My Subversive Commitment to Virginity
Remaining chaste
until marriage, argues Sarah E. Hinlicky, is a stronger
form of feminist empowerment
Sarah E. Hinlicky
is an editorial assistant at First Things: A monthly
journal of religion and public life, in which this
first appeared.
A recent graduate of Lenoir-Rhyne College in North Carolina,
she lives in New York City.
0K I'll admit it: I am 22 years
old and ,still a virgin. Not for lack of opportunity,
my vanity hastens to add. Had I ever felt unduly
burdened by my unfashionable innocence, I could have
found someone to attend to the problem. But I never
did.
Our mainstream culture tells
me that some oppressive force must be the cause of my
late-in-life virginity, maybe an inordinate fear of men
or God or getting caught. Perhaps it's right, since
I can pinpoint a number of influences that have persuaded
me to remain a virgin.
My mother taught me that self-respect
requires self-control, and my father taught me to demand
the same from men. I'm enough of a country bumpkin
to suspect that contraceptives might not be enough to
prevent an unwanted pregnancy or disease, and I think
that abortion is killing a baby.
I buy into all that Christian doctrine of law and promise;
which means that the stuffy old commandments are still
binding on my conscience. And I'm even naive enough
to believe in permanent, exclusive, divinely ordained
love between a man and a woman, a love so valuable that
it motivates me to keep my legs tightly crossed in the
most tempting of situations.
In spite of all this, I still
think of myself as something of a feminist, since virginity
has the result of creating respect for and upholding
the value of the woman so inclined. But I have
discovered that the reigning feminism of today has little
use for it.
There was a time when I was
foolish enough to look for literature among women's publications
that might offer support in my very personal decision
(It's all about choice, after all, isn't it?). The dearth
of information on virginity might lead one to believe
that it's a taboo subject.
However, I was fortunate enough to discover a short article
on it in that revered tome of feminism "Our Bodies,
Ourselves."
The most recent edition of
the book has a more positive attitude than the edition
before it, in that it acknowledges virginity as a legitimate
choice and not just a by-product of patriarchy. Still,
in less than a page, it presumes to cover the whole range
of emotion and experience involved in virginity, which,
it seems, consists simply in the notion that a woman
should wait until she's really ready to express her sexuality. That's
all there is to say about it. Apparent, sexual
expression takes place duly in and after the act of genital
intercourse. Anything subtler - like a feminine
love of cooking or tendency to cry at the movies or unsuppressable
maternal instinct or cultivation of a wardrobe that will
turn heads or even a passionate good-night kiss - is
deemed an inadequate demonstration of sexual identity.
The unspoken message of "Our
Bodies, Ourselves" is clear enough: as long as a
woman is a virgin, she remains completely asexual.
Surprisingly, this attitude
has infiltrated the thinking of many women my age, who
should still be new enough in the web of lies called
adulthood to know better.
One of my most vivid college
memories is or a conversation with a good friend about
my (to her) bizarre aberration of virginity. She
and another pal had been delving into the gruesome specifics
of their past sexual encounters. Finally, after
some time, my friend suddenly exclaimed to me, "How
do you do it?"
A little taken aback, I said, "Do
what?"
"You know," she
answered, a little reluctant, perhaps, to use the big
bad V-word. "You still haven't . . . slept
with anybody. How do you do it? Don't you want to?"
The question intrigued me,
because it was so utterly beside the point. Of
course I want to - what a strange question! - but mere
wanting is hardly a proper guide for moral conduct. I
assured my concerned friend that my libido was still
in proper working order, but then I had to come up with
a good reason why I had been paying attention to my inhibitions
for all these years. I offered the usual reasons
- emotional and physical health, religious convictions, "saving
myself" till marriage - but nothing convinced her
until I said, "I guess don’t know what I’m
missing."
She was satisfied with that and ended the conversation.
In one sense, sure, I don't
know what I'm missing. And it is common enough
among those who do know what they're missing to go to
great lengths to ensure that they don't miss it for very
long.
In another sense, though,
I could list a lot of things that I do know I'm missing:
hurt, betrayal, anxiety, self-deception, fear, suspicion,
anger; confusion and the horror of having been used. And
those are only emotional aspects: there is also disease,
unwanted pregnancy and abortion.
As if to prove my case from
the other side, my friend suffered a traumatic betrayal
within a month or two of our conversation.
It turned out that the man involved would gladly sleep
with her, but refused to have a "real relationship" -
a sad reality she discovered only after the fact.
---oOo---
According to received feminist
wisdom, sexuality, is to be understood through the twin
concepts of power and choice. It's not a matter
of anything so banally biological as producing children,
or even the more elevated notion of creating intimacy
and trust. Sometimes it seems like sex isn't even supposed
to be fun. The purpose of female sexuality is to
assert power over hapless men, for control, revenge,
self-centered pleasure, or forcing a commitment. A
woman who declines to express herself in sexual activity,
then, has fallen prey to a male-dominated society that
wishes to prevent women from becoming powerful. By
contrast, it is said, a woman who does become sexually
active discover her power over men and exercises it,
supposedly to her personal enhancement.
This is an absurd lie. That
kind of gender war sexuality results only in pyrrhic
victories. It's a set-up for disaster, especially
for women.
Men aren't the ones who get
pregnant. And who ever heard of a man purchasing
a glossy magazine to learn the secret of snagging a wife? Sacrifice
and the relinquishing of power are natural to women -
ask any mom - and they are also the secret of feminine
appeal. The pretense that aggression and power-mongering
are the only options for female sexual success has opened
the door to predatory men. The imbalance of power
becomes greater than ever in a culture of easy access.
Against this system of mutual
exploitation stands the more compelling alternative of
virginity. It escapes the ruthless cycle of winning
and losing because it refuses to play the game. The
promiscuous of both sexes will take their cheap shots
at one another, disguising infidelity and selfishness
as freedom and independence, and blaming the aftermath
on one another.
But no one can claim control
over a virgin.
Virginity is not a matter of asserting power in order to
manipulate. It is a refusal to exploit or be exploited. That
is real, and responsible, power.
But there is more to it than
mere escape. There is an undeniable appeal in virginity,
something that eludes the resentful feminist's contemptuous
label of "prude." A virgin woman is an
unattainable object of desire, and it is precisely her
unattainability that increases her desirability.
Feminism has told a lie in
defense of its own promiscuity, namely, that there is
no sexual power to be found in virginity.
On the contrary, virgin sexuality has extraordinary and
unusual power. There's no second-guessing a virgin's
motives: her strength comes from a source beyond her transitory
whims. It is sexuality dedicated to hope, to the
future, to marital love, to children and to God.
Her virginity is, at the same time
a statement of her mature independence from men. It
allows a woman to become a whole person in her own right,
without needing a man either to revolt against or to
complete what she lacks. I t is very simple, really:
no matter how wonderful, charming, handsome, intelligent,
thoughtful, rich, or persuasive he is, he simply cannot
have her. A virgin is perfectly unpossessable.
The corollary of power is
choice. Again, the feminist assumes that sexually
powerful women will be able to choose their own fates.
And again, it is a lie. No one can engage in extramarital
sex and then control it.
Nowhere is this more apparent
than in the moral nightmare of our society's breakdown
since the sexual revolution. Some time ago I saw
on TV the introduction of the groundbreaking new "female
condom." A spokeswoman at a press conference
celebrating its grand opening declared joyously the new
freedom that it gave to women. "Now women
have more bargaining power" she said. "If
a man says that he refuses to wear a condom, the woman
can counter, fine, I will!"
I was dumbstruck by her enthusiasm
for the dynamics of the new situation. Why on earth
would two people harboring so much animosity toward each
other contemplate a sexual encounter? What an appealing
choice they have been given the freedom to make!
The dark reality, of course,
is that it is not free choice at all when women must
convince men to love them and must convince themselves
that they are more than just "used goods." T
here are so many young women I have known for whom freely
chosen sexual activity means a brief moment of pleasure
- if that - followed by the unchosen side effects of
paralyzing uncertainty, anger at the man involved, and
finally a deep self-hatred that is impenetrable by feminist
analysis.
So-called sexual freedom is
really just proclaiming oneself to be available for free,
and therefore without value.
To
"choose" such freedom is tantamount to saying
that one is worth nothing.
---oOo---
It is puzzling and disturbing
to me that regnant feminism has never acknowledged the
empowering value of virginity. I tend to think
that much of the feminist agenda is more invested in
the culture of groundless autonomy and sexual Darwinism
than it is in genuinely uplifting women. Of course,
virginity is a battle against sexual temptation, and
popular culture always opts for the easy way out instead
of the character-building struggle. The result
is superficial women formed by meaningless choices, worthy
of stereotype, rather than laudable women of character,
worthy of respect.
Perhaps virginity seems a
bit cold, even haughty and heartless. But virginity
hardly has exclusive claim on those defects, if it has
any claim at all. Promiscuity offers a significantly
worse fate.
I have a very dear friend who, sadly, is more worldly-wise
than I am. By libertine feminist standards she ought
to be proud of her conquests and ready for more, but
frequently she isn't.
The most telling insight about
the shambles of her heart came to me once in a phone
conversation when we were speculating about our futures. Generally
they are filled with exotic travel and adventure and
Ph.D.s. This time, however, they were not. She
admitted to me that what she really wanted was to be
living on a farm in rural Connecticut, raising a horde
of children and embroidering tea towels. It is
a lovely dream, defiantly unambitious and domestic. But
her short, failed sexual relationships haven't taken
her any closer to her dream and have left her little
hope that she’ll ever attain it.
I must be honest here: virginity
hasn't landed me on a farm in rural Connecticut, either. Sexual
innocence is not a guarantee against heartbreak. But
there is a crucial difference: I haven't lost a part
of myself to someone who has subsequently spurned it,
rejected it, and perhaps never cared for it at all.
I sincerely hope that virginity
will not be a lifetime project for me. Quite the
contrary, my subversive commitment to virginity serves
as preparation for another commitment, for loving one
man completely and exclusively. Admittedly, there
is a minor frustration in my love: I haven't met the
man yet (at least, not to my knowledge). But hope,
which does not disappoint, sustains me.