Why Do We Have Sex?
We have sex more for connection than for procreation or pleasure.
Why do you sleep
at night? This is seemingly a simple question. But in fact it is a most
difficult question, as of yet unanswered by science. Many seemingly
simple questions are, on close inspection, not at all easy to answer.
One of these—perhaps the most interesting—is why we have sex.
Why do you want sex? The usual answer is, of course, based
on the known reproductive function of sex. We want sex because our
continued existence as a species depends on it. Children come from sex,
one learns. And the thing about the stork is just a story.But
the facts on the ground undermine this assumption. First, people
continue to engage in sex long after they have stopped having children.
Often, their sex lives actually get better, because there are no more
worries about unplanned
pregnancy (or, a bit later, about Junior popping up bedside mid-action saying he needs to pee).
Which leads us to the following fact: most sex happening right now around the world is not procreative. On the contrary, most of those getting busy at this moment would be shocked and upset to find that their joyful acrobatics have resulted in pregnancy. An intense interest in sex and eroticism is not necessarily linked to heightened interest in producing offspring. In fact, those interests are often inversely related.
Moreover, many sexual behaviors we commonly engage in, even
in the fertile years, are not related to reproduction at all. If sex is
for reproduction, how is the mechanism of sexual pleasure organized
regarding anal or oral sex? And why are you holding hands with your
boyfriend? Children do not come of it. Besides, you also hold hands with
your three-year-old niece. What's going on here? And what is
reproductive about someone pulling your hair? In fact, why does the
business
of genital, reproductive pleasure spread to all kinds of remote areas
not related to reproduction, such as shoulders (very sexy in the
nineteenth century), the neck (sexual attraction in Japanese culture),
or breasts (contemporary American obsession)? And if a man has a
biological urge to find a good mother for his offspring, why do men
routinely differentiate between a ‘sexy’ woman and a ‘motherly’ one, and
prefer the former to the latter?Now you say, “Okay, let’s
forget all the biology. Why complicate things? Sex feels good. It is a
pleasure. I have sex for fun.” But that argument is unsatisfactory as
well. It turns out the desire for physical pleasure is NOT the most
important reason for sexual activity.
Research shows that the physical pleasure of genital stimulation is not necessarily an important component in the decision to have sex. Researchers Cindy Meston and David Buss a few years ago asked 400 students about their reasons for engaging in sex. After processing the data and eliminating similar or identical answers, they were left with a list of 237 different reasons for sex, including "I wanted to give him an STD,” "I felt sorry for him", "To punish myself", and "I lost a bet."
The truth is, many people are having sex right now without pleasure or any expectation of it. If it’s pleasure you want, if you desire a nice orgasm, you'll get there faster—and cheaper, with more certainty and less risk of pregnancy and disease—through masturbation. So why are you having sex with your partner? And why, when you do masturbate, are you fantasizing about him (or about someone, anyway)?
It turns out that the deep experience of sexual pleasure
depends somehow on the presence, and conduct, of others. A brutal
illustration of this principle can be found in prostitution. On its
face, prostitution is a cold business—the epitome of (mostly male)
selfish pleasure seeking. The customer buys physical sexual release for
money, plain and simple. But the customer can give himself an orgasm,
for free. So why pay? And why is the customer's enjoyment increased if
the prostitute produces the sounds of enjoyment and sexual arousal? If
the client's
motivation
is selfish sexual release, the satisfaction of a biological urge, why
does it matter to him if the prostitute is aroused? What excites him
about the thought that she is enjoying herself? Fundamental social,
interpersonal dynamics are apparently present even here, inside the most
alienated transaction.Beyond that, let's face it, sex is not
automatically enjoyable. Remember your first sexual experience. It was
not fun. Some mouth-breathing, pimpled nudnik from chemistry class felt
you up in the back seat of your dad’s Chevy, forced a wet tongue into
your ear because his friend saw something on the Internet about how
that’s what you’re supposed to do. And then he asked if you came. Or
take for example the business of kissing. What is fun in exchanging
saliva and dinner remnants with someone else? Even if we focus on the
genitals, most of the sexual organs are very sensitive to touch—for
better or worse. If someone touches your genitals clumsily, or when
you're not ready or do not want to be touched, the contact will be
painful, offensive, and disgusting, not exciting and pleasurable. Good
sex is learned; you have to work for it. It does not show up on its own.
And it is not just about you alone. Sexual pleasure, it seems, is set
up, operated, defined, and organized by external factors.
Randall
Collins,
the great American sociologist who’s been writing on the subject for
decades (and on whose work many of the musings above are based), argues
quite persuasively that human sexuality can be fully understood only in a
social context. Human beings, fundamentally, are distinctly,
spectacularly social. Lonely and isolated, we cannot survive, let alone
thrive. For us, power and meaning emerge through making connections.
Sexual desire, thus, is not chiefly aimed at physical pleasure or the
production of children, but at connectedness with others. Sexual
pleasure is fundamentally a social construct, an emergent property of
social exchange.According to Collins, we construct our world
in an ongoing series of complex 'interaction rituals' that enable our
existence (physical) and give it meaning (mental, spiritual).
All aspects of our lives are conducted through these ceremonies.
Conversations between friends, a day's work, a football game, Sunday at
church—all these are interaction rituals. They may be different in
content, but they are similar in their underlying social and
psychological processes: they all involve gathering people into a group
whose members are aware of each other, directing their attention to a
common interest, sharing a strong emerging emotion, and defining clear
boundaries between 'us' and 'them'.
In this context, sex is an interactive ritual, and it follows the rules. In a sexual encounter, a small group gathers (usually two, no more). Participants are aware of the presence of the other (no one ever tells you in the middle of intercourse, "Wow, I just noticed you are here"), and their attention is directed to the common interest (they 'make love'). Participants share a powerful emotion, in this case sexual arousal, and construct a clear definition of ‘us' and 'them', ('us' are in here having sex, and ‘them’, poor slobs, are outside; they should not watch us, interrupt us, or even know all the particulars about that we’re doing).
The results of such interaction rituals—whether at church or
in bed--are also predictable: the solidarity between participants
increases (at church, we’re united under God; in bed, we’re faithful to
each other), the mental energy builds up (I'm strong in my
faith; I am deeply in love). From the encounter, especially if it’s repeated, canonical memories
will be chosen to symbolize the relationship to the partners (forty
years in the desert; forty minutes at that boutique hotel in Ventura),
certain objects will be imbued with a sacred quality (a cross; a wedding
ring), and certain gestures will be chosen to clarify the boundaries of
the relationship--demarcate what is ours only and distinguishes us from
others (we drink the blood of Christ; only we can touch each other
there).
Which leads us to the following fact: most sex happening right now around the world is not procreative. On the contrary, most of those getting busy at this moment would be shocked and upset to find that their joyful acrobatics have resulted in pregnancy. An intense interest in sex and eroticism is not necessarily linked to heightened interest in producing offspring. In fact, those interests are often inversely related.
Research shows that the physical pleasure of genital stimulation is not necessarily an important component in the decision to have sex. Researchers Cindy Meston and David Buss a few years ago asked 400 students about their reasons for engaging in sex. After processing the data and eliminating similar or identical answers, they were left with a list of 237 different reasons for sex, including "I wanted to give him an STD,” "I felt sorry for him", "To punish myself", and "I lost a bet."
The truth is, many people are having sex right now without pleasure or any expectation of it. If it’s pleasure you want, if you desire a nice orgasm, you'll get there faster—and cheaper, with more certainty and less risk of pregnancy and disease—through masturbation. So why are you having sex with your partner? And why, when you do masturbate, are you fantasizing about him (or about someone, anyway)?
In this context, sex is an interactive ritual, and it follows the rules. In a sexual encounter, a small group gathers (usually two, no more). Participants are aware of the presence of the other (no one ever tells you in the middle of intercourse, "Wow, I just noticed you are here"), and their attention is directed to the common interest (they 'make love'). Participants share a powerful emotion, in this case sexual arousal, and construct a clear definition of ‘us' and 'them', ('us' are in here having sex, and ‘them’, poor slobs, are outside; they should not watch us, interrupt us, or even know all the particulars about that we’re doing).
According to Collins, a thorough understanding of sexuality
is only possible if we look at it from the perspective of the social
context, rather than examining it from the perspective of the
individual. The dancer becomes such by virtue of the existence of the
dance. Instead of saying "Every dog has its day," we should say, "Every
day has its dog." You and your lover do not bring your sexual pleasure
to the relationship. You get sexual pleasure from the relationship. Your
body parts do not charge the relationship with sexual pleasure. The
interaction charges your body with sexual pleasure. Pleasure is not
derived from the physical stimulation of the genitals or from the
possibility of giving birth to the next Bill Gates. In its most
fundamental sense, sexual pleasure is derived from the synchronized cooperation between people. The whole of human contact is larger than the sum of its participating individual parts—possessing better resilience, greater wisdom, and deeper delights. Therefore we seek that whole everywhere, including in sex.
At the end of the day, sex is truly pleasurable because through it we
may transcend our aloneness and form a meaningful bond with another
human being.
Pakistani Teen age Aunty Hot and sex Bedroom Scene
ReplyDeletePakistani super sexy actors Nude Photo Shoot in Saree
Indian sexy hot girls aunties boobs pussy photo gallery
Indian sexy Sunny Leone Getting Fucked by hardy sexy cock
Hot sexy pictures photos girls without dress, showing her sexy nude
Indian Teen age Cute And Sexy School Girls SEXY Wallpaper
Desi Indian Young age sexy aunties pussy photo gallary
Indian sexy actors Sunny Leone Nude Photo Shoot in Saree
Boobs Press-Tamil-Telugu-Actress-bikini sexy South Indian Girls
Indian 20 years old sexy Aunties Housewife Removing Saree
Hollywood Sexy Celebrity girl fucking bathroom with her sexy boyfriend