Why a whole sprawling postscript to this bête
noire of the feminist movement? In fact, it turns into an inquiry
about something a lot closer to home: a delusion I've clung to
for far too long and that Paglia has helped me to "deconstruct." But of
course it all started with the discovery that she is my unwitting ally. A bisexual ally, confirming from afar, as it were, my reading of the heterosexual ur-myth of "the lady and the lusty smith." Thus, even as Paglia insists that a feminist
dream of remaking men in a new mold, "a kind of shy, sensitive form," is in the
interests of neither the human race nor of ordinary women -- even as she exalts "wild masculine energy," "the glory
of male lust," and "the pagan personae of athlete and warrior . . . whose ethic is candor, discipline, vigilance and valor"-- -- in short, as she defends an embattled masculinity, Paglia also laments the "hopelessness" of her own "romantic life," spent primarily with bisexual or heterosexual women. And it does sound oretty hopeless, given the women whom she hopes to seduce.
"I fail to see why lesbians must pursue other lesbians --
"it's illogical," she says. "Straight women, with their radiant sexual
aura, began it all." Wow! That's just what my myth-reading tells me, only myth
doesn't associate that "radiant sexual aura," as Paglia does, with a woman striving to project
it.
Especially in less fearful
societies than ours, where sex is "in the air," in a passing glance between
strangers on the street (that Paglia, who believes not in dampening lust but in
"fanning the flame," thoroughly approves), I doubt that men are turned on
exclusively or even primarily by her "vamps and tramps." I see an erotic
counterpart to "male swagger" not just in the strut of the streetwalker but in
the more contradictory demeanor of the "cocky virgin" -- an extreme of what
might be called "provocative inaccessibility" and a figure that largely escapes
Paglia's notice. (Britomart, whom Paglia admires enormously, comes
closest to her, but Spenser's warrior maiden doesn't have the sexual swagger
of my balled heroines; she never "taunts.")
In other words, Paglia never properly considers the role of
"provocation and denial" in a game that can be very much in the interests of
both women and the human race. Instead, taking "self-withholding" to be
something of a class neurosis (a pathology akin to anorexia?), she says that
"provocation and denial are built into the circuitry of the white middle-class
girl," presumably the same (American) girl who projects "a soft, unfocused,
help-me-please persona that, in adult life, is a recipe for disaster."
Yet Paglia also notes that "cockteasing is a universal
reality" -- "part of women's merciless testing and cold-eyed comparison
shopping for potential mates" -- and she complains bitterly, in an interview
with Laura Hutton, that women "seem to be like citadels ... they close
the door against you . . . and what I have had happen to me, okay, when
girls and women have said to me, 'You think I'm leading you on?' when, in
fact, her [sic] behavior had been, like for forty-eight hours,
outrageously leading on! Outrageously provocative!"
So is it (women as)"citadels" that enrages her? Or softness? Is "Daddy's
little girl" that Paglia despises also the outrageously provocative woman
she desires? Clearly not, but I wonder if we aren't talking about
two forms of the same thing, which I make a point of disentangling (here -- of distinguishing
an infantilized, peculiarly American image of femininity from the robust
folk femininity and downright taunting folk heroines with whom I have
long identified. In traditional balladry, they are strong women who
inspire strong lovemaking.   And yes, the core ballad in my defense of
the suspect erotic myth -- a ballad that were Paglia only familiar with
it, she should surely approve for its glorification of male lust! -- is an
exercise, on the grand scale, in provocation and denial.
I agree with Paglia on a trickier point that I'm not sure
she means to make, for she never says just how straight women "began it
all"; she lets "it all" remain wonderfully vague. But I would remind her
that even the streetwalker was once a virgin (as even the conniving marquise,
in Laclos' Liaisons Dangereuses, admits to once enjoying a simpler
happiness and to feeling "sometimes sorry that we've been reduced to such
expedients.") So I think I explore what Paglia refuses to explore when I
argue (here) that it's "the lady" who
really begins the whole suspect sexual action of "The Twa Magicians." The
lady sitting "straight as the willow wand," at once both pure and
"lustful," who sets this ballad of magical pursuit and capture in motion; "the
lady" with her flaunted litany of insulting protest who calls forth "the lusty
smith." Or so I concluded years ago, belatedly discovering Paglia and
applauding her insights into the "dangerous, alluring courtship ritual of sex
and seduction" of which "'no' has been, and always will be, a part."
Like the "no" implicit in the lady's slim virgin body
with its untouched and fiercely guarded "secret of life"? For that's
Paglia's language again. "Women have it. Men want it," she says in
recognition of women's "dominance on the deepest, most important realm,"
although the mythical virgin lady, in applauded archetypal struggle, is
clearly destined to "meet her match." And that's my borrowed
erotic cliché. Inherently problematic, inherently "sexist,"
it sums up my sense of "The Twa Magicians" as high (hetero)sexual mystery,
which appears, Paglia's vast scholarship and her kinship with the "woman on
the street" notwithstanding, to be terra incognita for her -- my
sense of a "game" that she never quite "gets."
To be sure, Paglia approves in principle the land of heterosexual love, describing it as "in sync with cosmic forces" even as she perceives herself to be violently out of sync with those very forces. She says she's "at war with nature," that is, at war with her own hormone-driven female nature which has impelled her to have sex with men on occasion but not, it would seem, to enjoy it very much and certainly not to enjoy any hint of the feelings implied in my erotic cliché. Other women may dream of "meeting their match" with the Harlequin romance equivalent of the "lusty smith"; but for her that meeting implies only distasteful female "submission." Far from strong lovemaking leading to love, "nature pushes me very strongly to mate," she says, "but then I wanna kill ... I hate this cloying intimacy." Or as she empathizes with the film of a mating female cat -- "like me, a solitary animal, and you can see that she's driven by those hormones to mate, to breed -- but she's angry at having to submit."
How quick to anger Paglia is herself! She assails, loudly
and entertainingly, a dizzying array of targets (victim feminism, French
deconstructionists, women's studies, bouncy blondes...) exaggerating and
personalizing the debate, too, in a way that cannot fail to raise academic
hackles and surely cannot endear her to target subjects like "the Mad
Hatter and her dumpy dormouse"1 (Catharine MacKinnon and Andrea
Dworkin). But she also refuses to reduce complex issues like date rape
to an ideological formula, and she appeals to many ordinary women who don't
call commonsensical advice "blaming the victim." They may never have
heard of MacKinnon or Dworkin, but mention Paglia and you may well get an
enthusiastic "oh yes, I like her."
I keep on bumping into these "street fans" of Paglia,
who, not surprisingly, often have strong working-class roots. They
share her distrust of liberal doctrines like "social constructionism" (still
much preached in regard to the total social construction of gender
and her impatience with a world of middle-class privilege that feminists often
invoke as if everyone lived or ought to live in it, her sympathy with those
"really masculine men" who exclude themselves from the
environment generating most of the rhetoric, her resentment at attempts to
impose white-collar standards of decorum on the blue-collar
workplace, her worry about "this arrogance that masculinity isn't
something we need anymore"... And they surely applaud her
reaction to Ivy League hecklers:
As I watched a half-dozen pampered, white middle-class girls, their smooth, plump cheeks contorted with rage, shriek at me about rape, I had two thoughts. First, American is failing its young women; these are infantile personalities, emotionally and intellectually undeveloped. Second, it's not rape they're screaming about. Rape is simply a symbol of the horrors and mysteries of the body, which their education vvnever deals with or even acknowledges. It was a Blakean epiphany; I suddenly saw the fear and despair of the lost... Feminism had constructed a spectral hell that these girls inhabited; it was their entire cultural world, a godless new religion of fury and fanaticism.
(from "No Law in the Arena," Vamps and Tramps)
"I don't believe in playing games, and that's one of my problems. I think that sex is a game -- and I have a great trouble flirting and playing the game .... I'm absolutely simple -- simplistic even... I think that my error has been maybe to, like, put too much intimacy into the sex connection. You know, maybe I should be treating it more cerebrally, more abstractly... See, I don't exploit people. I'm terrible at that... there's a self-withholding going on [in sexual contact] that I'm not capable of... I think I just show too much."
(from a conversation with Bruce Benderson, Vamps and Tramps)
Now many men may reject Paglia's "rapist" vision of them
(especially as it entails reveling in female helplessness and even inertness!)
Still, she is surely right that "male sexual functioning does not depend
on female response" or (as I would put it) that you cannot depend upon a man
to suddenly lose interest in you just because you suddenly lose all interest in him! Lust can turn to rape or would-be rape (see here). So
reality trumps ideology in my own "pastoral misadventure," as it surely trumps
ideology in the much more erotic "staircase scene" from Gone with the
Wind, where maverick feminist Christina Sommers found colleagues locked
into their own ideologically correct rapist vision. In a lighthearted comment that
was also meant as a serious warning to "out of touch" feminist philosophers,
she tried to remind them of popular female feeling on the subject. "Many
women continue to enjoy the sight of Rhett Butler carrying Scarlett O'Hara up
the stairs to a fate undreamt of in feminist philosophy," she wrote, and the
Society for Women in Philosophy responded.
SWIP felt the need to react formally to my heresy and arranged a meeting at which the feminist philosopher Marilyn Friedman read a paper showing once and for all how my views were treasonable to women.
Friedman told the overflow audience that she was stunned by my flippant reaction to Rhett's rape of Scarlett. For in her eyes there was no doubt whatsoever that Rhett raped Scarlett that night. Indeed, Friedman compared Rhett Butler to the psychopathic murderer/rapist Richard Speck.
I suggested to the audience that feminist philosophers ought to reflect on the distinction between being raped and being "ravished." It is a critical distinction -- quite clear to the millions of women who read romance fiction. It is behind the commonsense conviction that Rhett Butler is in no way akin to Richard Speck. The SWIP audience stared at me in angry incomprehension.
I had crossed a divide. For if feminism is a religion, Rhett Butler is its devil. My casual acceptance of women who find Rhett Butler so attractive was not to be forgiven. I never recovered my reputation as a reliable member of the sisterhood.
(from a Bradley lecture delivered at the American Enterprise Institute, Sept. 12, 1994)
Paglia knows these women exist in staggering numbers; she
knows they do not revel in rape, but I wonder if she fully understands that
"critical distinction" between rape and "ravishment" or (shifting our attention
to female energy or lack thereof) between mechanical sexual "submission"
and a joyous, unpredictable "melting." Blinkered in her own "rapist
vision," Paglia pays no heed to this side of the action; for her it is as if,
in spirit, all sex were indeed rape, and she only wishes she were on the
"rapist" end of it -- as if distinctions on the other side did not exist or did
not matter. For me, they are key.
To be sure, my neat distinctions do not always hold. As
Laclos shows in Liaisons Dangereuses (and de Valmont's rape/seduction
of the innocent Cecile Volanges), there is such a thing as being betrayed by
your own body. Sex is a messy arena (and it's no help to be a ninny like
Cecile!). So I wondered myself, long after parting on terms of open
emnity from the man who so disastrously misread me, just how I would have felt
had he prevailed; indeed I "talked" myself, upon dreamy self-reflection,
into a thoroughly erotic fantasy -- a "what if" that bore as little emotional
likeness to the actual event as erotic "replays" of my teenage museum encounter
with a "pushy old man" bore to that embarrassing nonevent.
So fantasy plays fast and loose with sexual memory.
And I'm obviously oversimplifying on the score of sexual fantasy too.
Paglia applauds Nancy Friday for exploring, in My Secret Garden, a rich
terrain of female sexual fantasy confounding feminist notions of how we ought
to think and feel -- indeed defying any spot judgment, as the full range
of male fantasy doubtless does too. Still, men's and women's "rape
fantasies" do show suggestively different public faces. And the
SWIP ideologues' "angry incomprehension" with the public face of a popular
female fantasy reminds me of Paglia's reaction to the whole "game" of sex.
Hers, to be sure, is a more interesting, intensely personal reaction:
where they see a whole class of women submitting to the "rapist" Rhett Butler,
Paglia sees herself "having to submit" essentially to any man with whom
"nature impels her" to mate. And she's angry too, though I cannot
but wonder if it isn't as much at the "treason" of her own female body (at her
own "meltdown"?) as at hateful man. Just what is it that she wants to
kill?
Paglia evidently does see with the eyes of the rapist or
rapist manqué, does
find that film of a mating female cat to be a template for her own sexuality.
But how odd that her experience should be at once so foreign to me, and
so familiar! For I have a combative nature too, a taste for clearcut,
energizing conflict and a distrust, nay a disdain, for sneaky "feminine wiles."
And I too identify with female cats; indeed as a child (after my first,
supposedly male, kitten proved female) I spent a lot of time studying them --
not just looking under their tails but spying on what I finally decided were
courting cats and trying to figure out what all that yowling and chasing meant.
I never saw the film to which Paglia refers and don't altogether trust
the conclusion commonly drawn from it (the argument that female cats couldn't
enjoy sex because "with cats it's so violent" plays just a little too neatly
into the conscience of cat owners "who care," and it doesn't quite square with
vmy own observations of some flagrantly provocative female cats either!).
In any event, I decided that sex was as mysterious a matter for cats as it was
for people, something I could only keep wondering about.
And at 69 I am still wondering. About the middle-class
sexual neurosis, as Paglia sees it, of "provocation and denial,"
about erotic fantasy and the "illusion" as she puts it (not unsympathetically)
of love. In short, about Hal and me.
_______________________________________________________________________________
Our whole history, I suppose, could be described as an
exercise in provocation and denial that didn't work -- or perhaps I should say
that it worked only too well in a stuttering, delusional way. Hal calls
ours a "beautiful romance," only regretting that he didn't find the right words
to win me almost fifty years ago when we both were unattached. He has
great faith in words, this man with the clumpy feet and gravelly voice who once
stuck to me "like a cockleburr" (said my mother), who followed me to Europe
and kept asking me to marry him and trying to argue me into bed, and who never
knew how close he came to it, that awful year after my brother drowned, on what
I had decreed would be our "last date."
What was the point of going on anyway? I didn't love
him and obviously never would. He got under my skin, and I sometimes
thought he understood me better than I did myself, but never, ever, would he
sweep me off my feet; he was just too resistible, too full of argument instead
of action, too opposed on principle to "sweeping" anyone "off her feet."
And having settled that, I could listen to Hal one last time and not
feel quite so prickly, feel indeed as if we were already lovers except for a
bit of flesh that meant a promise to me -- one I couldn't honestly give, though
it sent a shock wave through my whole body when he took my hand, though
suddenly, desperately, I wanted to plunge on with real lovemaking. "Come
back with me, Jeanie," he pleaded, and I hedged with a weaselly half-promise:
if ever I did, it would be "for good."
It wouldn't have worked, I tell myself; we'd probably have
made as unhappy a marriage as the one I shortly embarked upon. &nbp; A stormier
marriage for sure, even if I'm pretty damn sure that we wouldn't have argued
any more about sex. You "get it out of your system," I remember being
told by an advocate of "early experience" and thinking, much later, how dead
wrong he was. Clearly I, at least, had reason for the "self-withholding"
that Paglia decries; I could indeed be swayed to wildly irrational, total body
commitment. And had Hal succeeded in making love to me, had he and
I made the baby I so desperately and dumbly wanted to make? I suspect
that his "beautiful romance" would have been the first casualty. For
babies cost money; they make messy diapers; they cry at inconvenient times.
And it isn't just babies who bring romance down to earth (like husbands,
of course, they enter not at all into the fin amor of courtly romance);
when I visited Hal after he finally married someone else, I found myself
sympathizing with the woman who had to live with his highminded babble and
whose principal fault, he sometimes suggested, came down to the fact that she
wasn't his "dream."
And I still was? Why should I care anyway? For
to the dashing TA with whom I shortly did plunge on to love-and-babymaking, to
a flood of wild feeling and a temporary smothering of all doubt, I gave no
whole promise either. "A reluctant bride" Alec once called me, and I soon
became an escape artist of a wife. When our first big bash (helped by his
toastmaster stories of our year abroad?) drew to an early close, I remember
longing to follow our student friends out the door to an impromptu "real
party." Indeed, after Alec fell asleep, I crept out of bed into the
cold Chicago night and found a lit basement apartment window where I crouched
for a long time, listening to the murmur of voices within (Hal's!) and hoping
to be discovered but never daring to press the buzzer in the lobby. For
how could I ever explain myself? What could I say that wouldn't be a
confession that I'd made a ghastly mistake, wouldn't be a public slap at the
father of my sleeping child? So in the end I walked home and crept
back into bed.
That was my way, then: running off to the woods or to folk
festivals, having babies and baking bread and digging in the garden, and all
the while hiding behind a wall of hurt silence. For where Hal and I had
argued everything under the sun (and arguing, with Hal, led to kissing), my
rare arguments with Alec had a way of turning cold and ugly, to tears on my
part and professorial comment, about "inappropriate" behavior perhaps or mental
"sickness," on his. Were my spontaneous, middle-of-the-night tears also
a sign of sickness? For Alec, they were clearly a turn-off, as his own
sulking silence (his hurt?) was for me. "Your father would have
blown sky-high," said my mother when I escaped for seven weeks to France --
and wasn't that just what I was trying to provoke? Some action
for a change.
So there was fertile ground for fantasy from the start, and
perhaps from the start for a particularly unhelpful one: the Tristan and
Isolde story that Hal so likes to imagine himself (well, him and me) enacting.
It's a convenient tale for him to admire since, like all tales of fin
amor, it assumes the fine sentiment to be extramarital and to mean a lot
of ducking and weaving. But it isn't just the sneakiness of the Tristan
story that bothers me. In Gottfried von Strassburg's most artful telling
of the tale, it's the otherworldliness of "noble hearts" everywhere that's
held up for applause -- those edele Herzen who cultivate an expanded
Grotto of Love in their own fine feeling, divorcing an ideal of love from the
messiness of human life. And I find that beautiful ideal, at least as a
model for earthly human love, truly off-putting.
Now Paglia isn't slamming the imaginative construct of love
when she calls it an "illusion."
Being "in love" is clearly an ephemeral madness, and yet the "illusion of love"
bears nurturing. It can weather the rough and tumble of a shared life
like my parents,' embedding itself in small actions to the end of life itself,
or a hothouse plant in the grotto of fevered imagination, it can grow as did
this "beautiful romance" of Hal and mine. Out of time and out of place
("the teenagers" they called us in Alaska) and yes, it had became mine too on
those long night walks I took so as not to disturb Alec's precious "work" (in
the university "rat race," as he called it in conversation with colleagues),
not to be treated as a bothersome mental case -- as I cried and cried and did
not know in the end whether I was crying for a drowned brother or a never found
lover.
Marrying Hal might well have been a disaster, but at least
it would have been real. Not like this stupid brooding over what didn't
happen when it "should" or at least could have happened. Not like my
repentant fantasies of Hal taking my hand and holding me fast -- as at epic
intervals over the years he did take my hand and confess that he still loved
me, and very, very belatedly (his small daughter coming along on that early
morning Newport Festival walk must have delayed things by a decade!) did indeed
"bed" me in a Parisian park when he was overtired and overworked and full of
apologies for not "being a better lover." Though by then it almost didn't
matter. I was already constructing a romantic illusion that required
from Hal only occasional crumbs of (undying) love -- already singing "The Loyal
Lover" and throwing myself into its soppy refrain of "I love my love and I
love my love because my love loves me", already regretting how I'd once
grumpily told him, "I'm not a jukebox."
How different from Alec, whose only response, when I came
home from Marlington W. Va. with a prize in mountain music, was "there couldn't
have been much competition"! But we hadn't met since my face had hit
the dashboard of the family car; so going over to France at forty to "perfect
my French" and incidentally seeing Hal (now living in Paris with his
wife and three children while completing a doctorate at the Sorbonne) felt
like a huge risk. I walked three times round the block, working up my
courage to knock at 63 rue Jean-Jaurès and finally knocking on the door
only because at close to midnight I really had no place else to go. And
it was okay. "Jean," he said, looking straight at me and, glory be, not
flinching. I needn't have worried, I suppose; Frenchmen hadn't exactly
been flinching either. But I had worried. Hal was my link
to an older, blither me, to someone I wasn't sure even existed anymore.
It mattered that he should still know her. And still love her? Yes,
in a stuttering, memory-stuck way, his love had become a lynchpin of my life.
And the craziest part of it all was that the longer our
romance sputtered on, the more it confirmed my reluctance to marry my loyal
lover (well, loyal-in-his-heart) in the first place. Even as I felt
more and more tied to him, the less and less of a man he seemed. More
like a little boy really, building chivalric castles in the air while cheating
(apparently with a whole string of Unitarian ladies) on his workaday wife,
cheating on her but unable to stand up to her in the crunch (i.e., when she
found out, from a telephone call to Europe, about me) -- indeed, after
once indignantly dismissing the talk that inviting me to his wife's turf had
provoked (at "Camp Harmony" yet!) and calling the talkers, i.e., the would-be
enforcers of an oppressive social code, "camp Nazis," he finally answered the
question she posed on his return from Europe, "why did you come back?" with a
cotton wool abdication of wilful choice. "It was the thing to do."
 :Now in twenty-four years of marriage I often thought how
much easier it would be to leave a thoroughly blamable husband -- a drunkard,
say, or a wifebeater -- than sober, responsible Alec. And how much
simpler had Hal been the wilful deceiver instead of this "gentle soul" who saw no reason why our romance should "hurt anyone" and who
took such pride introducing me to colleagues on that ill-fated trip to Europe
"without lying." As if his evasive truthtelling (like Isolde's tricky
"oathkeeping") resolved anything! Indeed Hal's later insistence that
"it's true; you are my ski buddy from Seattle" was all the more
maddening for its sincerity. How much more appealing the childish
insistence on a deceptive, literal truth in the old ballads (like "Clerk
Saunders" telling his love to tie a napkin over her eyes "that you may swear
and save your aith ye saw me not since late yestreen") -- a truthtelling aimed
at deceiving others, where Hal, it seemed to me, was only deceiving
himself.
So I fumed, listening to his side of a stormy transatlantic
phone conversation a week later (after his Swiss-resident daughter, to his
dismay and my intense relief, "betrayed" us to her mother). "I didn't
want to upset you," he said, and I don't know if I heard a squawk of outrage
on the other end of the line or only imagined it. To hear the very excuse that he'd given for reneging on his promise to
me! That noble excuse for cowardice, "I didn't want to upset her," fortified with "it wasn't the
"right time,"
which always seems to have been some unrecoverable "if only" moment from the
past." If only his company had sent him to Seattle years earlier; if only
I'd issued a clear call to action then ("hey, I'm free!") instead of the
guardedly offhand letter I wrote after divorcing Alec; if only I'd been there
when he was considering divorce himself, seeking solace in other women's arms
and "fantasizing," he says, about meeting up with me again. . .
And now I hear, "if it were ten years ago . . ."; If only,
that is, I hadn't "given up on him" in the the blowup that followed our trip
to Europe; if only I'd followed the lead of my energetic ballad heroines like
the "Turkish lady" -- flown down and boldly claimed this man who'd expected his
wife to fade away into the woodwork and whose only response to a barrage of
tears was to "hunker down" for months of marriage counseling (with the sole
aim, it seemed, of "calming Mara") He couldn't act, couldn't even pick
up the phone, and he answered all efforts to lure him out with a highmindedness
that bordered on insult. "Maybe we should just stop talking," I finally
said after he hoped I'd be "valued in my fetching new garment" (a nightgown, as
I thought my own e-mail made clear) "whomever I wore it for"; and the romance
took another long, timewasting hit.
I shouldn't have given up on him, Hal says, for he turns
out not to have quite given up on me, buying with me "in mind" a woodsy house
that Mara hates, but of course not telling me a thing about it. In fact
I didn't learn about his whole dual-track life (with a now amicably distanced
wife) until I was feebleminded enough not just to resume the "beautiful
romance" (and yes, that was my initiative) but to start taking it seriously --
whispering hopes I'd never seriously entertained before into a small
granddaughter's ear, caroling with quixotic enthusiasm, "Let another wedding
be made ready/ Another wedding there shall be . . ." And then,
of course, is when I hear, "if it were ten years ago . . ."
To be sure, for years I'd colluded in the deception.
"Tell her," I'd said, and never made the words stick. For however
uncomfortable I'd long felt, wondering whether Mara was blind to what others
saw at a glance, whether she didn't want to know or simply didn't care (as Hal
said, on strictly "logical" grounds, she shouldn't care), I'd never pushed him to
cut free; and to think that, on my account, he might actually do so was scary
stuff. Being Hal's "dream," with serial honeymooning in Alaska or Sun
Valley or Europe, was one thing, marrying him quite another. Besides, why
force the issue now that he'd arranged his life with this huge untended space
in it? Not just the distant house that Mara rarely saw (near the workplace
she rarely visited) but neighbors who'd never met her (and rarely him):
artisans and winegrowere who gave cook-outs with ostrich meat on the grill and
who welcomed us with open arms, smiling at the ski-buddy-from-Seattle story and
finding that we'd known each other for so long "incredibly romantic."
It was a lovely welcoming space, and not just for play
On Hal's computer I could work on my messy website, and in bouts of
floor-to-ceiling housekeeping I quickly filled his car with trash (for
collection a hundred miles away!). Maybe, just maybe, I thought, this
business of "weaving our lives together" might work. So why did I kill
it? Why was I fool enough to insist that Hal "level with Mara" if he
ever wanted to see me or talk to me again? Why didn't I indulge his
reluctance to face painful conflict? (Hers too, my mother concluded ten
years ago; "they're two of a kind.")
Now I could wax ethical here about holding my head high,
wanting a man and not a mouse, wanting Hal to feel more of a man -- all
the things I repeated to myself on the sleepless night before my birthday,
weeks after Mara's second deluge of tears and Hal's second "hunkering down,"
when I fired off a call to action that backfired. "Thank you" Mara
e-mailed back, while Hal answered, "do what you damn please" to the suggestion
that I fly down and resolve, one way or another, a situation "without dignity
or honor for any of us." And I meant the fine sentiments. It felt good as I sang my way down the ski slopes (before receiving any
reply, of
course!) to think that I was making something clear and unambiguous happen at
last -- just the opposite from the slimy way I'd felt overhearing Hal's
complicated phone excuses for not coming home at the usual end of the week to
Mara. "Ho la hi, ho la ho"; how refreshing to cut loose from that whole
moral quagmire, and how marvelously empowering!
But Paglia suggests a more visceral motive.
"Some women like to flirt with danger because there is a sizzle in it," she says, going on to talk of the "sizzle of hot sex" as a
reason why women might choose to stay in a violent relationship. And
suddenly this misinterpreter of my deepest sexual self is speaking for
me again. Not, to be sure, as a battered woman in a violent
relationship -- say rather a balked woman, in an insistently "gentle" one?
For a brief time before I was put on hold again, there was indeed a
sexual payoff to the risky ultimatum suggested by a tough-minded daughter, a
payoff to the mere thought of it.
"Of course it's a risk, Mother; you may
lose him, you know," she said at the end of our long phone counseling session;
and her words struck like a blow to the pit of my stomach. No, I didn't
know; it didn't seem even remotely likely -- but in an instant, losing Hal had
become a gutwrenchingly real possibility, a danger I couldn't resist running.
And yes, there was an immediate, heightened erotic effect,
which, on an ambulance ride to the hospital for pneumonia five months later,
merged confusedly and disconcertingly with physical illness. "How do you
feel now?" the medics asked, and in the interest of full medical disclosure I
tried to tell them -- to describe a muscular aching for the man I'd been
stupidly trying to call (as if from a thousand miles away he could do
anything!), the man whose presence I craved and yet whose physical being seemed
if not irrelevant at least hugely disproportionate to my erotic response.
That disproportion had stuck me most forcibly when Hal and I watched the
film "Unfaithful" and I saw nothing of my aging lover in the irresistible
young Frenchman who provokes a steamy sex scene which is also a scene of
rare (or rarely filmed) erotic power. But in Diane Lane's quivering
body, oh my gosh, there I was at the very heart of it! A triumph of
the cinema, and it underscored a triumph of my own imagining: that I'd made
myself so shakingly vulnerable to the very antithesis of sexy "Paul
Martel."
Not that I wanted Hal to be that ruthlessly self-absorbed screen hunk! p;And yet, as I gaze into an old snapshot of him and me
cavorting on the green fifty years ago, I wonder wistfully if he mightn't once
have been a more compelling lover. More of a lover and less of a little
boy intoning words of love at precisely the wrong moment (as if to reassure
himself of their perfect truth? to talk himself back into lost time?)
More of that man who has just scooped me into his arms and is looking at
me in an oddly masterful way . . . and less of an aged Huck Finn as he appears
at his wife's side on the public occasion of his
own planning almost fifty years later ("she'll learn to accept you," he says)
where she attacks me at the coffee urn and he stands there stunned . . . or as
he appears, then, sitting beside her, tending the recording equipment with his
legs crossed at the ankle, well below the pants that he says she doesn't buy
too short and too tight on purpose ("she picks up bargains"). The picture
doesn't surprise me, nor does the little boy retreat to e-mail, first with a
petulant message that staying with a wife who clearly won't ever accept me
means "unconditional surrender" and then a succession of suspenseful news
bytes: "she's coming up to make soup," "she's acting much nicer" . . . A
"moderator," called in to help Mara "get in touch with her feelings," is also
set up for a phone interview with me. Am I aware of Hal's "character
defects?" she asks, or as a friend of my daughter puts it, "are you sure you
want this guy?"
How embarrassing to admit that I did! And how galling
that he could use my own brave words against me, salving his tender conscience
with the argument that I didn't want him after all, I couldn't want him
after he "failed the test." (Surely I couldn't want a man so prone to
crumple!) So he babbled of "enchantment," but of course, in the end, he
has chosen Mara over me, the commonsensical comforts of marriage to a "good
buddy" and rock solid folk musician over risky romance to a loose canon like
me. At least, that's how I hear "she needs me" -- surely a noble
euphemism for how, as I once argued oh-so-reasonably on her behalf, he needs
her.
Paglia puts it more brutally. "Husbands shrink," she
says, and at Hal's age, "nursing" clearly trumps sex. "How true!" I might
once have said to that cynical bit of folk wisdom, how true especially for
Hal . . . except that at last sighting he did not look as if he had
made the sensible, "shrunken" choice. He looked the dashing stranger,
whom I almost didn't recognize under the jaunty Western hat (since when has he
worn one of those?), and he sounded so goddamn pleased with himself, touring
with Mara's folk group -- pleased and at peace with himself -- so I can well
believe the grapevine report on his marriage. It is, I am told, "much
revived." And that galls too. Because I pushed them into it.
With that damnfool ultimatum, I made them take their marriage seriously
even as I pushed myself into unwilled, total body commitment to an illusion?
to a man who no longer exists and perhaps never did, a man I only imagined
into being out of my own crying need to be held? How banal! --
I really should throw that old photograph away.
But I thank Paglia for explaining my urge to raise the
sexual stakes so suicidally late in the game. "Tu aimes frôler
le feu," I was told thirty years ago in France; so clearly Paglia has it
right. I do like to flirt with fire; I made the gamble; I wanted
the danger. And now, well, it's nice to have made sense of the whole
mess, comforting to know why I did what I did. I only wish it were
warmer comfort. And it does seem a terrible waste . . .