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  • One of the frequent and painful paradoxes of romantic life is that the more we get to

  • know and love someone, the harder it can be to summon up any sincere wish to sleep with

  • them. Intimacy and closeness, far from fostering deeper sexual desire, can be the very ingredients

  • that destroy excitement - whereas having only just recently met a person and not feeling

  • too much for them can set up awkward yet compelling preconditions for wanting very badly to take

  • them to bed.

  • The conundrum is sometimes colloquially referred to as themadonna-whore complex.’ It

  • can sound offensive and reactionary phrased like this - as if the problem applied to only

  • one gender and might at some level condone or even promote the very dynamic that it described.

  • And yet the phrase circles something highly significant, always contemporary and of relevance

  • to every gender (it might, for heterosexual women, be known as thesaint brute complex’).

  • It was Sigmund Freud who first drew attention to our difficulties connecting love with desire

  • in an essay of 1912 titledOn the Universal Tendency to Debasement in the Sphere of Love’.

  • Of many of his patients, he wrote: ‘Where they love, they have no desire, and where

  • they desire, they cannot love.’ In seeking to explain the division, Freud pointed to

  • two facts connected to our upbringing: first, in childhood, we are generally brought up

  • by people we love deeply and yet towards whom we cannot express sexual feelings (frightened

  • as we are by a strict incest taboo); and second, as adults, we tend to choose lovers who in

  • certain powerful (though unconscious) ways resemble those whom we loved most dearly as

  • children.

  • Together these influences set up a devilish conundrum whereby the more deeply we come

  • to love someone outside of our family, the more strongly we are reminded of the intimacy

  • of our early familial bondsand hence the less free we instinctively are to express

  • our sexual desires without fear or reservation. An incest taboo originally designed to limit

  • the genetic dangers of inbreeding can thus succeed in inhibiting and eventually ruining

  • our chances of enjoying intercourse with someone to whom we are not in the remotest way related.

  • The likelihood of the incest taboo’s re-emergence with a partner increases greatly after the

  • arrival of children. Until then, reminders of the parental prototypes on which our choice

  • of lovers is subconsciously based can just about be kept at bay. But once there is a

  • pram in the hallway and a sweet infant referring to the person we once tied up or explored

  • with a sex toy asmummyordaddy’, both parties may significantly start to take

  • fright, complain of feeling tired and turn in early.

  • A dichotomy grows between thepurethings one can do with a partner one loves and the

  • dirtythings one still longs to do - but can only imagine being free enough to do with

  • a near stranger. It can feel untenably disrespectful to want to make love to, or to put the matter

  • at its sharpest, fuck the kind person who is later going to be preparing lunch boxes

  • and arranging the school rota.

  • To start to overcome the problem, it pays to observe that not all childhoods are equal

  • in their tendencies to generate sexual difficulties for people in later life. A parent who is

  • very uncomfortable with their body may send out covert signals that sex is invariably

  • dirty, bad and dangerous - and thereby lends their child an impression that it truly can’t

  • belong within a loving relationship. A more integrated and mature parent on the other

  • hand may suggest that they are reconciled to their desires and relaxed about some of

  • the proto-sexual things that small children naturally and innocently do: make a great

  • deal of noise and mess, take an interest in their bodies and (at a certain age) talk about

  • poo a lot. The feeling that one can be naughty and still loved andgoodis one the

  • great gifts a parent may bequeath to their child.

  • A lot of the work to repair the love/sex dichotomy can, strangely for something so physical,

  • be done in the mind. We can conceptually start to rehabilitate sex as a serious and in its

  • way entirely respectable topic that good people who love their children and their jobs and

  • are invested in an upstanding life can be profoundly interested in; that there need

  • be no conflict between a longing to be filthy and depraved at some points and decorous and

  • respectable at others. We can contain multitudes: the us that wants to flog or be debased or

  • smear and the us that wants to advise, nurture and counsel. One can be whore and madonna,

  • brute and saint. Rather than seeking out different partners, we might settle, less disruptively,

  • on merely adopting different roles. A child cannot express love and sexuality to a parent;

  • and vice versa. But it is one of the privileges of adulthood, that we no longer have to be

  • hampered by such a paradigm. Our lovers need not be only cosy co-parents and responsible

  • sweet friends, they can for a time - in the very best transgressive sense - also be something

  • else that is hugely important to our mental well-being and the survival of our relationships:

  • partners in crime.

  • If you enjoyed our film, you might be interested in our range of books on topics such as relationships. To explore click the link on your screen now.

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親密さと親密さ (Intimacy and Closeness)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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