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Masochism
by M. Miller
MASOCHISM
How could someone enjoy being tied up and spanked?
If you like whips and chains, .does that mean you're
crazy?
New research findings have changed our understanding
of sexual masochism. Up until recently psychology
took a very dim view of S&M. Psychologists thought
that masochists were mentally ill, probably
dangerous individuals full of guilt.
But a completely different picture has emerged in
the last decade.
It is now clear that most masochists live normal,
well adjusted lives. Apart from their sex lives,
they are pretty much just like anyone else.
Masochism is not a sign of being sick or
maladjusted. In the modern era of individual rights
and sexual tolerance, it seems ridiculous to condemn
an otherwise normal person for a basically harmless
sexual preference. Masochism is certainly mms-aal,
statistically speaking, strange? Yes, probably,
weird? Maybe. But sick? No!
Most theories about masochism derive from Freud's
views. Freud was puzzled by masochism and basically
had no idea what it was. He tossed out a few
speculations, which others have taken to heart. But
his ideas about masochism are probably inaccurate.
For example, Freudian theories of masochism are
always talking about guilt. But none of the recent
studies have found much evidence of guilt. Sex guilt
in particular, is absent. Most Masochists tend to be
Sexually liberated.
Why then, do people do it? The appeal of masochism
is in its effects on the mind. Masochism is a
powerful means of escape. Escape from everyday life,
from problems and worries, from who you are most of
the time. Masochism stops the world. It allows you
to live, to feel, to play, and to enjoy in a way
that is far removed from the rest of life.
Central to this is the effect of masochism on the
self. Your identity is basically a concept of who
you are. It relates you to the past and future. To
other people, to your work and family, and to
society at large. Identity brings in all your
relationships, your plans and ambitions, your
projects and goals, and so on. Masochism knocks all
of that out of your mind.
In masochism you become first and foremost a body.
The past and future, beyond the immediate scene,
vanish from the mind. Your focus is here and now on
sensation. In some cases the escape is carried a
step further. The masochist -becomes someone new. In
the fantasy scene, the masochist may adopt a new
role (of slave), develop a new personality, change
from male to female. (It is much rarer for female
masochists to become male during their scenes.) When
your old everyday identity 'is swept away, there is
room for a new one to be created in fantasy, to
replace it.
Consider how this works. The three main features of
masochism are pain, bondage, or loss of control, and
humiliation or embarrassment. Start with the last of
the three. Normally, people want to avoid
embarrassing or humiliating experiences. People want
to have high self esteem to think well of
themselves, to have other people think well of them.
People want to be admired, to be successful to be
famous, to be looked up to. Your normal identity is
based on a certain amount of respect and dignity.
But masochism deliberately strips away respect and
dignity.
The masochist is unable to maintain the
normal identity, because it is incompatible with
typical actions.
A respectable woman is not supposed to lie naked and
spread-eagled on a table while well dressed men look
at her. Respectable men are not supposed to wear dog
collars & lick someone's boots. Politicians, example
have unusually high rates of masochism. Probably
because politicians are forced by their jobs
to maintain such gargantuan egos.
Masochism may enable them to stop being their
overblown selves for a little while.
Second consider bondage and other forms of losing
control. Normally, people seek control. People want
power, they want to know what is going to happen to
them, they want freedom, they want to have choices
and options, and so forth. The quest for control is
one of the most universal psychological principles.
A big part of the self is devoted to gaining and
keeping control.
But masochism erases this aspect of the self. The
masochist may submit to being tied up or
blindfolded. The masochist is told what to do and
what not to do. During a scene, the masochist may
not be allowed to have an orgasm or even to go to
the bathroom without permission. Masochism forces
you to be passive, and that blots out a major part
of the self.
And then there's pain. How could someone like pain?
In fact, it turns out that most masochists don't
really like the pain. The sensation itself is
unpleasant - it hurts. But pain has powerful effects
on the mind. Pain takes your mind off other things.
It focuses attention and HOW. You might be worried
about meeting a deadline or paying the rent. You
might be planning, next years work or remembering
last year's successes and failures. But when the
dominant partner takes the whip to your derriere
those thoughts are likely to vanish. You forget
about being a homeowner, a decision maker, a sales
manager, a wife, and engineer.
During the whipping you become just a body.
The effect of masochism is often described as
liberating. Reading these descriptions one wonders:
How can it be liberating to be put in chains? But
the masochist is liberated from his or her own
identity. The exhilaration that masochists describe
is produced partly by this removal of who you are.
All your normal roles, ways of acting, your ideas of
who you are, the games you normally play with people
- all these abruptly stop.
All you are is your body. Or else you can fantasize
about becoming someone new, isn't this part of
sexual enjoyment for anyone? Why would someone need
to use whips & chains, since normal sex produces an
escape.
The Answer to this is that normal Vanilla sex isn't
powerful enough to produce the escape. In fact,
enjoyment of standard sex sometimes depends on
getting your mind off of other problems and hassles,
but sex alone isn't enough to bring this about.
Consider what happens in sex therapy. Many people go
to sex therapists because they aren't enjoying sex.
They don't get aroused, or they don't have orgasms,
and they want help. Sex therapy tries to find ways
of enhancing their sexual response.
Sex therapy since Masters and Johnson has been
heavily based on getting the persons mind off
himself, off of worries and problems and
distractions, and focused onto immediate sensations.
Sex therapists try to get their patients to forget
themselves, to shed their egos along with their
underwear.
For many patients, that's tough to do. Masochism is
a powerful means of achieving the same effect.
Masochism forces you to shed your ego and forget
yourself, because your actions simply don't fit your
normal identity.
This is not to say that sex therapists use S&M to
stimulate their patients. But they do a surprising
number of things that are similar. Consider some of
the following. Sex therapists try to stimulate what
they. call the "sensate focus" - attending merely to
sensations . They are talking about pleasant skin
contact, but pain certainly brings about an intense
"sensate focus" just as well if not faster.
Sex therapists focus on treating the couple
together, and masochists too are heavily onented
toward intimate relationships and partners, sex
therapists create isolation from the everyday world,
such as by having the couple stay at a motel and
break telephone contact with home and office.
Masochists create a scene that is radically cut off
from their everyday lives.
Some practices of sex therapy have an especially
strong resemblance to S&M. Sex therapists will have
the person assume a very passive posture. For
example, if the man has trouble keeping an erection,
they'll tell the woman to be on top and take care of
inserting the penis into her. Obviously, masochism
likewise puts the person in an extremely passive
role, including being on the bottom during sex.
Another factor is that sex therapists sometimes
forbid the couple to have intercourse or orgasm
during early stages of therapy, so they can get used
to physical playing without the pressure of
intercourse. Masochists often desire similar
structures of restrictions and permissions.
The point of all this is that masochism resembles
what sex therapists do to increase sexual response.
That may be part of the explanation of the sexual
appeal of masochism. People who want a sexual boost
may be drawn to it.
First those who don't respond easily may like
masochism because it brings their responses up to
normal. Second, people whose normal responses are
fine but who want really intense experiences may
like masochism. For them it may be a means of
producing stronger sexual feelings than they can
achieve in more conventional ways.
Of course, the attractions of masochism go beyond
the desire of a sexual boost. Seeing masochism as a
way of escaping from our identity is a good way to
place it in context. Many other activities in modern
life blot out the world and the everyday aspects of
self. These include alcohol and drug use,
meditation, absorbing hobbies and intense sports
such as hang-gliding or wind-surfing. Many people
even find that hogging or watching television
produces a kind of trance that takes their mind off
their concerns.
Masochism is just an unusually powerful member of
this group of escapist pastimes.
Is masochism a form of love or of hate? There has
been a lot of debate on this, but both sides are
wrong. Masochism has nothing to do with hate. And it
is not quite a form of love, although it offers an
alternative form of intimacy.
Masochism doesn't necessarily involve love. It is
possible to engage in with someone you're not in
love with, masochism makes love redundant. People
seem to prefer to do it with people they love.
What's clear though is that masochism produces an
intense bond of intimacy between two people even if
it's only temporary. The masochist submerges his or
her will. personality, even identity, in the
dominant partner. The importance of intimacy can be
seen in sexual fantasies. Masochistic fantasies are
much more likely than other sexual fantasies to
involve long-term relationships, stable partners,
and or lovers. (This conclusion is based on
statistical comparison of masochistic versus other
sexual fantasies). Masochists are heavily
relationship-orientated.
Masochism is thus not the same as love. but it
offers an emotional and passionate feeling of
closeness that is similar. I think the best way to
view masochism as an alternative—intimacy. Masochism
can be enjoyed without love, because intimacy is
usually rewarding, or it can be employed within a
love relationship to add a new dimension of relation
to your loved one.
Although the experts are just beginning to form this
new way of understanding masochism, don't expect
society to change quickly.
There are a lot of entrenched prejudices, and
attitudes change very slowly. Also, masochists
haven't been very forward about seeking tolerance,
understanding and acceptance.
Probably the best analogy is that if you only see
unhappy, neurotic homosexuals, it is easy to
conclude that all homosexuals are unhappy and
neurotic. It took lots of research findings plus the
gay liberation movement to convince people that view
was mistaken.
Masochism lags far behind homosexuality in public
understanding, let alone tolerance, clinical
psychologists have only seen unhappy neurotic
masochists, so many of them think that all
masochists are unhappy and neurotic. Research
evidence to the contrary has just started to appear
in the last ten years or so.
And there is no S&M liberation movement to gain
public favor.
If you are a masochist, or if someone close to you
is, the main thing is not to worry that there's
something wrong with you. There are probably a
couple of million other Americans with the same
desires, and the vast majority of them are healthy
and well adjusted. But don't expect society at large
to make it easy for you. It will take a small
miracle for society to revise its prejudices, and
miracles take time.
Dr. Baumeister is a research scientist, a professor
of psychology at Western Reserve University in Ohio.
His first book "Identity", received a national award
from the American psychological Association. For
further information on masochism, see Dr.
Baumeisters latest book. Masochism and the Self
(1989). it is available in some bookstores.
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