editors: laura Berman howie brick contributing editor: mary long sundciy mctgazine inside: page four-books page five-the great escape Number 1 Page Three Septembe FEATURI r 8, 1974 ES N Sex,. love By TIMOTHY BARRON overcome - is that a LAST SUMMER Susan and I split to reject traditional up. The shock I felt then - one that internalizes as "right' hasn't yet disappeared - came at least what in turn becomes partly because I had assumed we would to overcome, no matte endure. Despite doubts and rocky times, believes the lessons I quietly believed things would work out solete. The second pr and we would stay together permanently. though we are quick It was in the aftermath of our split, reject the choices when I was feeling a mixture of fear made, the range of n and confusion, that I first seriously ques- us seldom offers eas tioned such absolutes as marriage, mono- ers. gamy, roles, children and commitment. Jack, a thoughful se And to my surprise, when I looked neither a job nor a s around, I discovered that my friends, put it this way: "The and their friends, were beginning to is what I don't wa face similar conflicts. that's settle for the Nonetheless, it wasn't until later that But the rest just seem I realized the first source of conflict I start thinking ab( seemed to be between generations. It from a relationship, I was at dinner one night that a spontan- was someone around eous discussion about our parents got I could act out of sor underway. Howard Wolowitz, There were about six of us at the table, 'U' professor who see and when the conversation turned to how put the problem in me we would do things differently as parents "One of the conseque the feelings spilled forth. "I don't want to be a parent like my father was," said one of my roommates in a voice laced with bitterness. "He knows he failed as a parent by never be- ing around. I don't even know who he is, and he doesn't know who I am. We have very little to talk about. I used to feel sorry for myself, but now I feel sorry for him. He missed his chance." Donna, who had just graduated from college and is just beginning medical school saw the limits of her mother's life: "My mother has always been totally subordinate to my father. She brought us up and she shut up about having to do it. But it's sad now because we've all left home and she lived through us. All she has to look forward to is cook- ing my father's dinner - which he may or may not like. I'd be bored to death." PETH, WHO came out of a sheltered, middle-class background, had slight- ly different resentments. "How am I supposed to have made a serious career? My model was this person who never worked a day in her life and who en- couraged me from the beginning to look for a man - that was the most im- portant job. I feel like I'm at a big disadvantage now - men have a 20 year headstart. It gets my angry.' I realized the feelings they articulated probably represented only the tip of an iceberg. My belief that what hovered beneath was something much more com- plex was borne out in subsequent conver- sations with another 15 or 20 students. By asking first about attitudes toward parents, I uncovered a general pattern that looked something like this: ; Although we came from educated fam- ilies, most of us were raised on a diet of fairly rigid and circumscribed atti- 'tudes about lifestyles. Our parents got married (and had sex anly after the vows), made a permanent commitment, roles and fewer outsi and produced children. If they got di- that if anything goes vorced, they did so much later, often tionship, it is blame only to remarry quickly. Roles were Personal satisfaction 2 clear and complementary: the male was a part of identity nov chief economic supporter, the female was marriage could be sus baby maker and child rearer. the church or the ki But for my friends at the University' people would say, or seemed morally wrong traditional bets are off. The emphasis that isn't true. Roles, is instead on a range of constantly ex- up, were functional, a panding options - remaining single, liv- about them are forer . ing and sleeping with someone but not ity. Competition is be getting married, carrying on multiple, the odetmore cm short-term relationships, not having Healthy as this may b children. Women are now freer to pursue it will take an awful b careers, men to undertake family respon- experience to get the sibilities: more than ever bisexuality out. In the meantime and homosexuality are acceptable. To the majority of us who are experience- lots of frustrations, r hungry, idealistic about relationships, sions, later marriages and antiauthoritarian, our obvious reac- es." tion to the new freedoms is positive. Liv- Take Cary 22, an ing together before marrying, for in- stance, encourages a much more inti- ing woman whose attit mate and open way to know someone ed radically in the la else. Sharing responsibility for childrear- a freshman she met D ing means that the traditionally distant and lived with him father ill. knew hie family )%attar a and fib eration: confusion sharing, but how not me having the can I child." respond? It's ire eds, powerful emotion- rlies our attempts beliefs. What one and "good", and familiar, isn't easy er how strongly one have become ob- oblems is that al. and passionate to our parents have new options before y, clear-cut answ- nior who has found trong relationship, only thing I know nt to do --and sake of settling. is like a fog. When out what I want almost wish there telling me. I wish me higher cause." a psychiatrist and es many students, ore general terms: ences of undefined "I THINK it is an incredibly hard and painful transition. It is wrenching for me to change my way of relating, parti- cularly with a woman since it's harder to hide behind old roles. I was used to being dominated; I was never bound by the concept of being a housewife, and yet a career was really secondary. An emotionally important relationship was my biggest priority, and I related to David the way I did to everyone: the only way I could be valuable was if I could be needed. My interest in a ca- reer wasn't an outgrowth of a strong self-concept, it was more that I'd al- ways done well in school and so it seemed like a logical step. I might have been a doctor, but you better believe I would be a married doctor. My involve- ment with Barbara meant some pretty serious changes." Cary is typically ambivalent about the future: "I'd like a love relationship but I don't need it absolutely. When I think about the kind of people I'm attracted to - strong and independent - and the emotional needs I have, I'm in a real di- her telling me, just when we were split- ting up, that I didn't fulfill some of her real needs. She said it in a very mat- ter-of-fact way, but it really threw me. Needs? I hadn't even thought about needs. You just had a relationship and that was that. It wasn't until we were apart that I began realizing what she meant!" AVID HAS been only sporadically in- volved since he broke up with Cary and he is unsure about settling down again. "I don't know. I'd like to but I'm supercynical about getting caught in another relationship like the one I was in. I look at Cary now, and the ways she's changed, and I have such mixed feeling that I realize I don't know what I want. In one way she is much more attractive to me now. She's stronger, more aware of herself, more independ- ent. I can't help thinking that being in- volved with a woman has been a large part of it, getting out of the shadow of expectations about how to relate to men. "But that's only one part of it, the A FEW DAYS later I was walking down the street discusing careers with an ambitious woman I know, when she noticed an adorable five-year-old boy across the street and lit up. "I love kids. Seeing one like him makes me want to be a mother." She smiled but there was an edge in her voice. "Every time my maternal instincts flare up I squelch them, consciously. How am I going to bring up kids and have a career at the same time?" Another woman I talked to, who recently started work in a day-care center, feels the conflicts more in a personal than a career con- text. "There are feelings in me that say yes, I'd like to be a mother, but then I say, what if I had a kid now? What would I be doing with a kid? The kids I work with, a lot of them, are really unhappy. Would I want to have an unhappy kid? Would I want to be responsible for that? It's frightening. I'd like the father to be someone nice, and I'm worried about the idea of his not being around. I don't want to be mar- ried, but I'd feel more inclined to have a child if I was. That's another con- fusing thing." Joanne Veroff, a local psychologist, considers the ambivalent attitude toward children, particularly among women, a fascinating new phenomenon. "With birth control and abortion and the end to so- ciety's expectation that everyone should have children, the decision becomes yet another personal choice. Young people seem to believe they shouldn't have child- AIthough we came from educated families, most of us were raised on a diet of fairly rigid and circum- scribed attitudes about lifestyles. Our parents got married (and had sex only after the vows), made a permanent commitment, and pro- we wanted to do.dIn a lot of ways he had been rare. Sexually he didn't have to be the aggressor and he wasn't con- cerned only with his own orgasm. He cared about whether I was enjoying sex. After our relationship was over, I was celibate for a long time, and I even got to like the feeling of independence, but eventually I began seeing other men. They were usually trying to exploit me sexually, and I felt I was being used as a receptacle. I began to distrust men in general, and I suppose one reason was that I felt I had so many hurdles to face that men didn't. I began resent- ing them and I got pretty cynical. "I like men. I want a man and I want to be in love. But I keep meeting ones who didn't emotionally fill needs, and I realized that it was characteristically only with my female friends that I got fulfillment. I had a sense of resignation that some day I might have to have a gay relationship. I hadn't had one be- fore because of the guilt, the fear, the hassles, but mostly, I guess, because I never met a woman where it worked out. I think I would have had an affair if I had met someone. "I DON'T TAKE as much shit as I used to, but my tendency is still to fail into a dependent role because I like strong men. It's a constant fight. One night I was in bed with a guy I had been seeing and he told me he thought I was getting too serious. That made me furious. I'd felt good/about the fact that we'd been able to keep it light, and I'd been enjoying it anyway. But then I realized the reason I was so angry was because here was another male denying feeling, pushing away commit- ment, and here I was, a typical female, trying to deny that it mattered when it did." Ann has discovered that many men aren't ready to deal with women on an equal, nonexploitative basis. But I saw men who were plagued with the opposite problem - women apparently less ready to reject expectations than they were. Jamie, for example, a sgihtly clumsy, bespectacled 20-year-old talked about his troubles with forthright innocence and great intensity: "The girl I'm seeing was taught to believe the male is dom- inant; she was brought up in an Ortho- dox Jewish household. She wants me to take the lead in the things we do sex- ually, and I have trouble with that. My parents spent so much time trying to make me guilt-free about sex that now I'm self-conscious and unnatural. I tell her I'm a bit inexperienced myself, and she's got to have patience, but she ex- pects me to get things going. I guess I believe in men's liberation as much as women's liberation. The barrier of men having to act strong and sexually dominant is idiotic. I would probably have an impossible time staying involv- ed wtih a woman who was locked into that role." ENOUGH TALES. What of the future? Today's confusion is tomorrow's un- certainty. Many young people today can imagine a future alone, but few can ac- cept that possibility as a likely alter- native. Nearly everyone struggles with conflicts they are only beginnnig to un- derstand. For my part, I feel divided. That notion that I'll feel less pressured to put work before relationship, that I'll be involved with someone who has a challenging career, and that before any marriage commitment, I'll live with thei person long enough to know what I'm getting into - all these assumptions seem enormously attractive. On t h e other hand, I can't imagine coping with multiple relationships or bisexuality. I don't want to compromise if there's the prospect of a more satisfying alternative out there, but I also don't want to spend my life in a constant and ultimate fruit- less search for the ideal. For now - hard times, much turmoil. Lisa, a wry and perceptive 20-year-old woman, says it well for many of us. Her family is solidly traditional and middle class; her current friends, whose backgrounds are similar, are all making varied and valiant efforts to check the past and test the future. "You want to know, the truth? I'm so free I'm lost. I can't stand to be dominated but I only like dominant men. I don't expect to be married at 30, but that scares me to death. Lesbianism is the new thing. You've gotta consider it. duced children. vorced, they did If they got di- so much later, often only to remarry quickly. Roles were clear and complementary: the male was chief economic sup- porter, the female was baby maker and child rearer . .. But for my friends of the University, tradi- tional bets are off. : ;na:.:v..;N.;.. " r. :. ' Y"K^.';:,s 'R?" :f h:a k .. \;c: '; :,3: ';:;:? .< :'3 ':Y":c :n: >,: i:;..;,:y;; ,,.. de expectations is wrong in a rela- ed on one's self. is so much more ww. Before, a bad tained because of ids or what other simply because it g to end it. Now as they were set nd the new ideas unners of irstabil- ginning to replace plementary order. e in the long run, ot of generational ese things ironed , you can expect esentment, confu- and more divorc- intense and strik- tudes have chang- .st two years. As )avid, fell in love, for most of the lemma, I don't even know if I'll settle down with a man or a woman. But either way, let's say my lover gets a job in Florida; and I get into school on the West Coast, what are we going to do? And I suspect it may happen some- time. So maybe you solve the problem once, but then what precedent does it set for the next time? It is showing weakness, is it damaging one person? There are lots of qustions, and there's a lot of room for resentment." "It's hard to come to terms with, but I think 'enduring' may come to mean a few years and not a lifetime. That scares me. Maybe people won't make serious emotional commitments until much later in life. When things seem impossible I say, well maybe when I'm 35 and we're both settled . ." Not surprisingly, the experience of the last year has been one of great change not only for Cary, but also for David. "It was devastating for me when I found out about Cary, of course - ego crushing and scary. It was frightening partly because it meant I was without positive side when I'm rational and objective and not hurting. The other side is that I think Cary has lost some of her softness and gentleness -- and that bothers me. She doesn't care as much about how she looks, and she is less vulnerable, and innocent. Maybe that's chauvinistic, but those are quali- ties I liked,. ones I wish more men had. "Also I think the force of my per- sonality, forgetting whether it belongs to a man or a woman, tends to push anyone I get involved with into a sub- ordinate role. I don't want to do that, but it's hard. I sympathize with women who find it difficult not to subordinate themselves, because I find it difficult not to dominate. In the last year, at times when I've been working hard, I've said to myself, 'Thank God I'm not in a heavy relationship now 'cause I'd really screw it up. Maybe that means going my own way." David grimaced and looked at me plaintively. "Does it really have to be all or nothing?" -f - n f _ A ~ M r n~fo tn ren unless they themselves are together and have fully formed identities. In my own case, I learned a lot about myself by bringing up children. If people decide to wait until they have strong identities before having children, they may just end up not having children at all. It's funny, but it never seems to occur to the students I talk with that maybe you don't have to be a perfect parent. Plenty of healthy, happy kids have imperfect parents." NOWHERE ARE our conflicts more highly charged, and the ability to sort them out less successful, than in the area of sexuality. Other kinds of struggles may be smoothed over by words, or simply denied; with sex it's all in the open. Although few people seem involved in multiple relationships, many struggle even in traditional setups. Ann, an at- tractive woman who graduated this spring, found that no single sexual pos- sibility - and she's tried a range of them - has proved ideal. "My ideal goal when T ra ma to 11 .: , .. 4..- -I