Future of Sex
It's just mechanics; Viagra is just the start: we'll soon
have pills that make you feel deep love and video games that give
good vibrations. Welcome to the masturbatory society.
Is your sex life normal? The question was raised recently on the
Oprah Winfrey Show. Tell us, the show asked its 20 million viewers, what
turns you on, what turns you off, and
what makes good sex.
HealthyPlace.com Video
The Future of Sex
Sex is changing and diversifying in this brave new world. Does sex have a
future?
View with
Real Player. |
|
|
The problem with such questions is that there are no "normal" answers.
The normal is problematic because our ideas about sex have changed
fundamentally. What constitutes normal is constantly refurbished. Its
boundaries shift rapidly, and continue to shift. So what was abnormal
yesterday--say, pornography--becomes normal today. And what is shunned today
(say paedophilia) may just as easily become normal tomorrow.
One huge jump was provided by
Viagra. In less than six years since the
impotence pill came on the market,
Viagra and its competitors, Levitra and
Cialis, have transformed sexual norms and practices. As Meika Loe argues in
The Rise of Viagra (New York University Press), it has redefined the concept
of normal and changed the language of sex.
From the beginning, this was a treatment branded and marketed as normal.
Impotence was called "erectile dysfunction", or simply ED--a common
condition, as the football legend Pele assured us in TV ads, but not normal.
Moreover, it did not arise from psychological causes or physical damage;
rather, it was a simple medical condition rectified by a pill. Suddenly,
drug company surveys discovered that more than half the US adult male
population suffered from ED; figures for Europe were not far behind.
So if you
can't get it up because you're pissed, stressed out, simply not
in the mood or no longer find your partner attractive, you are actually
suffering from a disease. And like all diseases, it must be cured. The cure
is to swallow a pill and have sex no matter what, any where, any time,
whenever. This has now become the norm.
HealthyPlace.com Audio
The Science of Love
For the first time,
researchers have located the place in the brain where those
love-struck fevered feelings take root. The neural profile
when you fall madly in love is similar to the profile when
you feel thirst, hunger or when you crave a drug. And where
the passionate romance "hot spot" is on the right side of
the brain, sexual desire is on the left. Hear about the
latest research on understanding the biology of falling into
love.
Listen with
windows media player. |
|
|
Viagra is another step in stripping sex of all its complexity. Sex has
been reduced to a simple question: for men, "how big?"; for women, "how
long?". Combine these conundrums with other features of a market economy,
such as availability on demand, choice, flexibility to mix'n'match, and we
have new definitions of sex and love
and of what it means to be
human.
Today, to be normal, humans have sex right up to their last breath. It's
the way to go. Sex is no longer the indulgence of the young. Nowadays, it is
people over 50 who are having the most sex. With demographic shifts, high
divorce rates and early retirement, the erstwhile golden generation of
Sixties swingers who let it all hang out are now the "silver singles" (as
they are called in America). The preoccupations of their youth have been
sustained through their later years by medical enhancements. The wet dreams
of 60-year-olds, who turned on to chemical enhancement in the Sixties, are a
manifest example of future normality for us all.
What Viagra actually treats is loss of male power. In a confusing,
depersonalising world busy reassigning status, regendering the social order,
manipulating the ever-increasing demands of a commodified existence, sexual
potency is the last bastion. Men, who have lost status and power almost
everywhere, from workplace to home, must repair to the bedroom. Only there
can they find the redemption of their true nature.
However, in an age of sexual equality, men cannot be left alone with
their predicament. The other half of humanity, too, finds it is not exempt
from malfunction. Just a few months ago, the disease "female sexual
dysfunction" hit the headlines. But female sexuality being what it is, women
probably need something more than a pill. Simple enhanced blood flow, as
laboratory tests have shown, is not good enough. So a female Viagra won't do
the job as well as a vibrator or a dildo--soon to be widely and cheaply
available from a Boots near you. A vibrator outperforms even a man on
Viagra.
More serious aids to female performance are in the pipeline. In the next
few years, patches and drugs to enhance vaginal lubrication and sensitivity
will become available. A US surgeon has already patented a pacemaker-sized
device which, implanted under the skin, triggers an orgasm. Last month,
clinical trials for the device were approved by the US Food and Drug
Administration. Within a decade, it will be normal for every woman to have a
perpetual orgasm whenever she wants it, wherever she needs it.
Love, too, will be available on demand. Recent research on love
suggests that it consists of three basic biochemical elements. First,
testosterone--which produces lust. Second, a group of amphetamine-like
chemicals (dopamine, noradrenaline and phenylethylamine) produces feelings
of euphoria that lead to infatuation. Third, if a relationship survives the
first two rushes, a new biochemical response emerges, based on oxytocin,
vasopressin and endorphins. This produces feelings of intimacy, trust and
affection. Pharmaceutical companies are currently working on this third
phase. So a "love pill" that modulates your subtler emotions and takes you
straight to deep feelings of intimacy, trust and affection is just over the
horizon. Science will fulfil the fairy tale. It will come up with a genuine
love potion.
continue
Written in 1/05. Last reviewed: 10/05
top ~
send page to
friend
|