[Eating out]


When your lover sends back the main dish


BY COURTNEY WEAVER

“so,” I said, fiddling with my tea cup. "Everything at work is going well, huh?"

"Great," Julian responded brightly. "You sure you don't want another bite of this crème brûlée? I'm going to finish it."

"I'm not a dessert person. Go ahead." I watched him. "Good, huh?"

"Not really. Overbaked, like scrambled eggs."

"Really? But you're going to eat it anyway?"

"Sure." He scooped up the last mouthful. "Check, please," he called.

"So you didn't like it. You ate it anyway, I see." I tapped my spoon on the table. "I don't mean that in a bad way."

"Uh, I guess," he said uncertainly. We'd only been going out for a few weeks, and we'd had a few conversations like these, those getting-to-know-you stabs in the dark. Now I could see him mentally wrestling, trying to see what road I was leading him down. "I probably didn't need the calories. But I do bad things sometimes."

I stopped tapping the spoon and looked at him. "Like what kinds of things?"

"Dessert?" he asked hopefully. "I don't hold much expectations for a good crème brûlée.

I nodded, thinking. "I think we need to have a talk."

I'd been rehearsing this conversation in my head for some time now, ever since Julian and I had begun sleeping together fairly regularly. The first time we'd been together, it seemed fine, if a little awkward. True, I'd gone down on him, and he hadn't reciprocated. Okay, that's fine. It's the first time, right? Anything can be forgiven the first time. You're nervous, you're clumsy, you don't know what the other person expects. We'd been tired that first night; we'd been groping for over two hours, negotiating this panty here, this bra there. That first time, it'd be lucky if one of you got off, incredible if it were both, and a virtual miracle if it was simultaneous.

But the second time, still no reciprocation. Yes, he seemed willing, eager even, to be with me in this compromising state of affairs, jeans around our ankles and T-shirts thrown by the side of the bed. I watched him watch me with a certain awe — perhaps it was shock — as if he couldn't really believe he was with me, there, naked, in my bed.

Maybe it was inexperience. He had let it slip that I was the most aggressive woman he'd ever been with. Aggressive? Julian didn't know the meaning of the word. The third time, I asked him to go down on me. ( Honesty, communication, openness, blah, blah, blah: all that stuff that's conducive to a healthy relationship.) And while he acquiesced, was it just me or did I sense a certain reluctance? As I lay there on my back, I made a mental note to look up the definitions of "aggressive" and "assertive." Maybe Julian meant the latter?

I started to ask him, "Julian, when you said aggressive, didn't you really mean ..." How sexy, what timing. I'd had semantic discussions before in bed, but never like this.

The truth of the matter is, as time went on, I simply did not think that he was sexually attracted to me. Sure, it happens, but it had never happened to me before, and I did not like it one bit. I knew he enjoyed being with me; I knew in a general sense that I was an attractive person. We liked going out for dinner, seeing movies, curling up on my sofa, and maybe that would have to be enough. I wondered, would it be okay if Julian never wanted to rip my clothes off and make mad passionate love to me on the living room rug?

There almost always is one person in a couple who is more sexually motivated than the other. And why should it always be the guy? I'd thought my libido was no stronger than the average Jo, but maybe I was misinformed. Maybe I was a nymphomaniac. A sex-starved, aggressive harridan, who would stop at nothing to achieve her next orgasm, who cared nothing for the sweet, gentle kind man who perhaps wasn't as concerned as he should be about getting her off but still loved her inside...

As I sat watching Julian eat his overbaked brûlée, the thought briefly flitted through my mind that it would be too forward of me to stroke his thigh under the table. He wouldn't like it. I watched the waiter set down the check. He probably thought we were this romantic couple, the dessert just a prelude to going home and making mad love all night long.

It was no use, Julian and me, and I knew it. Perhaps if I were the man in this relationship, perhaps if I were a different person altogether, it would be negotiable. But I couldn't compartmentalize this aspect of the relationship. Sex is too important to me, and I was feeling too terrible.


How much inequality of lust can a relationship survive?
Talk about it in Table Talk.


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