The real counterpoint to Weiss
by
Fitzpatrick
05/23/2008, 9:53 AM #
Weiss starts from an assumption that men are miserable, reluctant monogamists. The real counterpoint to this idea is not the parallel reluctance of women, it's the perspective of the happily married man.
I don't feel any temptation to have sex with other women. Sure, other women are sexually attractive in a superficial sense, but I like bonding and mutual affection as much as the physical stimuli of sex. Given the opportunity for "no strings" sex, I'd decline.
Why? Part of it is certainly self-image, honor, and the desire to stick to a promise. But that's really only a little part, and statistically speaking, seems to be too weak to hold back countervailing urges.
Another part is that I don't want to hurt my wife. But again, this is a relatively small part of the motivation to stay monogamous. Weiss claims that he backed off the idea of an open marriage because he couldn't stand the idea of his wife fooling around. I wonder if she was sincere about that offer, or just pulling a lever to squash that notion. If my wife made the same offer as Weiss's, though, I'd decline that, too. Even if she agreed that I could fool around and she wouldn't, I still wouldn't.
The main reason I'm monogamous is that I want to be. I like knowing the person I'm with, better than anyone else knows her, while she knows me better than anyone else. It's a feeling based in love, but extending far beyond the squishy, stomach-flipping excitement of a new romance. Fortunately, the butterflies are lasting and recurring, too, but the bond is something that satisfies a need and desire in me that multiple partners would not. Where else am I going to find that?
I like feeling young, too. Doing new things makes me feel young, being physically fit helps, as do reading new books and plugging in to popular culture. I also like feeling old, wise, experienced, capable, and confident, and I like seeing those traits in my wife, too. Fooling around with a younger woman would probably not make me feel young, at least not in a positive sense. I suspect I'd feel self-conscious and awkward, and kind of like a fraud.
Happily married men don't make many headlines or get much TV airtime, but we are out there. Folks like Weiss might not ever be happily married, and I certainly don't think that everyone can or should or must be to be a good or happy person. Analyses like Weiss's and the XX bloggers' should not, however, overlook the fact that monogamy is not simply a social construct or a compromise based on the competition between men's and women's wiring. It also fulfills a desire and need in both partners, including men.