Cheating Or Non-Monogamy? The Difference May Matter For Health

21 07 2010

A new study on over 500 gay men’s relationships in San Francisco finds that nearly half of the couples maintain “open relationships,” nearly half are monogamous, and slightly less than 10% are discrepant between partners.

Whether “open” or monogamous, these couples place a strong emphasis on consensually defining the contours of their relationships.

What Is An “Open” Relationship?

Polyamory can be broadly defined as consensual non-monogamy; it serves as an umbrella term, including:

  • “open” relationships (two partners are romantically exclusive, but agree that lovers are permitted)
  • polygamy (one husband with multiple wives)
  • polyandry (one wife with multiple husbands)
  • other relationship structures that are consensually defined to allow for multiple romantic and/or sexual partnerships.

Polyamory is fundamentally different than infidelity or “cheating,” which typically entails one or both partners of an otherwise monogamous relationship forming a relationship and/or having sex with a person who is not their partner.

The key difference is that polyamorous and open relationships are defined by all involved to have open boundaries, while infidelity is a matter of dishonesty.

Relationship Structure And Sexual Health

Dr. Colleen Hoff, a researcher at the Center for Research on Gender and Sexuality recently released a study on over 500 gay male couples in San Francisco.

She asked the partners of these couples, independently, whether the couple was monogamous or “open,” and about the decisions they made regarding the relationship, sex, and health.

She found that nearly half had open relationships, and just slightly fewer maintained monogamous (“closed”) relationships; however, about 8% reported discrepant relationship structures, in which one partner said “open” and the other said “closed.”

No matter the relationship structure, she found that nearly every couple had some sort of sexual agreement – that is, the partners had come to an explicit, consensual agreement regarding the contours of their relationship (open vs. closed, primarily).

While this is a helpful strategy to promote safe-sex practices, including open communication between partners, the couples noted that this agreement was a matter of building trust and protecting the relationship and less so about HIV and other sexually transmitted infections.

Dr. Hoff and other sex researchers have noted that these findings suggest that HIV and STI prevention efforts must take into consideration that, for some couples, the health of the relationship is the top prioritynot sexual health:

[Garrett Prestage, an HIV researcher in Australia] added: “Unfortunately, most HIV prevention seems to be predicated on a message that implies they (gay men) should not trust their partners and should always act out of self-interest. That runs contrary to most healthy relationships.”





[kinsey] Are Women Faking It In Bed? A New UK Study Says Yes, Sometimes.

21 07 2010

This was originally posted at Kinsey Confidential.

It… you know, the big “O.”  While everyday discussions of sex and sexual pleasure often conclude that women sometimes fake having orgasms during sexual activity with male partners, some researchers are finding a grain of truth in that assertion.  A new study of 71 women provides evidence for when these women were most likely to orgasm (vaginal-penile intercourse was least cited) and whether these women ever fake orgasms.

The Study

England-based psychologists Gayle Brewer and Colin A. Hendrie administered a survey to 71 women from their local community, asking them about their current and lifetime sexual and relationship history, how and when they achieved orgasm, whether they moaned or screamed (“copulatory vocalizations”) during sex, and whether they ever forced these vocalizations for a particular reason (e.g., to speed things up due to pain).  They found that the majority of these women reported reaching orgasm through self masturbation, vaginal-manual (hand, fingers) stimulation by a partner, and vaginal-oral sex, though they were significantly less likely to report orgasm through vaginal-penile intercourse.

So, Do They Fake It?

The researchers found some inconsistency between the women’s actual sexual pleasure (i.e., orgasm) and moaning and screaming.  One-quarter of the 71 women, about 18 women, reported making these vocalizations during sex over 90% of the time, and almost 80% (51 women) reported doing so during sex over half of the time.  Well, why do these women fake it?  Two-thirds of the women reported making “copulatory vocalizations” to speed up their male partner’s orgasm, primarily to relieve discomfort or pain, or due to boredom or fatigue; for some, this was simply due to time limitations.  Nearly 90% reported using these vocalizations to boost their partner’s self esteem.

What About Women’s Pleasure And Orgasm?

Although some in the media have focused just on women’s admission to faking orgasms during sex with male partners, the researchers of this study are also concerned about what seems to be the prioritization of men’s sexual pleasure and orgasm over women’s:

To further emphasize the secondary nature of a female’s orgasm in their motivation towards engaging in sexual intercourse, 68% of females responded positively (i.e., [5 cm approximate mid point on the 10 cm visual analogue scale used) to the question asking whether they would stay with an otherwise satisfactory partner, even if they never reached orgasm with them.

Other researchers, like New Zealand-based psychologist Virginia Braun, have highlighted the centrality of vaginal-penile intercourse in heterosexual sex which, as even Brewer and Hendrie’s study highlights, tends to privilege men’s pleasure and orgasm over women’s.  In her research, Braun has found that couples place value on egalitarian sexual activity, giving priority to the pleasure of both female and male partners, but that couples tend to see vaginal-penile intercourse as the “main event.”  What she and others have called the “coital imperative,” that is, that sex isn’t actually sex unless vaginal-penile intercourse happens, also implies that sex is officially over for heterosexual couples when the male partner has orgasmed, so, if the female partner had not reached orgasm by that point, she’s out of luck.