Read The Guide to Getting It On Online
Authors: Paul Joannides
Tags: #Self-Help, #Sexual Instruction, #Sexuality
The “Honey Do” Influence:
A guy would have less resistance to wearing girls’ bikini bottoms if his wife said, “Honey, I think you’ll look sexy in these.” This fact wasn’t lost on the underwear manufacturers, as the ads with the male athletes in their bikini briefs were clearly aimed at women.
Penis-Over-The-Top Factor:
The transition to bikini underwear for men had a good deal of practical significance. That’s because when we pee, a lot of us don’t pull the penis through the fly in men’s briefs or boxers. Instead, we yank the elastic waistband down and plop the penis over the top. So the fly is totally useless for a lot of men and having the lower waistband makes the process of peeing easier.
Briefs and Bras in Perspective
Publications in gender studies tend to focus on subjects like violence, rape, and the truly awful things that some people do to others. They would consider our look at men’s and women’s underwear superficial. However, “superficial” means “on the outside.” In the last two chapters, we took your blouses off and pulled your pants down.
If we had a gender studies course at Goofy Foot University (a.k.a. G F-U!), students would spend the first week playing with Barbie, GI Joe, Legos, and Matchbox Cars. They would then be asked to consider the relationships between play and gender identification. The next week, they would have to strip down to their undies and free-associate about what’s masculine and feminine. Hopefully, one of the women would be wearing a Granny Bra.
The most important lesson, however, is that a hundred years ago, no one would have been able to predict that the bra would ever be sexy. And as little as fifty years ago, no one would have been able to predict that men would feel manly wearing women’s bikini bottoms. Look at all of the effort that went into weaving these pieces of cloth into the sexual fabric of our culture.
A Note on Different Water Cultures:
Most male surfers wouldn’t be caught dead in Speedos. The only commonality between many male swimmers and surfers seems to be water, and the water of the former smells like chlorine while the water of the latter tastes like salt.
CHAPTER
70
What’s Masculine, Feminine & Erotic?
T
he thinking in some academic circles is that masculinity and femininity are constructed by society. And once you start chipping away at what’s masculine and what’s feminine in different cultures, you can’t help but agree, at least a little. Men and women may arrive at things like sexual orientation in different ways, and our brains might even process certain aspects of sexuality differently, but culture plays a big role in determining our sex roles. This chapter takes a brief look at matters that can be incredibly complex.
Masculinity, Then and Now
A little more than a hundred years ago, men who didn’t have much money worked in jobs that required a good deal of physical labor. Unlike today, a lean, buff man with sexy muscles did not get that way from working out at a gym. His well-defined muscles were usually the result of a low-paying job. As a result, a well-dressed man with a pot belly was a better catch for an attractive young woman in the year 1900. The big belly and nice clothes meant being able to protect your wife and children from an economy that suffered frequent and wicked downturns. They meant a woman wouldn’t have to work outside the home, which was significant when the best jobs most women could get in 1900 were a domestic servant or a seamstress, working long hours at very low pay. To earn more, she might need to become a prostitute.
Have things changed just a bit? Well, not with the economy, but with the muscles. Nowadays we assume that most men with buff muscles have enough leisure time to work out. It’s unlikely that someone who is working two jobs will be able to make time for the gym. A guy who has a job as computer programmer may work out at the gym in an attempt to hide the fact that his biggest physical challenge at work is opening up his laptop. And the young woman of olde who may have viewed Mr. Portly as a good catch might very well be working out at the gym today with Mr. Buff and making as much money as he is. Such an independent woman would not have been considered “feminine” a hundred years ago. In 1900, feigning frailty was an important element of femininity.
What Different Societies Have to Say
Each culture has its own definition of what’s masculine, feminine and erotic. Here are some examples of how these definitions differ from culture to culture, year to year:
Masculinity & Femininity
For many of us, masculinity and femininity are concepts that make all the sense in the world as long as you don’t try to define them. For example, people in this country think of masculine as being rough-and-tumble and feminine as being dainty and nurturing. Yet this isn’t nearly as true in preschools that require girls to wear the same kind of clothes as boys. Once freed from wearing dainty outfits, a lot of little girls get rough-and-tumble too.