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Truth or dare
Maggie
Gallagher
November 12, 2003
Can we get honest about sex? I know it seems
all we do is talk openly and honestly about sex. But while we
blather on about it on "Oprah," there is one set of sexual truths we
have all rather studiously repressed: gender. For 30 years, elite
women have insisted we all talk and act as if we believed in
androgyny (or the idea that there are no natural differences between
men and women). Which, mind you, is a very different matter than
equality (which is the idea that social institutions should do
justice to both men and women).
Until now. The covers of two esteemed New York
magazines have announced an end to all that sexual repression.
First, The New York Times Magazine does a cover story on educated,
successful women who want to get off the fast track to raise their
own children. Why? Not patriarchy, not lack of good child care, but
because, well, many women like caring for their babies. Corporate
jobs can be a bore, and babies have a way of making their own
opinions of day care known that go straight to the hearts of many
mothers.
The top two administrators at Princeton
University are now women, and one of them muses that she sort of
hoped that the ambitious would marry nurturers without regard to
gender. But it hasn't worked out that way. Ambitious women marry
ambitious men. Why? Because ambitious women are sexually attracted
to ambitious men, not nurturers.
"Don't you know that a man being rich is like a
girl being pretty?" purred Lorelie Lee. "It isn't everything, but my
goodness, it certainly helps." Or if not rich, a brilliant
intellectual, or an aspiring artist, or at minimum a big, strong
fireman who rescues people from death.
Such is the heretofore unspeakable sexual truth
now blaring from the cover of New York magazine. "Power Wives: What
Happens to Marriage When SHE Brings Home the Bacon?"
It's not pretty. We are not talking here about
co-breadwinner families, but marriages where women make so much more
than their husbands that the husbands basically give up on the
breadwinning thing. The result is some pretty unhappy wives.
The first thing to go is sex. Anna, whose
marriage had once been "very sexual," was blunt about the
consequences for her. "Sex is not a problem for him. It was a
problem for me. When someone seems like a child, it's not that
attractive." It doesn't help that the less men do in the workplace,
the less they do around the house, too. (Yes, there is research on
this: Full-time employed husbands do more housework than unemployed
men.)
The ugliest marriage profiled is Emily's, a
senior sales exec married to a struggling photographer. "When Emily
comes home, she doesn't always want to be the boss," the magazine
reports. "But she says her husband no longer has the authority to
take over. 'I want somebody to take that power role away from me,'
she explained. '(But) I'm not going to pay the bills -- I feel like
his mother -- and then come home and (perform a sexual act
unmentionable in a family newspaper, although not apparently in New
York magazine).'"
The sexual truth is that women (unless they're
lesbians) are attracted to men. And masculinity is not like
femininity. It is a performance. It has to be won -- and it can be
lost. How to create a strong sense of masculinity that serves rather
than oppresses women is the problem feminists never solved because
until now, they dared not even acknowledge that it exists.
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