Sexy is subjective. It is fluid. But is it exclusive? If you were to look up sexy in a dictionary, you would find something like “arousing or tending to arouse sexual desire or interest (American Heritage).” Talk about about encompassing. Our sexual desires are unique. Sure, they are greatly influenced by our socialization, by the media images we see, by the normalization of certain bodies as sexy, but still we maintain differences in what arouses our sexual desires. So why is it that so many of us are taught that sexiness is an unattainable goal? Fat people, people with disabilities, trans people, and so many others internalize the belief that we do not and possibly cannot arouse sexual interest in others. We just aren’t sexy. I’m curious to know what is the purpose for this socialization? What are the effects on those deemed unsexy? How do our differing desires break down those barriers? And how can we learn to view those unique desires as persynally liberating?
First, we must think about what we persynally define as sexy. Now look at how that definition is unique to and shaped by cultural influence. Now let’s look at what is normalized as sexy in the US and what is being globalized as sexy through media images and marketing.
Looking at persynal preference, we will find a variety of ideals of sexiness - is it the size of the eyes? of the hips? of the breasts? of the arms and chest? amount of body hair? intelligence? length of legs? thickness of thighs? thickness of waist? sense of humor? attitude? social status? hair color? clothing? eye color? size of the nose? shoulder width? hair length? body odor? height? gender? skin color? genitalia? clothing? what? We rarely define sexiness based on one characteristic. Instead, we combine our tastes to create sexiness in our mind. Its a persynal construction which we often allow to be dominated by an external social construct. What is that external construct? First, its culture. Cultural upbringing and heritage can help determine what attributes we find sexy. Individually, cultures define sexual desire by many different standards which often conflict with the dominant or other cultures. But let’s look at the dominant culture in the US (and that which is being globalized as the norm). This culture is heteronormative, so we are taught only to look at people perceived to be of the “opposite” sex/gender to be sexy. We learn that sexiness is equated with thinness, muscle tone, a lack of body hair, ‘flawless’ skin, white teeth, able-bodied, expensive clothes, upper-middle to upper class social status and more. If you were to combine all of them together to create a culturally ideal body, it would be virtually impossible to replicate naturally. Thus we develop eating disorders, undergo plastic surgery, consume billions of dollars in cosmetics, wax, shave, laser-off or chemically remove our body hair, dye the hair on our head, participate in organ-damaging fad diets, pump ourselves full of drugs, and so forth. In essence, we come to believe that if we cannot naturally create such a body then we must do what nature cannot and mold ourselves into perfection through massive consumption. I am not judging anyone who partakes in any of these activities. I have and do participate in several myself. And i do feel that we can participate in such activities in the context of persynal expression and liberation. But is that what the majority of us are doing? And where do we draw that dividing line? I’ll leave that for further discussion.
Although the dominant culture has not been completely successful at wiping out persynal and cultural differences in desire and arousal, it has made great strides at normalizing notions of sexiness not only in the US but throughout the world. Media and advertising campaigns are exporting standards of arousal/beauty into every market they can reach. But why?
Let’s go back to what happens when we normalize a standard of sexiness that is naturally unattainable. We begin to look at ourselves not as uniquely sexy and beautiful, but as manifestations of countless flaws. And when sexiness is marketed as a purely physical notion, we view ourselves as imperfect physical objects rather than unique, complex subjects. Objects are easy to exploit. They have no sense of self-worth or self-power. Objects are paradoxically communized individuals containing no sense of community or collective power and yet no notion of individuality. Objects are simply matter to be molded, reconfigured, moved, and exploited at will. Subjects, on the otherhand, are a threat to hierarchical power structures. Subjects recognize their individuality but also maintain a sense of collectivity. Subjects are not controlled by outside forces, but rather control their own lives and shape the world around them. So we can see that it is in the best interest of those that wish to gain or maintain power-over to create a world of objects or objectified people. A sure-fire way to do this is to normalize insecurity, pathologize notions of normal (this goes beyond just beauty and sexiness), and create societies where everyone is judging everyone else on the backdrop of unattainable norms and ideals.
Yet despite the normalization of beauty and sexiness, we continue to resist in small ways by creating our own definitions. But where we find liberation is not in how we define other people’s sexiness, but how we are able to define ourselves as sexy. It is only ourselves, through our own sense of self-worth and power that we are able to become active subjects in our world. So no matter how much we are aroused by those outside the norms, if we are unable to view ourselves as sexy and beautiful then we are forever doomed into a world of disempowered objectification. We learn to accept the externalization of who defines us. Thus giving up our power to someone or something outside of ourselves.
So as we find those resistant notions of sexiness in others - hairy bodies, passionate discussion, soft bellies, body fat, a sense of self, whatever it may be for you - we must spend just as much time reflecting back at how we create and embody sexiness. Yes, we may use props or body modification to play with sexiness. But its not the lipstick or the shaved legs or the working out that make you sexy. Its you. You are sexy. You’re belief that you are sexy is what makes you sexy. Its your power, your self-worth, you. Know it. Carry it. Flaunt it. We must not continue to allow others to define us or we will be destroyed. Don’t act sexy, be sexy. Touch yourself. Talk to others like you know you got it. Write about your sexiness, even if you don’t show it to anyone else. Take pictures of yourself or of you with a lover. You can burn them when you’re done, i don’t care. But resist a culture that tells you that you aren’t sexy enough to be naked, to be touched, to touch yourself, to be desired, to be needed. You are.
Photo courtesy of NoFauxxx.com.[tags]Big Fat Carnival[/tags]
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what a great post vegan kid…
i’ve always wondered at how it is that people get so mad at us big women for dressing sexily–like you gain fifty pounds and suddenly you aren’t allowed by law to be a sexual human being any more…either that or you get fetishized–big girls suck great cock!!–interesting how it’s always centered around static gender systems and mandetroy heterosexuality?
but really, all the fancy rhetoric aside–it’s really hard to stand tall agains those who tell you your a fat pig…it’s painful and it’s hard…it’s so painful it’s almost impossible to over come in this culture–which is why i am really so thankful that you have written this…
ps i love the picture…
great post.
Puts me in mind of a survey I once answered, about sexual fantasties, was something like this:
Your fantasies:
1. Are you in them? Or do you fantasize about other people without your being present? If you are in them, is it as participant or just spectator? If you are in them, are you truly yourself or different from yourself?
2. Do you fantasize another person’s point of view, desires and thoughts?
3. Is there a narrative, set-up, story? Or just a scene, without history or future?
4. Is there a sequence of events, or just images? If there is a temporal sequence, do you proceed neatly chronologically or with analepsis (flashback) and prolepsis (flashforward)?
5. Is there dialogue? Narration? Do words matter? Do you describe the fantasy to yourself in words as you have it?
6. If you were to write down a typical fantasy, how long would the text be?
7. If you are in your fantasies, are you predominantly desired or desiring?
8. Does atmosphere matter? How much detail - clothes, setting, room temperature?
9. Is there music in your fantasies?
10. Are there aromas in your fantasies?
Could be a blogsphere meme!
A sure-fire way to do this is to normalize insecurity, pathologize notions of normal (this goes beyond just beauty and sexiness), and create societies where everyone is judging everyone else on the backdrop of unattainable norms and ideals.
Wow–thank you. And I love the advice at the end.
thanks yall.
bfp - like the cliche says, easier said than done. Its always hard to walk upstream, but it does make us stronger. It is nearly impossible to overcome that constant beating that so many of us receive. Especially if we are complicit in the campaign of silence and isolation. We have to talk about such things… and we have to talk about them in public forums.
chabert - that is a great meme. if you don’t mind, i’m gonna fill it out and pass it on.
V, I read this post at least once a week. I’ve been trying for weeks to figure out how to explain how much this post touched me, lifted me up and threatens to change me. As a matter of fact, I read it again this morning, esp. the last paragraph, and for the first time in 30 years (yes, since I was NINE) I am wearing a halter top. (Mister is all aglow.) XOX, Vegankid. I’d love a chance to meet you someday……
wow, g bitch, you made my week! i’m really glad that something i wrote has moved you in such a positive way. own that halter top!
yes, someday we will meet (of course it probably would have been easier while i was still in the south:)
hello i want to be part of ur program and how i am going to start it and i wnt to nom march more about u
hey ishmeal,
umm, no program. and if you want to know more about me, read through this blog. you’ll get a better idea than if i summed it up.