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BY SUEY CHOW

If you have a question, write to me at:
Suey Chow
Willamette Week
822 SW 10th Ave.
Portland, OR 97205
e-mail:sueychow@pobox.com


Read previous Dinner Palace of Love columns.


Dear Suey,
I haven't been attracted to anyone lately or felt very sexual at all. I wonder why. Maybe I'm not meeting enough people? Maybe I'm tired of romantic comedies and the gender debate? I'm still a little curious about sex as a cultural phenomenon--I just don't feel like having any myself. I'm not old (36), I'm not ill, I'm not depressed. I'm just not interested.

I looked into a recent survey in the Journal of the American Medical Association; it says a whopping 43 percent of American women and 31 percent of men experience some form of "sexual dysfunction"--lack of desire, difficulties with arousal, problems with climax, performance anxieties...yadda, yadda, yadda--I'm sure we've all heard it before. Lately, I can't get that study off my mind. What do you think? Have I been stricken with the latest new social disease? Or is this "normal"?

--The Usual Nons

Dear Nons,
You don't say whether or not you're busy, getting out of a sticky relationship or stressed out, or whether you have a history of unpleasant sexual experiences, so I will assume these are not a problem for you. Even so, we all have our refractory periods, and if you don't feel like having sex right now, then don't bother.

In the meantime...have I mentioned that sports are really good exercise, too?

The main problem with sitting around reading thick studies about America's sexual dysfunction is that you lose out on the profoundly physical experience of your own intelligence. Join a hiking club, learn tai chi, figure out how to do the mambo. Rediscover sunburns and learn about sex again through your skin. Look, it's summer outside. --Suey

Dear Suey,
I recently returned from a two-week trip to Cuba. When I left, my girlfriend of 14 months left a note in my luggage: "I love you and can't wait for your return. You are not alone anymore." When I got back, she picked me up at the airport late on a Sunday night; the next morning, at 7 am, she called and told me she couldn't see me anymore. I've been shocked, angry and depressed for two weeks. What should I do?

--David

Dear David,
What can you do? Perhaps you can start by feeling shocked, angry and depressed for at least a few more weeks. Don't fall for the callow American habit of viewing human despair as unproductive, a sign of moral degeneracy. Instead, take your cue from the French, who have cultivated the habit of misery. They have a way of making depression seem smug and cultured. Or imitate the Germans, who like to drive themselves slowly, analytically mad with it. Or the Chinese, who view it as a form of brave honesty. Or the Brazilians, who like to create ballroom dances about it.

I think you should slouch at an outdoor cafe table with your legs in the sidewalk, glaring at Portland tourists from behind dark sunglasses. Harass the help for being so slow with your french fries and flick your lighter distractedly at the edges of their misleading paper menus that advertise so-called food service until somebody on the so-called payroll throws you out. Drag yourself home and sit in the dark watching new-wave cinema on the ugly American VCR, repeatedly dialing up the woman who ruined your life (or at least, the most recent two weeks of it) until her answering machine tape runs out or she picks up the phone. Did she break up with you because she met someone else? Because she has a terminal illness? Because she has borderline personality disorder? Because she's indecisive? If she has a hard time making up her mind, perhaps you can use that to your advantage.

But at some point, it might occur to you that this is just the way it's going to be. And then you will have stumbled upon one of life's great truths, which is that we, as a race, are doomed to a life of unexpected happenstance. We will be betrayed by our ideals, undermined by our hopes, blind-sided by the unpredictable people who love us. And yet, through it all, there is always a chance for fulfillment. Sometimes it doesn't come in the form of dependable relationships with the people who leave notes in our luggage. Sometimes it comes as romantic despair, a trip to the library to read Beat poets, or howling pain. And then, it'll change again.

--Suey


Previous Columns:

5/5/99

  -Crushed out on movie stars
5/12/99  

-My 22-year-old daughter is threatening to marry her 23-year-old boyfriend
-I met someone over the Internet - but I'm afraid she's a stalker!

5/19/99   -How to buy a dildo
5/26/99   -Do you think it's OK to break up with a guy over sex?
-My boyfriend is homophobic and my best friend is a gay man.
6/2/99   -Should I choose a relationship or the single life?
-How can I tell if I really love my girlfriend, or just her money?
6/9/99   -My boyfriend feels like a pervert
-Should I jeopardize my relationship for sex with my ex?
6/16/99   -dildos can reaffirm your humanity
-where are all the straight men?
6/23/99  

-My wife wants an open marriage
-I can't stand my in-laws' cooking

6/30/99   -black man seeks advice for courting an Asian lady
-tip from a queer customer
  -My lover is a slob
-Breaking up is hard to do
7/14/99   -Buying porn
7/21/99  

-After two years, my boyfriend and I don't have sex enough
-I'm still in love with my ex, and she's getting married

7/28/99

-My girlfriend is obsessed with telephone psychics.
- I'd rather be with my cat than my girlfriend

8/4/99  

-I started seeing a guy who's an 'emotional dud'
-I'm 50-plus and want to get back into dating, love and sex.

8/11/99   -I'm 19, but I only like older women
-When should I meet my online pal?

 

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Willamette Week | originally published August 18, 1999

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