|
Love, Sex & Health
Bondage Unbound
Growing numbers of Americans are experimenting with sadomasochistic
sex. But is it always safe and sane?
By John Cloud/Clayton from
Time Magazine Online
January 19, 2004 Health
It turns out that you call it "S
and
M" only if you don't do it or if you experiment only
occasionally with those handcuffs you keep hidden at the back
of the nightstand. If, on the other hand, you are seriously
involved in the sadomasochistic subculture—if, say, you have
attended one or more of the nation's 90 annual sadomasochistic
events ("Beat Me in St. Louis," for instance) and own
not only handcuffs but also a spanking bench, a flogger, some
paraffin wax, an unbreakable Pyrex dildo and various other
unmentionables—you call it, simply, SM.
The linguistic distinction between S&M and SM may seem tiny,
but the pop-culture, peep-show version of S&M has little to
do with the real lives of those who practice SM (which is why
sexologists who study sadomasochism have now also adopted the
shorter abbreviation). S&M is Madonna in kinky outfits, Anne
Rice chapters that run to the louche—even a recent Dannon ad
featuring a woman in a French-maid uniform. Such S&M imagery
has become so common that our astonishment at Robert Mapplethorpe's
photographs of leather and pain 20 years ago now seems quaint.
Today you can watch Samantha on
Sex and the City
in virtually the same poses.
But those who practice sadomasochism—including those halting dabblers
who tee-hee their way through spankings, hoping to paddle excitement
into their marriage—know it's still taboo. (After all, if it weren't,
it would lose its power to excite.) To reconcile the icons with the
actual practice, I spent several weeks recently talking to SM
practitioners around the U.S.—in New York City and San Francisco,
yes, but also in North Carolina and New Mexico. Whether they
were nervous novices or experienced Dungeon Masters leading
some of the nation's 250 SM organizations, virtually all of
them asked for anonymity. One man said he had lost a job when
his boss found directions to a bondage workshop in his office.
Others said they would be embarrassed if their families learned
of their proclivities. We live in a culture in which sadomasochism
is everywhere—from Versace billboards to at least a dozen college
campuses where SM support groups have been established—but somehow
it remains unseen and unspoken, just beyond the edge of respectability.
Given the silence, measuring SM's popularity is not a precise
business, especially since it blurs into the larger category
of BDSM, or bondage-discipline-sadomasochism. A 1990 Kinsey
Institute report said researchers estimate that 5% to 10% of
Americans occasionally engage in SM sex. "The lighter
end of BDSM is penetrating bedrooms across America. It's
restraint on bedposts, it's spanking, it's fantasy play—and
it's all fairly common," says Barnaby Barratt,
President-Elect of the American Association of Sex Educators,
Counselors and Therapists. In his quarter-century of private
practice as a therapist in southeastern Michigan, Barratt says,
"hundreds, if not thousands" of married couples have
told him they want to bind, paddle or play teacher/pupil
with each other.
Barratt and other therapists say that couples often hope
that role playing or nipple clamps or quick-release bondage
will rev up their sex lives. "Many people have this as
part of reciprocal, consensual love relationships, and in
those cases, we assure them it's not a problem," says
Eli Coleman, director of the Program in Human Sexuality at
the University of Minnesota. He also makes the point that
"there's an element of domination or submission or pain
involved in almost any sexual interaction. What sadomasochism
does is take these elements of eroticism further toward
their extreme."
Some couples experiment a few times but return to what
serious SM-ers call "vanilla" sex. Others
become more deeply involved in the SM scene; they use
SM props or fantasies every time they have sex. The
scene has become so large and varied that it encompasses
the rich farrago of coupling practices known as BDSM,
which includes not only SM—the erotic enjoyment of
inflicting and/or receiving pain—but also BD
(bondage/discipline) and DS (domination/submission).
BD usually involves physical restraint and a punishment/reward
setup (say, Nurse Ratched with a patient). DS relationships
are often as emotional as they are carnal. Submissives relish
transferring authority over aspects of their lives to others;
the submissive might allow the dominant not only to tie her
up but even to tell her when she must go to sleep.
A common misperception is that most DS relationships involve
dominant women—dominatrices, in the parlance—ordering around
submissive men. (As a result, some feminists have come to see
BDSM lifestyles as not only transgressive but progressive.)
And, indeed, among the many prostitutes who offer BDSM
services, more are dominant than submissive, says Dr.
Paul Federoff, a University of Ottawa psychiatrist who
has studied sadomasochists. "You also might see a lot
of dominant women at a BDSM nightclub," he says, but
"although it's not the politically correct answer, more
women in the scene are choosing the submissive role."
In a study Federoff co-authored last year, he found that
among 1,320 self-identified BDSM practitioners who anonymously
completed a Web survey, 79% of women reported being "always
or usually submissive"; only 35% of men did.
In one sense, then, "Doc" and "Surri"
aren't so unusual. Married in July, they live in Clayton,
N.C., in a just renovated home that—when I visited in
November—had been overtaken by Christmas decorations.
("I'm a Christmas freak," says Surri.) She is
Doc's wife, but she also thinks of herself as his
"slave," and although she sometimes says
the word just like that—using her fingers to create
quotation marks in the air—their master/slave arrangement
directs almost every aspect of their lives. Doc tells Surri
what she can and can't wear every day, and when the three
of us arrived at a steak house for dinner, Doc ordered:
"She'll have a white Zinfandel and a glass of water."
(Surri did choose the Robert Mondavi over the Sutter Home on her
own.)
If Surri fails to accomplish something Doc asks—say, cleaning
out the car or working in the garden—he might spank her or
stand her in the corner as though she were a wayward child.
When she succeeds, he might call her a "good girl"
or give her a small gift. ("I filled out one of those
online profiles that ask for your favorite quote, and mine
was 'Good girl,'" says Surri. "Hearing [Doc] say
that makes me happier than anything else in the world.")
Surri, who turns 38 this month, particularly enjoys such "age
play" when she's ill; at those times, Doc, 39, might bring
her a Winnie-the-Pooh bear. In the bedroom, Surri likes Doc to
flog her, but softly, in a light figure-eight pattern. She's
not one of those slaves who enjoy the sting of a whip. Says
Doc: "A lot of people in the life aren't into pain,
despite everything you hear in the media."
Doc and Surri take BDSM much further than most practitioners,
but they say they merely verbalize and theatricalize the
unspoken power exchanges that exist in every relationship.
"About 80% of how we live our lives is the way Mom and
Dad did in the '50s," says Doc. "And the way most
Baptists live their lives down here," says Surri, referring
to the Southern Baptist Convention's resolution that wives
should "submit" to their husbands.
But when does this theater go too far? Why would a grown
woman let anyone tell her what to eat and wear? "Sometimes
people do get lost in this behavior," says Coleman of the
University of Minnesota. "It can become very, very
powerfully erotic and mood altering." Because of this
concern, "sexual sadism" and "sexual
masochism" are listed in the
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders
(DSM), the psychiatry compendium. The latter diagnosis, for
instance, might apply to someone who starts out wanting a playful
smack but ends up begging to be beaten bloody.
BDSM activists—yes, there are BDSM activists—counter that any
sexual activity can become overpowering. And few sexologists
would argue that whips and stilettos, in and of themselves,
cause sexual compulsion. That's why some mental-health
professionals contend that the American Psychiatric Association
should remove sadism and masochism from the DSM. "There
are no data to support their inclusion," says Charles
Moser of the Institute for Advanced Study of Human Sexuality
in San Francisco. "There is no study that shows that
having BDSM interests causes distress or dysfunction."
In addition, the chains, the hot wax, the boot-licking
humiliation—they're all secondary for most BDSM practitioners.
"Pain is a means to an end, but not the goal itself,"
says Federoff of the University of Ottawa. "People into
this scene, all of them, will tell you that they want anesthetic
when they go to the dentist as well as you do. What's different
is what they use pain for." BDSM-ers like to use athletic
analogies: marathoners endure the agony of the last miles so
they can savor the accomplishment of finishing. SM, they say,
is no different.
But that doesn't explain why people do it—a question that
sexologists can't yet answer. "Tell me the etiology
of heterosexuality or homosexuality," says Moser,
"and I will tell you the etiology of SM."
Federoff has compiled new online surveys from 2,000
women and 2,000 men who identified themselves as part
of the BDSM scene. "We have only started to analyze
the data," he says, "but the first impression is
that the people we have looked at tend to look very much
like regular people from all walks of life—that is, they
tend to look like people who might fill out Web questionnaires
on any topic. Second, by the measures of psychological health
we were able to get, they tend not to look particularly
psychologically impaired"—at least no more so than the
general population.
At this point, we should make clear that the BDSM these
researchers study is consensual. No one in the fledgling
BDSM movement argues in favor of actual slavery or rape
(though eroticized simulations of such crimes are common).
Among the BDSM clubs and support groups, all the reputable
ones preach the BDSM mantra: safe, sane and consensual.
"Like every other subculture, we have a fringe, an
element that doesn't follow the rules," says Susan
Wright of the National Coalition for Sexual Freedom, a
BDSM advocacy group formed in 1997 that claims 34 member
organizations representing 10,000 people. "But every
mainstream BDSM group has a mission statement that includes
those words over and over: safe, sane, consensual."
More specific guidelines—always check bound limbs to ensure
circulation, for instance—have developed over the decades,
she says. BDSM has a rich history. In the 19th century,
psychiatrist Richard von Krafft-Ebing famously applied a
French literary term—le
sadisme, which described the sexually violent writing
style of the Marquis de Sade—to mental patients who exhibited
an "association of lust and cruelty." Less famously,
Krafft-Ebing named masochism after the bawdy novels of Leopold
von Sacher-Masoch, whose most famous work,
Venus in Furs
(1870), describes the willing enslavement of a dreamy man
by a beautiful widow.
More recently, the Internet has helped connect curiosity
seekers with BDSM organizations. Doc and Surri, for instance,
help lead a North Carolina group that started less than a
year ago but already has nearly 700 people on its e-mail
list. The calendar of BDSM social events now includes
gatherings for every imaginable subgroup—everything from
the International Deaf Leather Contest (scheduled in Dallas
in August) to the Black Rose convention in the Washington area,
a yearly weekend of workshops and parties that draws 1,000.
Host communities aren't always thrilled to learn that hundreds
of kinky convention-goers will be dropping in. In 2002, after
Baptist leaders heard that the Howard Johnson hotel in Bridgeton,
Mo., had served as the site for Beat Me in St. Louis, the Southern
Baptist Convention canceled reservations at the hotel. Last year
the Kenner, La., police chief mailed letters to local hotels
urging them not to provide accommodations for Fetish in the
Fall, a four-day series of parties and educational
demonstrations—Dances with Whips, for instance—set for
November. Chief Nick Congemi was worried that the gathering's
activities would be "borderline illegal"; organizers
canceled the event to spare attendees embarrassing public
scrutiny.
Congemi has a point about the law. It is a bedrock principle
of common law that consent is no defense against assault charges,
and many prosecutors see BDSM activities like flogging as assault.
In the past half-century, many SM participants have been successfully
prosecuted. But while most appellate judges have upheld those
convictions, a 1999 New York State ruling is altering the
landscape. In that case, an appeals court overturned the
conviction of Oliver Jovanovic, a Columbia University grad
student who had been sentenced to 15 years for kidnapping and
sexually abusing an undergrad. Before the alleged assault, the
woman had e-mailed her SM fantasies to Jovanovic. The trial
judge had refused to admit the e-mail messages into evidence,
but the appeals court held that while no one has a constitutional
right to engage in SM, the e-mails would have shed light on
whether Jovanovic reasonably believed that the woman had
consented.
Of all the knotty issues swirling around BDSM, consent was the
most difficult for me to understand. No means no, but does yes
always mean yes? If you ask someone to pass a flame across your
genitals or tie you up for hours or tell you what to eat, are
you in your right mind? I pressed Surri repeatedly on these
issues. Finally, after a robust drag on her cigarette (which
she had asked Doc's permission to smoke), she answered, "What
we worry about when we look at our own community and try to make
sure abuse isn't happening is whether submissives are restricted
in their speech. And I can always say what I want ... Yes, Doc
makes the final decision about things. But if he said to me,
'Shave off your hair,' well, we would have some issues because
there's not a chance in hell I would do that." Surri and
Doc do take the master/slave relationship to elaborate lengths,
but she can always end it. "Ultimately," she says,
"I have more control in this relationship than he does."
But Surri admits that not all her SM relationships have been so
balanced. After she left her second husband—Doc is her third—she
"got tied into a very bad person," she says. One day
the man told her to get into a dog kennel, and she willingly
complied. But then he left her alone—a major no-no under the
safe-sane-and-consensual guidelines taught at SM conferences.
As it happened, the apartment building accidentally caught
fire. Surri suffered burns and smoke inhalation. "I was
nearly dead when the paramedics got to me," she says.
When I ask what happened to the man, tears well in her eyes.
"Nothing." Surri didn't press charges because she
was worried that if the authorities discovered her dominant-submissive
lifestyle, they would come for her daughter.
Surri's daughter, a polite, sunshiny 14-year-old, knows that her
mom takes orders from her stepdad, but Doc and Surri keep their
sexual relationship—along with the floggers and other apparatus—private.
Surri says her daughter's most common response to any mention of the
BDSM lifestyle is, "Ugh, Mom!" (The daughter's privacy is one
reason I agreed not to use real names for Doc and Surri. Another is
that there are no legal protections for BDSM; the home-improvement
warehouse where Doc works could fire him.)
I left North Carolina unsure what to think about the couple. They
seem madly in love—"because we have this kind of relationship,
everything has to be spoken, so it's much deeper," says Doc.
And they are hardly radicals. Doc is a Schwarzenegger Republican
and a big fan of the
Left Behind
novels, the evangelical Christian thrillers that graphically depict
the damnation of the sinful. Both Surri and Doc criticize the moral
laxity of parents who allow kids to shirk their chores and sass
their elders.
On the other hand, Surri's "biggest satisfaction in life"
should probably be something other than "seeing [Doc's]
approval." She says it's in her nature to submit—that, in
a manner of speaking, she has no choice but to give up choice.
But can such thorough submission truly be safe, sane and consensual?
Wright says BDSM-ers debate such issues all the time. If SM is to
become a more accepted part of the mainstream, those serious
debates—and not just the titillating extremes of "S&M"
iconography—will have to come out of the closet.
|