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Posts tagged: intimacy

How you choose to spend the irreplaceable hours of your life literally transforms you.

All relationships change the brain — but most important are the intimate bonds that foster or fail us, altering the delicate circuits that shape memories, emotions and that ultimate souvenir, the self.

[…]

Just consider how much learning happens when you choose a mate. Along with thrilling dependency comes glimpsing the world through another’s eyes; forsaking some habits and adopting others (good or bad); tasting new ideas, rituals, foods or landscapes; a slew of added friends and family; a tapestry of physical intimacy and affection; and many other catalysts, including a tornadic blast of attraction and attachment hormones — all of which revamp the brain.

When two people become a couple, the brain extends its idea of self to include the other; instead of the slender pronoun “I,” a plural self emerges who can borrow some of the other’s assets and strengths. The brain knows who we are. The immune system knows who we’re not, and it stores pieces of invaders as memory aids. Through lovemaking, or when we pass along a flu or a cold sore, we trade bits of identity with loved ones, and in time we become a sort of chimera. We don’t just get under a mate’s skin, we absorb him or her.

[…]

If you’re in a healthy relationship, holding your partner’s hand is enough to subdue your blood pressure, ease your response to stress, improve your health and soften physical pain. We alter one another’s physiology and neural functions.

However, it’s not all sub rosa. One can decide to be a more attentive and compassionate partner, mindful of the other’s motives, hurts and longings. Breaking old habits isn’t easy, since habits are deeply ingrained neural shortcuts, a way of slurring over details without having to dwell on them. Couples often choose to rewire their brains on purpose, sometimes with a therapist’s help, to ease conflicts and strengthen their at-one-ness.

[…]

During idylls of safety, when your brain knows you’re with someone you can trust, it needn’t waste precious resources coping with stressors or menace. Instead it may spend its lifeblood learning new things or fine-tuning the process of healing. Its doors of perception swing wide open. The flip side is that, given how vulnerable one then is, love lessons — sweet or villainous — can make a deep impression.


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This 3-part Venn diagram theorizes “sexuality,” “intimacy,” and “kink” as distinct entities that overlap at certain points. Sexuality contains “masturbation” and “casual encounters,” intimacy contains “cuddles” and “smooches,” and kink contains “non-sexual kink play.” The overlap of sexuality and kink creates “sexual kink,” the overlap of sexuality and intimacy creates “vanilla,” the overlap of intimacy and kink creates “chastity/service,” and the three overlap in the center to create a “full mix.”
There is so much wrong with this diagram and the post it accompanied, but it’s nevertheless worth reading:
mooserrific:

vanillaedge:

From Dishevelled Domina: Kink, Sexuality, and Intimacy

Take home message for me:

As members of a kink community, we are particularly open with our sexual attitudes. We discuss sexual topics that are normally taboo, and we revel in our kink with each other. Why aren’t we so open about intimacy though? Why do we still reserve that for the special at-home times or our semi-private after-care corners?
Intimacy is so important to me, my sexuality, and my kink – I expected the local groups to be a bit more open about that kind of stuff. I expect it to be better represented in the porn field. I find anything without to feel hollow and shallow. I was actually taken aback by how hidden that part of us is, and how absent it is from the public view, when attending local munches even.
Can’t we strive to do better?


I felt compelled to leave a comment:

As a personal exposition, this is probably a really valuable post. Good on you for writing and publishing it.
However, as written, this post has so many problems I don’t even know where to begin to unpack it. So I’ll start with the most glaring problem of all: not once in your entire post do you use the term “BDSM”, instead using “kink” to represent what is so obviously referring to the semi-public BDSM Scene. If you had simply replaced every occurrence of the term “kink” or “kinky” with the term “BDSM,” this post would be an order of magnitude better than it is.
As for further discussions of intimacy, I’ll simply encourage you to at least rethink if not totally drop the term “friends,” and to understand that the BDSM culture’s discourse expresses intimacy as consensual yet violative risk-taking (not happy-feeling-intimacy but scary-feeling-intimacy; think horror movies, not romantic comedies).
So intimacy, counter to your assertion, is actually visibly there at the munches and in the disgusting porn you and I both hate so much. It’s just that the BDSM community’s discourse makes the truly pathetic blunder of mistaking the representation of intimacy (the fashion, the scowls, the attitude) for intimacy itself.
The relationships BDSM’ers have become not with one another, but with their own fetishes.
Most of them love their whips and don’t know how to love the people on the other end.

I was asked to clarify, so I did:


[I]n real life, we have “kink” parties and “kink” munches and we don’t really use the BDSM term all that much.

And you want to be like the munches and parties you dislike…why, weezie? Are you part of this group you dislike? Is that why you write “we”? And if you are, why are you letting this groupthink determine your use of language, which is arguably the most powerful tool for change you have as a writer?
Your behavior seems self-defeating to me, and since I don’t believe you intend to sabotage your own effectiveness, I have to conclude you are instead simply writing without thinking.

How do you differ between the [“kink” and “BDSM”]?

*Sigh.* Read. Think. Watch. (Yes, these are the same links as before.)
I’ve seen SOME very rare moments of (“normal”) intimacy. I’ve seen loving looks, embraces, smooches, cuddles, and everything else I’d expect to see at “intimate” events… I’ve just seen it once or twice. I want more of THAT, whatever that was. :/
Same with porn: Almost all porn is devoid of feeling. However, Dishevelled Domina’s Tumblr Porn is amazing precisely because she hand-picks ones that convey feeling and respect in those intimate moments. I just wish it was easier to find more of it.

Intimacy is presented as scarce for reasons that are larger than the scope of the poisonous BDSM culture, so I would encourage you to forget about BDSM and focus instead on trying to discern intimacy itself. Your question about “where do friends fit in” betrays the fact that your analysis does not actually center on intimacy but rather on the crude representations of it—in this case, the mirage of “friendship” as a stand-in for emotional closeness. In other words, your appraisal falls so short because it suffers from the identical phenomenological misapplication as the BDSM community’s discourse; I think it is laughable at best to analyze others’ legitimate failures (as you have rightfully done to the BDSM community) with a critique that suffers from the same failure as that which you are critiquing.
Forget BDSM, “kinky,” and “vanilla.” Forget “friends,” “lovers,” and “play partners.” None of these words are useful in discerning intimate relations versus superficial ones. Focus on relationships instead.
You seem attracted to more or less the same kind of imagery as I am (I also like Disheveled Domina’s Tumblr), but you aren’t analyzing intimacy objectively, you’re calling the-thing-you-like “intimacy” when in fact it is simply “normal”—your word—manifestations of intimacy. If you continue to fail to recognize that distinction, your approach will at best pathologize non-lovey-dovey expressions of intimacy—expressions that the BDSM community’s discourse emphasizes—because that approach fails to acknowledge that “lovey-dovey” stuff like “cuddling” or “smooching” (also your words) are in no way intrinsically intimate at all.

And after I was asked yet again, I clarified more:


Could you sum up the difference between “kink” and “BDSM” real quick?

Sure, weezie.
“Kink” is to slut as BDSM is to intercourse. Someone who’s “slutty” is simply someone who is more promiscuous than you. Someone who’s “kinky” is simply someone whose sex acts entail less normative behavior than yours.
The term “kink” is used vastly differently depending on whether the person is a practitioner of non-normative sexual behaviors. For example, anal sex is “kinky” to a “sheltered” college girl in Idaho; the same is not true of sex-magic practitioners, for they think “kink” equals BDSM, which is false. (For the most part, so do polyamory community members and, of course, the entire BDSM culture.) Therefore, “kink” is not the same as BDSM. Treating the words as if they are synonyms, however, promotes misunderstanding between the two groups of people commonly, though equally inaccurately, referred to as “vanilla” and “kinky.” Thus, it is a dangerous, self-defeating thing to do.

I don’t yet have the proper vocabulary to be verbally competing at your level. I ask that we instead look at the ideas presented herein, and respond to them. Not the words I use, but the ideas I convey.
As time moves on, my words will get better.

I don’t feel like we’re competing, so it’s telling to hear you say that.
In any event, you know how to reach me when your words “get better.” ‘Til then, good luck on your journey. You’ll hear from me most often when I think you’re doing something harmful to the information landscape of topics I’m passionate about—like using “kink” and “BDSM” as synonyms. It’s not personal, I promise. :)

This 3-part Venn diagram theorizes “sexuality,” “intimacy,” and “kink” as distinct entities that overlap at certain points. Sexuality contains “masturbation” and “casual encounters,” intimacy contains “cuddles” and “smooches,” and kink contains “non-sexual kink play.” The overlap of sexuality and kink creates “sexual kink,” the overlap of sexuality and intimacy creates “vanilla,” the overlap of intimacy and kink creates “chastity/service,” and the three overlap in the center to create a “full mix.”

There is so much wrong with this diagram and the post it accompanied, but it’s nevertheless worth reading:

mooserrific:

vanillaedge:

From Dishevelled Domina: Kink, Sexuality, and Intimacy

Take home message for me:

As members of a kink community, we are particularly open with our sexual attitudes. We discuss sexual topics that are normally taboo, and we revel in our kink with each other. Why aren’t we so open about intimacy though? Why do we still reserve that for the special at-home times or our semi-private after-care corners?

Intimacy is so important to me, my sexuality, and my kink – I expected the local groups to be a bit more open about that kind of stuff. I expect it to be better represented in the porn field. I find anything without to feel hollow and shallow. I was actually taken aback by how hidden that part of us is, and how absent it is from the public view, when attending local munches even.

Can’t we strive to do better?

I felt compelled to leave a comment:

As a personal exposition, this is probably a really valuable post. Good on you for writing and publishing it.

However, as written, this post has so many problems I don’t even know where to begin to unpack it. So I’ll start with the most glaring problem of all: not once in your entire post do you use the term “BDSM”, instead using “kink” to represent what is so obviously referring to the semi-public BDSM Scene. If you had simply replaced every occurrence of the term “kink” or “kinky” with the term “BDSM,” this post would be an order of magnitude better than it is.

As for further discussions of intimacy, I’ll simply encourage you to at least rethink if not totally drop the term “friends,” and to understand that the BDSM culture’s discourse expresses intimacy as consensual yet violative risk-taking (not happy-feeling-intimacy but scary-feeling-intimacy; think horror movies, not romantic comedies).

So intimacy, counter to your assertion, is actually visibly there at the munches and in the disgusting porn you and I both hate so much. It’s just that the BDSM community’s discourse makes the truly pathetic blunder of mistaking the representation of intimacy (the fashion, the scowls, the attitude) for intimacy itself.

The relationships BDSM’ers have become not with one another, but with their own fetishes.

Most of them love their whips and don’t know how to love the people on the other end.

I was asked to clarify, so I did:

[I]n real life, we have “kink” parties and “kink” munches and we don’t really use the BDSM term all that much.

And you want to be like the munches and parties you dislike…why, weezie? Are you part of this group you dislike? Is that why you write “we”? And if you are, why are you letting this groupthink determine your use of language, which is arguably the most powerful tool for change you have as a writer?

Your behavior seems self-defeating to me, and since I don’t believe you intend to sabotage your own effectiveness, I have to conclude you are instead simply writing without thinking.

How do you differ between the [“kink” and “BDSM”]?

*Sigh.* Read. Think. Watch. (Yes, these are the same links as before.)

I’ve seen SOME very rare moments of (“normal”) intimacy. I’ve seen loving looks, embraces, smooches, cuddles, and everything else I’d expect to see at “intimate” events… I’ve just seen it once or twice. I want more of THAT, whatever that was. :/

Same with porn: Almost all porn is devoid of feeling. However, Dishevelled Domina’s Tumblr Porn is amazing precisely because she hand-picks ones that convey feeling and respect in those intimate moments. I just wish it was easier to find more of it.

Intimacy is presented as scarce for reasons that are larger than the scope of the poisonous BDSM culture, so I would encourage you to forget about BDSM and focus instead on trying to discern intimacy itself. Your question about “where do friends fit in” betrays the fact that your analysis does not actually center on intimacy but rather on the crude representations of it—in this case, the mirage of “friendship” as a stand-in for emotional closeness. In other words, your appraisal falls so short because it suffers from the identical phenomenological misapplication as the BDSM community’s discourse; I think it is laughable at best to analyze others’ legitimate failures (as you have rightfully done to the BDSM community) with a critique that suffers from the same failure as that which you are critiquing.

Forget BDSM, “kinky,” and “vanilla.” Forget “friends,” “lovers,” and “play partners.” None of these words are useful in discerning intimate relations versus superficial ones. Focus on relationships instead.

You seem attracted to more or less the same kind of imagery as I am (I also like Disheveled Domina’s Tumblr), but you aren’t analyzing intimacy objectively, you’re calling the-thing-you-like “intimacy” when in fact it is simply “normal”—your word—manifestations of intimacy. If you continue to fail to recognize that distinction, your approach will at best pathologize non-lovey-dovey expressions of intimacy—expressions that the BDSM community’s discourse emphasizes—because that approach fails to acknowledge that “lovey-dovey” stuff like “cuddling” or “smooching” (also your words) are in no way intrinsically intimate at all.

And after I was asked yet again, I clarified more:

Could you sum up the difference between “kink” and “BDSM” real quick?

Sure, weezie.

“Kink” is to slut as BDSM is to intercourse. Someone who’s “slutty” is simply someone who is more promiscuous than you. Someone who’s “kinky” is simply someone whose sex acts entail less normative behavior than yours.

The term “kink” is used vastly differently depending on whether the person is a practitioner of non-normative sexual behaviors. For example, anal sex is “kinky” to a “sheltered” college girl in Idaho; the same is not true of sex-magic practitioners, for they think “kink” equals BDSM, which is false. (For the most part, so do polyamory community members and, of course, the entire BDSM culture.) Therefore, “kink” is not the same as BDSM. Treating the words as if they are synonyms, however, promotes misunderstanding between the two groups of people commonly, though equally inaccurately, referred to as “vanilla” and “kinky.” Thus, it is a dangerous, self-defeating thing to do.

I don’t yet have the proper vocabulary to be verbally competing at your level. I ask that we instead look at the ideas presented herein, and respond to them. Not the words I use, but the ideas I convey.

As time moves on, my words will get better.

I don’t feel like we’re competing, so it’s telling to hear you say that.

In any event, you know how to reach me when your words “get better.” ‘Til then, good luck on your journey. You’ll hear from me most often when I think you’re doing something harmful to the information landscape of topics I’m passionate about—like using “kink” and “BDSM” as synonyms. It’s not personal, I promise. :)


This blog is my job. If it moves you, please help me keep doing this Work by sharing some of your food, shelter, or money. Thank you!

PayPal
Help me desimplify/deconstruct: Rape and Sex

As promised, I wanted to jump back into this discussion—but, and I say this with some trepidation, relatively briefly because I am just too overwhelmed for much more than a dip back into these particular theoretical pools. Here’s the background:

creatrixtiara:

So this conservation happened on Twitter:

@maymaym: Free #Porn Lowers #Rape Rates http://is.gd/aw1Bqp 15-19yo men largest contributor to fewer assaults when given ‘net access. /via @Broadsnark

@tiaramerchgirl @maymaym @Broadsnark doesn’t that reinforce the idea that rape has to do with sexual desire (Rather than power or control)?

@maymaym @tiaramerchgirl Can’t it be both? Dichotomizing #rape as “not about#sex” is inaccurate even if #power’s the salient factor. 

@tiaramerchgirl How so? (then I RT @maymaym’s tweet)

@maymaym @tiaramerchgirl Um…what do you mean “how so”? #Rape is “not about #sex” in the same way anorexia is “not about food.” C’mon.

@tiaramerchgirl @maymaym Um. I feel you’re heading into MAJORLY problematic territory here (even if I’m too inarticulate to express it) 

 @maymaym @tiaramerchgirl That’s true, I am. :) I’m also thinking of some of @SocDocSN’s work. See p. 126 of “Playing on the Edge”http://ur1.ca/2fcpg

I don’t have a copy of the book he linked, so I can’t refer to what he’s pointing to. But I find huge issues with his statements and would like some help articulating them (or hell, if you agree with him, help explain why).

Some thoughts:

  • Rape is about dehumanising - sex just happens to be a tool for dehumanising. It hits at intimacy, personal boundaries, trust, consent.
  • It’s about treating the other person as property rather than a living human being (the person who raped me kept saying I was her “sex toy”)
  • Does it even need to involve sexual activity to be rape? Which definition of “sex”? What about verbal, non-penetrative, other senses?
  • Anorexia - control of body, dysphoria of body image: not just food control, but other issues too - again, food is just a tool
  • Where do you go if you’ve been raped in a sex-positive environment then? (like me)
  • Watching porn still doesn’t necessarily impart good consent skills
  • Sexual frustration and desire - how to release?

Claiming fair use, I’ll transcribe the relevant portions of Newmahr’s text, Playing on the Edge: Sadomasochism, Risk, and Intimacy. Page 126 offers some useful context to the remainder of the discussion, but feel free to skip to the quotes from page 174 if you’re already well-versed in feminist discourse regarding both rape and BDSM. And if you’re not, please do read this through, because it is actually important:

The Erotic-Violent Dualism

In her deconstruction of the feminist reconceptualization of rape as violence rather than sex, Catharine MacKinnon (1989) argues that this position maintains the ideological and conceptual distinction between sex and violence: “Whatever is sex, cannot be violent; whatever is violent, cannot be sex” (1989, 323). Her underlying objection in this argument, of course, is to the ideological preservation of “the ‘sex is good’ norm,” rather than to the implications of its corollary, “violence is bad.” Regardless of the moral position of her argument, MacKinnon’s point is important; violence and eroticism are positioned in a diametric opposition to one another. Where overlap is suspected or identified, it is pathologized, legislated, or reconceptualized as not “really” one or the other. A conscious and deliberate relationship between the erotic and the violent is ethically unacceptable. In the context of powerful feminist critiques of (hetero)sexuality over the past three decades, the conflation is especially problematic.

At this point in the book, Newmahr seems to be trying to do several things at once:

  1. preempt the knee-jerk reaction many people have to any conflation of sex with violence, as is frequently seen in the staunchly anti-SM crowd;
  2. summarize salient discourse surrounding the intersection of sex and violence; and
  3. challenge the notion that SM is “just sex”.

This is really difficult because in order to succeed at any one of these goals, you need to hold multiple perspectives in your head at once. You need “both/and” thinking. The fact of the matter is that SM thoroughly problematizes traditional notions of both “feminist” and ”gender” theory from all kinds of angles, and perhaps intersectionally so most of all.

To the third point, Newmahr continues, writing, “While the conceptualization of SM as an alternative kind of sex is reductionist, SM is, for most people in Caeden, sexualized, at least to some extent.” Then she gives examples of why this is, such as people’s self-labeling of SM as part of their “sexual identity,” that much attention is paid to one’s genitals, breasts, buttocks, and other erogenous zones in play/scenes, and so on. This exposition continues for a while, focusing on how “the relationship between sex and SM is problematic for participants” because “[t]he eroticism of SM is not quite the same experience as the eroticism of sexual arousal.” More examples are cited in the following pages, including interview transcripts in which one participant, “explained that for him, SM and sex ‘are separated, for the most part, and were, early on, separated.’”

But in the middle of all this, Newmahr notes that while SM and sex are wholly “separated” for some participants, “it is sexually relevant [and] is also linked to power and to violence.” On this most important thread, she writes:

In their illumination of the important relationships between heteronormative sexuality and ideologies of domination and violence, feminist analyses have helped to transform an ideological objection to the conflation of the erotic with the violent into a theoretical and conceptual limitation. As Pat Califia pointed out, “Anybody who questioned [the anti-pornography activists’] definition of porn or violence was accused of having bad consciousness about violence against women” (1981, 256-57). Violence, then, could not be problematized; conflated with violent crime, “violence” is intrinsically morally problematic.

This, then, is the more palatable side of the coin to my assertion that “rape is ‘not about sex’” in the same way that “anorexia is ‘not about food.’” Since rape is an abhorrent (violent) crime, and since the anti-SM feminist viewpoint has so thoroughly monopolized discourse regarding social values in all their myriad applications, accepting “violence” as being a potential part of “sex,” much less a potentially desirable and valuable facet of some consensual sexual activity, is believed even in pro-BDSM circles simply to be unconscionable. It is rejected out of hand, uncritically, without nary a shred of self-reflection; we who tout ourselves non-judgmental cowardly judge that which we value.

Newmahr recognizes this, writing:

Most [SM participants] would, understandably, vociferously object to [SM’s] categorization as violence, as Carol Truscott did: “Consensual sadomasochism has nothing to do with violence. Consensual sadomasochism is about safely enacting sexual fantasies with a consenting partner. Violence is the epitome of nonconsensuality, an act perpetrated by a predator on a victim. Consensual sadomasochism neither perpetuates violence nor serves as catharsis of the violent in the human spirit” (Truscott 1991, 30). Yet tansgressions of the boundary between eroticism and violence are fundamental in SM play. […] SM play is profoundly and significantly different from nonconsensual interactions in nonconsensual contexts, but it is nonetheless a performance of violence.

Anyone familiar with SM play knows, of course, that Newmahr is correct. I certainly do. “And what do we make of circumstances in which people orgasm from blows to the back or being kept in a cage? While psychological perspectives, and psychoanalytical approaches in particular, offer entry points into exploring these conflations, they do so in the wake and shadow of essentialist models that themselves pathologize intersections of eroticism and violence,” Newmahr says. And I agree.

The point, in case it wasn’t clear, is that SM is both violent and sexual, but not merely sex. With an understanding of BDSM and freed from the constraints of the “violence is bad” trope, we can now complicate things further by discussing nonconsensual sexual violence. It is from here that I remarked, “Dichotomizing rape as ‘not about sex’ is inaccurate even if power’s the salient factor.”

At this point in the book, Newmahr spends a number of pages discussing the sociological literature on violence. I’ll encourage you to go through it on your own. Then she returns to her own ethnography.

Newmahr discusses various “strategies of resolution” with which people tackle this “conceptual quagmire.” The most obvious is “disavowal and detachment,” which is MacKinnon’s apparent strategy and the strategy of most BDSM’ers who consider consent to be the be-all-end-all factor in segregating (nonconsensual) violence from (consensual, if “kinky”) sex. Regardless of whether it’s employed by anti-SM crusaders or BDSM’ers, this strategy is fundamentally dishonest. It is, again, the flip side of the coin to discussing rape as purely about violence and not in any way about sex—because it so clearly is about sex, but not merely about sex, as you and many others have correctly pointed out.

In discussions of sex-that’s-not-merely-about-sex, everyone, but perhaps mostly the sex-positive community and academia, does a huge disservice to one another by not examining intimacy as separate from sexuality. This is why I am so often so loudly supportive of asexuality; they examine the liminal space of the non-erotically sexual. It is within this space that plenty of consensual SM and nonconsensual sexual crimes inhabit.

Although Newmahr did not research, discuss, or even hint at asexuality in her work, she’s circling some of the same things I’ve been observing the asexuality community discuss for years. Namely, the relationship of intimacy with other areas of life.

Fast forward to page 174 in Playing on the Edge: Sadomasochism, Risk, and Intimacy where, after setting the theoretical stage for this, Newmahr returns to examinations of the intersection of sex and violence by examining the nature of intimacy:

The challenges in understanding intimacy parallel the problems in conceptualizing violence, pain, and eroticism. Trapped in moral frameworks and tethered to political agendas, these ideas are rarely deconstructed. SM forces us to confront the apparent inconsistencies and paradoxes contained within them. In doing so, we can trace conceptual links between intimacy, eroticism, and violence that move beyond psychological models of innate drives and pathologies.

Newmahr independently theorizes intimacy not as only lovey-dovey, good feelings of “connection” and “energy,” which are words most members of the BDSM Scene use instead of intimacy, but rather as “access to otherwise unknown parts of people.” (And that, I’ll note, is a remarkably similar articulation to the powerful articulations by asexual activists.) With this amoral, apolitical framework of intimacy, society can be reexamined in a more constructive way. In this sense, perhaps the single most understated consequence of the “sexual revolution” was that, to use Newmahr’s words, “As regulatory (and thereby disciplinary) forces regarding sexuality are challenged and sexual practices and identities change, other aspects of self acquire the potential to supplant sexuality as a highly protected aspect of self.”

In other words, in a world where cultural doctrines of virginity or monogamy no longer hold sway, what would intimacy, or “connection,” look like? As a sex-positive movement, we are leading the way there, but after we dismantle the sexist tropes of sexual purity and the world’s homophobic heteronormativity, what will we offer in their place? Is “sex for everybody!” really the best we can come up with? That’s not only horribly inarticulate, it’s resoundingly dull, reminiscent of Syndrome’s stupid plan to turn everyone “super.” We need better understandings of intimacy, and of sex, and of violence, or our generation’s sexual revolutionthe one about sexual information—will, for all intents and purposes, fail as spectacularly as the first.

But I digress. Newmahr did so far less than I. In any event, she continues:

Understanding intimacy as the experience of achieving access to protected aspects of others’ selves provides a theoretical framework for understanding the intimacy of interpersonal violence. Nonconsensual violence (what most people mean when they say “real violence”) transgresses physical, social, emotional, and ethical boundaries between actors. Perpetrators of interpersonal violence gain access to experiences of others that most do not. The “sneaky thrills” that Jack Katz finds among thieves are intimate thrills (1988). The sexual metaphor he uncovers in the narratives of the thieves follows, for the thrill in both heteronormative eroticism and theft lies in gaining access. To violate, and to be violated, are intimate experiences. If we cease to reserve the word “intimate” for situations that are desirable or healthy, we can see, for example, the intimacy of violent crime. Rape, which many of us would shudder to consider “intimacy,” is so heinous precisely because it is so intimate.

And so, in much the same way as rape is so heinous precisely because it is so intimate, it is also so “violent” precisely because it is sexual. In a world where access to sexual experience were not so closely guarded and equated with social closeness, rape might be less sexually violating (which is what most people say when they mean, “nonconsensual intimacy”) but I doubt it would be any less sexual.

I hope this helps deconstruct a few things for you, as it did for me. Consider picking up a copy of Playing on the Edge—it’s an awesome book. And while you’re waiting for it to ship or whatever, consider listening to Kink On Tap episode 70, in which Newmahr discuses the book with me—it was grand.


This blog is my job. If it moves you, please help me keep doing this Work by sharing some of your food, shelter, or money. Thank you!

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A visual representation of Paul Graham’s Hierarchy of Disagreement, also called the Argument Pyramid. Each layer in the pyramid can also be referred to as a numbered Disagreement Hierarchy level. For example, name-calling is sometimes referred to as DH1, while refutation is sometimes referred to as DH6.
In his words and from his essay, How to Disagree:


The web is turning writing into a conversation. Twenty years ago, writers wrote and readers read. The web lets readers respond, and increasingly they do—in comment threads, on forums, and in their own blog posts.
Many who respond to something disagree with it. That’s to be expected. Agreeing tends to motivate people less than disagreeing. And when you agree there’s less to say. You could expand on something the author said, but he has probably already explored the most interesting implications. When you disagree you’re entering territory he may not have explored.
The result is there’s a lot more disagreeing going on, especially measured by the word. That doesn’t mean people are getting angrier. The structural change in the way we communicate is enough to account for it. But though it’s not anger that’s driving the increase in disagreement, there’s a danger that the increase in disagreement will make people angrier. Particularly online, where it’s easy to say things you’d never say face to face.
If we’re all going to be disagreeing more, we should be careful to do it well. What does it mean to disagree well? Most readers can tell the difference between mere name-calling and a carefully reasoned refutation, but I think it would help to put names on the intermediate stages. So here’s an attempt at a disagreement hierarchy


See also: solving disputes.
Not to be confused with arguments that rest on the shoulders of other arguments, ala, an Argument Pyramid where an argument is an explanation, reasoning, rational, or story.
While I agree with the majority of Graham’s points, I do disagree with one of his main rationales (i.e., arguments). Graham says:

[W]hile DH levels don’t set a lower bound on the convincingness of a reply, they do set an upper bound. A DH6 response might be unconvincing, but a DH2 or lower response is always unconvincing.

If I’m reading Graham correctly, he’s saying that disagreeing by using ad-hominem and name-calling tactics are “always unconvincing.” However, then he says:

The most obvious advantage of classifying the forms of disagreement is that it will help people to evaluate what they read. In particular, it will help them to see through intellectually dishonest arguments. An eloquent speaker or writer can give the impression of vanquishing an opponent merely by using forceful words. In fact that is probably the defining quality of a demagogue.

I’m left wondering: If an eloquent speaker or writer does successfully “give the impression of vanquishing an opponent merely by using forceful words,” does this leave the opponent or, often more importantly, the unnamed third party in any dispute (the observer) convinced of their argument? Often, at least in my experience, the answer is yes. In fact, the widespread “successes” of demagogues are a testament that it’s not always necessary to be correct—that is, to be truthful or, in Graham’s words, intellectually honest—in one’s assertions to either realize a particular intent or to sway people’s minds, but rather one merely be right—that is, to be perceived as the winner of the dispute.
I both personally appreciate and sympathize with Graham’s clear and noble intent to bring more happiness to more people. I even agree that using higher DH levels will generally achieve more happiness during dispute resolution, but I remain unconvinced that higher DH levels are always more convincing (or, “useful,” or “effective”) than lower ones. This is not to discount the usefulness of understanding DH levels. After all, one must know the rule to break it well.
Perhaps the most useful example of situations where lower DH levels are, potentially, more useful is applicable to leadership. For example, David Logan speaks of 5 “tribal” stages of leadership. Stage 1 tribes are, in his words, “a group where people systematically sever relationships from functional tribes, and then pool together with people who think like they do.” People in a “stage 1 tribe” may be gang members, prison inmates, or anyone else who, effectively, believes that “life sucks.” Logan describes “tribes” from stage 1 all the way up through stage 5. A stage 3 tribe, he explains, “is the one that hits closest to home for many of us because it’s in stage 3 that many of us move. And we park. And we stay. Stage 3 says, ‘I’m great and you’re not.’”
Indeed, Logan’s not just talking about some nebulous notion of community, he’s talking about the way people move between communities, and, moreover, how they talk to each other when they do that—he’s talking about communication. Now, it should almost go without saying that convincing people of something is simply one part of communication, and if one is to communicate convincingly with others, one ought know how others communicate. Moreover, one ought identify these others explicitly: opponent(s), comrade(s), and observer(s).
How do each of these groups communicate? In what “tribal stages” are these three groups? In my experience, and in many disputes, one is attempting to convince one’s observers rather than one’s opponents, and the more observers there are—such as is afforded by the Internet’s development, as Graham states—the less likely it is that all of these observers are in the same tribal stage.
So Graham is correct when he says that “you find there is a lot more meanness down in DH1 than up in DH6.” But if we are willing to accept Logan’s conclusion that “leaders need to be able to talk at all the levels so that [one] can touch every person in society,” then Graham is incorrect when he asserts that “[y]ou don’t have to be mean when you have a real point to make. In fact, you don’t want to. If you have something real to say, being mean just gets in the way.”
I think, actually, it’s quite the contrary. Sometimes, being “mean” is the point. Moreover, depending on the context and, yes, perhaps counterintuitively, that’s not necessarily a bad thing. As Walt Whitman once famously said, “Do I contradict myself? Very well then: I contradict myself. (I am large, I contain multitudes.)”
For antagonism, dearest loves, is not in fact the inverse of intimacy.

A visual representation of Paul Graham’s Hierarchy of Disagreement, also called the Argument Pyramid. Each layer in the pyramid can also be referred to as a numbered Disagreement Hierarchy level. For example, name-calling is sometimes referred to as DH1, while refutation is sometimes referred to as DH6.

In his words and from his essay, How to Disagree:

The web is turning writing into a conversation. Twenty years ago, writers wrote and readers read. The web lets readers respond, and increasingly they do—in comment threads, on forums, and in their own blog posts.

Many who respond to something disagree with it. That’s to be expected. Agreeing tends to motivate people less than disagreeing. And when you agree there’s less to say. You could expand on something the author said, but he has probably already explored the most interesting implications. When you disagree you’re entering territory he may not have explored.

The result is there’s a lot more disagreeing going on, especially measured by the word. That doesn’t mean people are getting angrier. The structural change in the way we communicate is enough to account for it. But though it’s not anger that’s driving the increase in disagreement, there’s a danger that the increase in disagreement will make people angrier. Particularly online, where it’s easy to say things you’d never say face to face.

If we’re all going to be disagreeing more, we should be careful to do it well. What does it mean to disagree well? Most readers can tell the difference between mere name-calling and a carefully reasoned refutation, but I think it would help to put names on the intermediate stages. So here’s an attempt at a disagreement hierarchy

See also: solving disputes.

Not to be confused with arguments that rest on the shoulders of other arguments, ala, an Argument Pyramid where an argument is an explanation, reasoning, rational, or story.

While I agree with the majority of Graham’s points, I do disagree with one of his main rationales (i.e., arguments). Graham says:

[W]hile DH levels don’t set a lower bound on the convincingness of a reply, they do set an upper bound. A DH6 response might be unconvincing, but a DH2 or lower response is always unconvincing.

If I’m reading Graham correctly, he’s saying that disagreeing by using ad-hominem and name-calling tactics are “always unconvincing.” However, then he says:

The most obvious advantage of classifying the forms of disagreement is that it will help people to evaluate what they read. In particular, it will help them to see through intellectually dishonest arguments. An eloquent speaker or writer can give the impression of vanquishing an opponent merely by using forceful words. In fact that is probably the defining quality of a demagogue.

I’m left wondering: If an eloquent speaker or writer does successfully “give the impression of vanquishing an opponent merely by using forceful words,” does this leave the opponent or, often more importantly, the unnamed third party in any dispute (the observer) convinced of their argument? Often, at least in my experience, the answer is yes. In fact, the widespread “successes” of demagogues are a testament that it’s not always necessary to be correct—that is, to be truthful or, in Graham’s words, intellectually honest—in one’s assertions to either realize a particular intent or to sway people’s minds, but rather one merely be right—that is, to be perceived as the winner of the dispute.

I both personally appreciate and sympathize with Graham’s clear and noble intent to bring more happiness to more people. I even agree that using higher DH levels will generally achieve more happiness during dispute resolution, but I remain unconvinced that higher DH levels are always more convincing (or, “useful,” or “effective”) than lower ones. This is not to discount the usefulness of understanding DH levels. After all, one must know the rule to break it well.

Perhaps the most useful example of situations where lower DH levels are, potentially, more useful is applicable to leadership. For example, David Logan speaks of 5 “tribal” stages of leadership. Stage 1 tribes are, in his words, “a group where people systematically sever relationships from functional tribes, and then pool together with people who think like they do.” People in a “stage 1 tribe” may be gang members, prison inmates, or anyone else who, effectively, believes that “life sucks.” Logan describes “tribes” from stage 1 all the way up through stage 5. A stage 3 tribe, he explains, “is the one that hits closest to home for many of us because it’s in stage 3 that many of us move. And we park. And we stay. Stage 3 says, ‘I’m great and you’re not.’”

Indeed, Logan’s not just talking about some nebulous notion of community, he’s talking about the way people move between communities, and, moreover, how they talk to each other when they do that—he’s talking about communication. Now, it should almost go without saying that convincing people of something is simply one part of communication, and if one is to communicate convincingly with others, one ought know how others communicate. Moreover, one ought identify these others explicitly: opponent(s), comrade(s), and observer(s).

How do each of these groups communicate? In what “tribal stages” are these three groups? In my experience, and in many disputes, one is attempting to convince one’s observers rather than one’s opponents, and the more observers there are—such as is afforded by the Internet’s development, as Graham states—the less likely it is that all of these observers are in the same tribal stage.

So Graham is correct when he says that “you find there is a lot more meanness down in DH1 than up in DH6.” But if we are willing to accept Logan’s conclusion that “leaders need to be able to talk at all the levels so that [one] can touch every person in society,” then Graham is incorrect when he asserts that “[y]ou don’t have to be mean when you have a real point to make. In fact, you don’t want to. If you have something real to say, being mean just gets in the way.”

I think, actually, it’s quite the contrary. Sometimes, being “mean” is the point. Moreover, depending on the context and, yes, perhaps counterintuitively, that’s not necessarily a bad thing. As Walt Whitman once famously said, “Do I contradict myself? Very well then: I contradict myself. (I am large, I contain multitudes.)”

For antagonism, dearest loves, is not in fact the inverse of intimacy.


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