by David Steinberg
(12/29/99)
As you are certainly more aware than is humanly reasonable, the digital
counter on the grand temporal odometer in the sky is about to roll over from
1999.9999 to 2000.0000. In the larger scheme of things, as we all know, this
means nothing whatsoever. Nature wastes little attention on the arbitrary
boundaries that humans love to erect between here and there, this and that.
But, nature aside, these arbitrary notions do have a way of collecting their
own meanings, especially when they gain a foothold in the collective
consciousness, as the notion of the millennium has certainly done. So, as the
digital counters in the post offices spin their way down to 000:00:00:00,
we're likely to find ourselves wrapping our minds around some feeling,
however vague, that some big thing is ending and another big thing is coming
along to take its place.
Some people find this anticipation distinctly unnerving. Israel has already
stepped up its security to deal with unstable types expected to show up in
Jerusalem on the Great Day, expecting to witness (or in same cases try to
bring about) the end of the world as we know it. And, minor technical
glitches notwithstanding, I suspect that the exaggerated public panic
surrounding the Y2K question is largely an expression of a more generic
malaise -- the feeling that we are jumping off the cliff of the known
(symbolized by dates that start reassuringly with the number "19") into the
ether of the unknowable (dates that start with that foreign number "20").
That sense of undefinable uncertainty needs something to worry about, a peg
on which to hang its nervousness whenever we walk in the door. If it weren't
YKK, it would be HIV, or FBI, or GNP.
But let me be just naive and blindly optimistic enough to suggest that
stepping out of the old into the new needn't be first and foremost about
anxiety. New beginnings, even arbitrary ones, have their own special kind of
magic -- the chance to wipe clean some slate that's gotten all smeared with
soot or dust or mildew, and make the proverbial fresh start -- innocent,
ignorant, and unpolluted as a newborn babe, at least for the first few
minutes. It's the feeling that "today is the first century of the rest of
your life," to hopelessly mix two metaphors. Heady stuff, for those who have
a taste for uncertainty, who like not knowing how the story of their life is
going to turn out. If changing the first two digits on the calendar breaks
old habits and helps people enter a zen state of beginner's mind, well, maybe
this notion of millennial shift has something to be said for it after all.
When we start looking ahead to what we are likely to see in neo-millennial
sex, this kind of excited, basically optimistic, gleeful anticipation of
what's coming down the pike seems particularly appropriate. If you're the
sort of person who sees expansion of sexual openness and expression as a good
thing. (If you're not, you're definitely reading the wrong column....) No, I
have not forgotten that the forces of social conservatism and sexual
repression are hard at work as ever, tilting their swords at such diverse
sexual windmills as pornography, abortion, public funding of erotic art,
homosexuality, sex-positive education in schools, and anything that has to do
with celebrating and enhancing the body's capacity for physical pleasure. But
the hysterical urgency of these reactionary campaigns is really a testament
to how rapidly sexual issues are moving in progressive directions, rather
than an indication that American sexual mores are about to return to the
wasteland of the 50's.
So many new and intriguing sexual genies have been popping out of one
tight-fitting bottle after another that the poor traditionalists who want to
return to the antisexual past are right to be in such a tizzy. The social and
sexual fabric of Norman Rockwell America is in shreds, just as the most dire
prophets of the Right say it is. All hell (as they call us) has indeed broken
loose, and will break loose even more in the years that start with the number
two. The end is indeed nigh -- thank God(dess). To wit:
The pursuit of sexual pleasure for its own sake -- separate and above any
desire to bring adorable new children into the world, separate from any
enlightened attempts to strengthen marriages and other ongoing relationships,
separate indeed from any concern about relationship at all -- is here to
stay, an indelible fixture in the consciousness of the vast majority of
Americans, even the people in the Heartland. Sex is good. Pleasure is good.
Calvin was wrong. Renunciation of pleasure does not lead to the good life.
There is just too much evidence that self-imposed misery only breeds more
misery for that basic truth to be unacknowledged.
The notion that women have a right to their own sexual desire, sexual
identity, and sexual satisfaction (rather than orienting their sexual
existence around the sexual desire and satisfaction of men) is also a
permanent feature of the sexual landscape. Yes, Virginia, women do have
clitorises, g-spots, orgasms, vibrators, and extra-marital affairs, and now
that the rose has found its way (back) to their cheeks, ain't no amount of
anti-pleasure preaching going to take that sweet truth away from them, except
for those few who are unfortunate enough to have thrown their lot in with the
radical right-wing fringe.
Awareness and public acknowledgment of homosexuality as a pervasive and
increasingly normalized social fact of life is growing with all the power of
historical inevitability, even though virulent homophobia and violence
against gays is as prevalent as ever. The significant news is not that a
majority of Americans still oppose gay marriage, but that 30% of Americans
have already radically revamped their perspective on this most basic social
institution, recognizing that, except for a few sexual details, gay people
and heterosexuals are all just plain folks wanting social recognition of
their love and all the economic benefits that married people enjoy. Too many
gay people are out and too many het people have put personal faces on the
once-dispersonal notion of homosexuality for many people to still believe
that homosexuals are inhuman monsters. Bisexuality, s/m, fetish play, open
non-monogamy, intergenerational sex, and the mutability of gender are a few
historical steps behind gays, but the shape of the progression over time is
the same.
One by one, sexual perspectives outside of what was once an unchallenged and
exceptionally narrow sexual mainstream are making themselves known and
emerging from legacies of guilt and shame. Local and national communities of
support are being built for all sorts of sexual diversity, and subcultures of
sexual information, elaboration, and celebration are blossoming and
multiplying everywhere.
The importance of the Internet is no small factor in this shift away from
ignorance and isolation for the sexually unconventional. Sexual information
and perspective -- much more significant than the graphic images that have
been the focus of so much media attention -- are available on the Internet in
a way that they has never been available to large masses of people before.
The Internet has taken the means of information production and control out of
the hands of a small elite of socially powerful individuals and put them in
the hands of the multitudes. That simple fact changes the rules of the
information game in a way that can never be reversed.
The Internet is already proving to be the most significant advance in the
democratization of information since the invention of the printing press, and
we are just beginning to understand and explore its possibilities. With
information -- sexual and otherwise -- freely available outside the control
of magazine and newspaper editors, book publishers, television network
moguls, and Hollywood power brokers, no one needs to struggle alone for
sexual identity and understanding these days, even if their sexual fantasies,
tastes, or practices are radically different from those of most people around
them.
Once people have real access to truthful, nonjudgmental information about
diverse sexualities, and access to the company, conversation, and support
that comes from interaction with dozens, hundreds, and thousands of sexually
like-minded souls, the lie that there is something wrong with people who go
beyond the sexually straight and narrow is exposed as exactly that -- a
fiction designed by those in power to keep people with diverse sexual
interests stigmatized, isolated from each other, powerless, and therefore
controllable.
What is most significant of all, perhaps, is that there are now so many
different sexual minorities flowering that even the boundaries and fixed
definitions established by these individual sexual countercultures are
dissolving. We are quickly moving beyond easy, static, sexual and gender
identifiers like gay, straight, s/m, vanilla, bisexual, man, or woman. When
there are so many sexual and gender possibilities out there, why choose only
one? More and more people are noticing that their sexual tastes, passions,
and orientations may not be quite the same as they were five years, five
months, five weeks, or five minutes ago. People seem to be getting used to
the idea that it's just fine (indeed rather wonderful) to let your sexual
perspective shift and change over time, or in the moment -- that you can play
your sexuality by ear, make it up as you go along, not try to keep it
confined to one easily-labeled and static category -- however unconventional
any one sexual designation might be.
With all this sexual exploration and creativity going on, the antisexual
rantings of all the old white men in the halls of power becomes increasingly
irrelevant. Time, as the song says, is on our side. In time, the old people
wither and die. Their place is taken by people who have grown up in different
sexual times, and who therefore have different sexual needs and different
sexual visions. Sexual battles that had to be fought, sexual rights that had
to be won, are forgotten and taken for granted by people too young to ever
have experienced the way it used to be. Sex for pleasure? Sure. Sex between
men and between women? Sure. Sexual power games and role playing? Of course.
What is your problem? Did people really used to worry about these things?
Now, don't get me wrong: It's certainly important to take the forces of
sexual repression seriously. This country has a real potential for
puritanical fascism growling just beneath its fair-minded, populist,
don't-fence-me-in surface. But even with all that violent reactionary
potential, the time when it would have been possible to turn back the sexual
clock in some significant and long-standing way -- if such a time ever really
existed at all -- has passed.
The backlash against the sexual Great Leap Forward of the 60's and 70's has
essentially played itself out. The political fortunes of social conservatives
are clearly on the wane. Both popular and financial support for the religious
and social right have been declining for years. At long last, all sorts of
people -- ranging from media mavens to politicians in and out of office to
just ordinary folks -- are realizing that the mean-spirited, born-again
Emperor has no clothes, that the number of people who make up the
well-organized and exceedingly vocal subculture of moralistic extremists is
pretty damned small compared to the rest of us who also think and vote. The
electorate's response -- first yawning, then angry -- to attempts by the
likes of Kenneth Starr, Tom De Lay, and Henry Hyde to turn Bill Clinton's
sexuality into some kind of moralistic Armageddon was a welcome indication
that everyday Americans have grown up a great deal around issues of supposed
sexual outrage. The undertow from the political wave that washed all those
nasty young conservatives into Congress in 1994 (and scared the bejesus out
of just about everyone else) came back to wash many of them out again in 1998
when the brash, impetuous, and just plain immature True Believers bet the
store on Presidential impeachment and lost.
Next year's elections will be crucial for determining what happens in the
short run. For all the depressing similarities among the mainstream
candidates and political parties, it does matter whether George Bush or Al
Gore comes to inhabit the White House, and whether the Democrats or the
Republicans control Congress, the various statehouses, city governments, and
local school boards. But whatever the details of the next four or eight years
may be, the longer, larger picture remains essentially both unalterable and
delightfully positive. If we are to salvage anything meaningful from all the
millennium madness, it might as well be to notice that it's this longer,
larger picture that matters the most in the end.