexuality, and the world is a poorer place for it,” says Cindy Gallop, founder of Make Love Not Porn.
“Female pleasure really is considered less of a priority,” says Jennifer Wider, M.D., women’s-health expert and spokesperson for sexual-wellness brand K-Y. (The first systematic mapping of pleasure in the female brain didn’t occur until 2011—decades behind the scientific study of men’s sexual pleasure.) Cue the countless headlines about the orgasm gap—a term which sums up the chasm several studies have found between the number of orgasms women and men in heterosexual relationships have. But the gap goes beyond the bedroom. Even in an era where porn stars make political headlines, female pleasure is conspicuously absent from the conversation—even in places where sexual wellness should be right on the top of the list of discussion topics. “When we go to the gynecologist, we’re asked, ‘Are you sexually active? Do you want birth control? And do you want to be tested for STDs?’ says Cindy Eckert, CEO of Sprout Pharmaceuticals and the woman behind female-sexual-desire drug Addyi. Rarely does whether or not you actually enjoyyour sex life come up.
The stigmas surrounding women and sex—especially good sex—run deep. So deep that the very idea of what it means to have good sex is murky, filtered by unrealistic portrayals of women on screen who often orgasm seductively after five seconds of penetration.
The real definition of good sex is simpler, and yet so much more complex at the same time. “Good sex is sex that makes you feel great,” says Gallop. “I don’t mean as in ‘Oh, you just had a phenomenal orgasm and you feel great about that.’ What I mean is literally how comfortable you feel in your sexual skin. I’m talking about feeling at one with yourself as a sexual being, feeling perfectly at ease with how you express yourself sexually, feeling accepted in every possible respect, and therefore feeling really great about sex and all its manifestations.”
Good sex, in other words, is sex that makes you feel like Beyoncé. “There is no objective, outside measure of that at all,” Gallop says. “There is no formula. There is no rule book.”
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