Welcome back!
I’ve been grappling with something over the past few months as I embark on a serious relationship with a woman for the first time. My femininity feels under fire by my own fucked up gender programming. The reality is that it doesn’t matter how much Judith Butler and Eve Sedgwick I read. It doesn’t matter that I have idols like Tristan Taormino, Lee Harrington, and Bear Bergman. It doesn’t matter that I love genderbenders and all level of gender fucking. I have some fucked up assumptions and ideas about sex and gender and sexuality that infect my ability to be as fearless as I want to be.
This is a confession of sorts but also a cry for help. I think about myself in reference to kink and sex and realize that I associate submission and service with being feminine. I associate beauty, weakness, and delicacy with being feminine. And I also realize that I am so terrified of being seen as anything other than feminine that I put up some strange defenses against this.
Case study A: Ariel
Ariel is my gorgeous girlfriend. She is beautiful and petite and has long flowing hair. She moves gracefully on high heels. She also has a powerful job in a male-dominated industry and changes car batteries and asserts herself aggressively in conversations. She looks high femme but has always thought of herself as butch. Still, when I touch her I sometimes feel huge, ham-fisted, rough, and all-together ugly. I know she longs for me and I fail her because I don’t know how to be. On the one hand, strapping on a pretty dildo and fucking her for hours sounds like pure bliss but I know that getting to that point will be full of second-guessing myself and my desires and my actions.
Am I being entirely heterosexist in my view of this sexual relationship? Abso-fucking-lutely! Because she is feminine, I feel masculine. (We won’t even get into the terrible fact that I associate masculinity [on myself!] with ugliness) I don’t want to feel this way. It isn’t enlightened, it isn’t sex positive. I wouldn’t teach it to my students. But it infects my reality and I don’t know how to deprogram it.
Case study B: Michael
[Note: This section has been edited for nuance. The lack it previously exhibited, though, is likely symptomatic of my issues with binary thinking.]
Michael is a petite man. We are the same height and I outweigh him significantly. When we first met I didn’t think the relationship would work because of this. I thought I would feel huge and be self-conscious and afraid. So I submitted myself to him. He felt like he was capable of being in charge and I let him be. Even if I couldn’t be delicate and small by comparison physically, I knew I could shrink myself mentally. It works out well that he has discovered enjoyment of beating me until I cry, pulling my hair, grabbing my throat. (Again we won’t get into how fucked up it is that my way of feeling feminine involves simulated victimization) Even when I am initiating sex with him, it feels like an act of service and devotion. He often gives me feedback on how to touch and where and when. I siddle up to him and slither a limb around his body. I kiss gently. The touches are a seduction and they are a worship and only in my most wanton and least self-conscious moments do I allow myself to be aggressive and take up space.
Taking up space
I haven’t really defined what this means to me just yet. You may have guessed some of it by now, though. I think of it in terms of physical space – my body is larger and I attempt to diminish that regularly. I also think of it terms of political space – my voice should be smaller, my needs should be less important, my desires should be locked away.
This might seem ridiculous to some of you that have met me or read this blog. Of course I take up space in terms of talking about sex. Here I am now with this presence on the internet. Blabbing, opining, discussing in detail, issuing edicts and judgments and ideas. But some of that strength leaves me when I’m making love to some of the people I adore most in the world.
I know that every relationship goes through growing pains and these are no exception, but this issue feels bigger and scarier and more about me being fucked in the head than any I have run into before. So, dear reader, tell me what you think. How do I get my theory to line up with my practice? How do I deschool myself of gender? How do I embrace femininity in a way that doesn’t make me need to masculinize others? How have you done it or how do you wish you could?


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5 Responses for "Femme sex and taking up space"
I’m afraid I have no advice to offer, and, indeed, suffer from the same feelings.
Especially the feeling of masculine being ugly on me, the feeling of being “huge, ham-fisted, rough, and all-together ugly” in contrast to femme women.
I’d love to know if you figure out anything about all this.
Shadowedge
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When I was perpetually afraid of turning into an asshole (by being too masculine) or a laughingstock (by being too feminine), I made everything line up along one axis in my head. Roleplaying scenes ended up helping a lot with that—on different nights I got to ‘be’ a bunch of different male stereotypes that I realized didn’t have much more in common with each other than they did with the real me.
So, I don’t know. If you & Michael like roleplaying at all, try to figure out what roles vary the balance of the things you feel you’re conflating in your head: Who’s simultaneously more feminine and less submissive? (A whore conning her john out of money?) Who’s submissive but not worshipful? (The prisoner beaten into compliance?) Who’s both butch and seductive? (The lesbian convincing her gay friend to ‘experiment’?)
(Yes, I know, I like cheesy porn-plot scenes.)
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I don’t have much to offer in way of feedback, but as a femme, this piece really speaks to me. Thanks*
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“I associate submission and service with being feminine. I associate beauty, weakness, and delicacy with being feminine.”
This is an interesting problem. For me it is turning out just the opposite: whatever untamed force resides within me that is decidedly ‘female’ is, apparently, very much a top, very aggressive and, while “beautiful” in the sense of how I am (sometimes) able to perceive myself, not “beautiful” at all in the usual sense of masculine. I was born a bio-male and like that part of me.
What do you do? How do you “deschool” yourself of gender? It takes time. You can practice: try “being male” (I leave it to your well honed sensibilities to pull on some ideas, but it might range from watching sports to putting on a jock strap to cinematic stereotypes). Dress male, breathe male. Don’t shower. Stop shaving. Swear. It’s a kind of perverse “fake it til ya make it” variant. IT won’t completely deschool you, but it might give you a nudge.
Then the fun might happen more easily.
Losing our fear is ALWAYS an uphill battle.
You can do this.
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Get a grip, woman! You are putting the cart before the horse by attempting to define yourself by how you interact with others. This is incredibly dishonest, both to yourself and to those with whom you interact. Surely you can’t be so desperate for companionship that you have to pretend to be something which you aren’t. So figure out who YOU are, then present yourself to the world. Sure, you may experience rejection, but the result will be a better relationship with someone more suited to you.
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