This posting is in
response to Dr. Steven Reiss's recent piece on motivational analysis vs.
psychodynamic analysis of behavior, which I found exceedingly interesting and
provocative. Interesting and provocative because he analyzes so-called sexual
promiscuity, opposing his motivational view of such behavior to a psychodynamic or
psychoanalytic one. And, for me, especially because he specifically mentions my
former mentor, Rollo May's perspective on love and promiscuity. Since Dr. May
is no longer around to defend himself, having died in 1994 at the age of 85,
let me respond to your points, Dr. Reiss, though, ultimately, I can only speak
for myself here. (more after the cut)
Promiscuity is, as
you suggest, a culturally determined concept, but is formally defined,
according to Webster, as including not only frequent but
"indiscriminate" sexual behavior. Preference for frequent sexual
contacts is not necessarily the same as being sexually indiscriminating. The
latter, in women, indicates a possible compulsive, and therefore, pathological
quality to the excessive sexual behavior, referred to traditionally as nymphomania.
(In men, it is called satyriasis.) Such indiscriminating or sometimes
even random sexual behaviors can be commonly seen in various mental disorders
such as psychosis, manic episodes, substance abuse and
dependence, dissociative identity disorder, as well as borderline, narcissistic and
antisocial personalities, and can, in fact, often be partially diagnostic of
such pathological conditions. (See, for example, the diagnostic criterion of impulsive
behaviors like reckless sex in Borderline
Personality Disorder and often dangerously heightened sexual
drive and behavior in the manic phase of Bipolar Disorder.)
Of course, some experimental promiscuity during adolescence and
young adulthood is typical in our culture, and considered by most to be
developmentally normal rather than pathological
Having said that,
it is easy for men to be accused of imposing a double standard when it comes to
female sexuality:
It's fine for men to be sexually promiscuous. Even indiscriminate. Such sexual
activity is often culturally encouraged and admired. But when women openly and
aggressively express their sexuality like men, we tend to view them as mentally
ill, promiscuous, sinful or evil vixens. To be fair, what's good for the goose
is good for the gander. Though I would argue that psychologically,
sociologically and biologically, sex holds a significantly different meaning for
men and women. Sigmund Freud, the first "psychodynamic" theorist more
than a century ago, was very clear that we (and I would say this is somewhat
true even today, and certainly for Guggenheim's generation) live in a sexually
repressed society. We are admittedly less sexually repressed here in America
following the "sexual revolution, "free love" and "women's
lib" of the 1960s and 70s, but, perhaps more so than our European cousins,
still suffer from this Puritanistic aspect of what Freud referred to as
"civilization and its discontents." Society, psychiatry, psychology,
and, for many, religion,
still dictate what is "right" and "wrong," "moral" or "immoral,"
"acceptable" or "unacceptable," "normal" or
"pathological," "good" or "evil" regarding human
sexual behavior.
Just because
someone, male or female, refuses to accept society's standard regarding sexual
self-expression does not necessarily make him or her neurotic, perverted,
pathological, antisocial or aberrant. On this we can agree. In the case you
cited of the famous heiress and art patron Peggy Guggenheim, I don't know how
much of her sexual behavior was indiscriminating in its frequency. Indeed, I know
nothing of her sex life at all. Nor am I familiar with her mental health history. So any commentary on
her behavior here by me is completely speculative. But she apparently was
indeed, as you point out, highly motivated to have frequent (if not totally
indiscriminating) sexual liaisons with numerous men throughout her adulthood.
So much so that you note the high number of abortions (estimated to be as many
as 17) she purportedly underwent. And her sexual behavior was certainly
unconventional in her day and socially frowned upon. The very important
question you raise is: What was it exactly that motivated her
"promiscuous" (meaning, in this case, excessive by "normal"
or conventional standards) sexual life?
You seem to
suggest that, generally, the primary motivation for
such "promiscuity" has mainly to do with innate intense sexual drive,
combined with a low extrinsic motivation for social acceptance or
"honor." But what is "sexual drive"? I have no doubt that
different temperaments, sometimes congenital, can include different, e.g., more
or less aggressive or powerful libidinal urgings. But here we get into the nature of a so-called
"drive." As a clinical psychologist, I think of "drive" as
a combination of both biological (endogenous or intrinsic) libidinal energy,
intrapsychic structure (including complexes), and external (exogenous or
extrinsic) motivation. Or what psychodynamic psychotherapists call primary and secondary
gain. In other words, for me, what "drives" us sexually or
otherwise is a mixture of nature and nurture, as well as familial, societal or
cultural influences. But I consider it a gross oversimplification to reduce
motivation in the case of sexual promiscuity to pure biology. Human motivation
is a quite complex matter. Much more so than animal motivation.
For Rollo May,
this motivational "drive" of which we are speaking is what he termed
the daimonic. The daimonic, wrote May in his magnum opus, Love
and Will (1969), "is any natural function which has the power
to take over the whole person. Sex and eros, anger and rage, and the craving for
power are examples. The daimonic can be either creative or destructive and is
normally both." The passionate psychobiological power of the daimonic is
capable of driving us toward destructive and/or creative activity.
Particularly to the extent it remains unconscious
and, therefore, unintegrated into and disconnected from the conscious personality. Much
of the greatest art and most evil deeds are direct or indirect expressions of
the daimonic. And it appears to me that Ms. Guggenheim was not only personally
driven but both attracted to and fascinated by the daimonic manifested in
the artists she worked and played with. (For more on May's idea of the daimonic and
its clinical implications in both evil and creativity,
see my bookAnger,
Madness, and the Daimonic.)
Applying May's
unique psychodynamic model of the daimonic, we could
conceivably conceptualize Ms. Guggenheim's hypersexuality as a manifestation
of "daimonic possession," an inordinate and irresistible sexual
drivenness. But what was this compelling drivenness really all about? Was it
truly just about lust, sex and sexual satisfaction? If it was Oedipal in
nature, the so-called Elektra complex in women, as classical Freudian analysis
might suggest, were her unconscious strivings purely and literally sexually
motivated? Or was it a symbolic seeking after some other aspect of Eros: the
love of men, the love of other women's men, regaining the abruptly lost sense
of security and love of her father during adolescence? In this particular case,
she had evidently been deeply wounded by her parents'
repeated marital separations, the sudden loss of her father in the HMS
Titanic tragedy, and then the abandonment by her mother when she was
relegated by her to being brought up by nannies. These sorts of painful, traumatic losses
during childhood or
adolescence can and do affect self-esteem and self-image,
and frequently manifest later in neurotically repetitive relationship patterns
(see my prior post), psychiatric symptoms
such as chronic depression and
anxiety, and difficulties with emotional intimacy. However, the fact is that
Ms. Guggenheim married twice and produced two children, indicating at least
some capacity and desire for intimacy and commitment. Yet, you may be right
that marriage and
monogamy simply did not suit her personality nor her voracious appetitefor
sex. Or, as I would put it, for love via sex.
Promiscuity or
monogamy. Is one more existentially meaningful than the other? You contend
Rollo May prejudically believed so, that he was someone who found monogamy
meaningful and sexual promiscuity shallow, superficial and unfulfilling. And
you are probably right. I agree that people derive meaning in life in different
ways. Marriage or monogamy is not for everyone. (See, for example, Bella
DePaulo's blog on being single here at PT.)
Marriage or monogamy is no more inherently meaningful (or meaningless) than
promiscuity, singlehood or celibacy for that matter. You call this the
"brutal truth." Rollo May's psychology never shied away from,
distorted or denied the tragic and brutal truth about
human existence. Existential psychotherapy is
based upon acknowledging and confronting reality as it is, rather than as we
would like it to be. It is existentially true that meaning is where we find or
make it. For a priest, monk or nun, celibacy is spiritually meaningful. For a
"free spirit," which may have been how Guggenheim either described
herself or was perceived by others, uncommitted sexuality is personally
meaningful, perhaps signifying freedom, rebellion and self-assertion. For the
woman who identifies with the archetypal role of Muse or femme
inspiratrice, providing sexual love to artists may hold profound meaning. I
don't know whether Ms. Guggenheim suffered from a lack of meaning in her life.
In fact, I tend to doubt it based on the little I've read, since she was
apparently fully and passionately engaged in the arts and in her serial sexual
adventures with various prominent and prodigious artists. We might even surmise
that, for Guggenheim, sexuality--along with her creation of cutting-edge art
galleries and keen eye for up and coming artists like Cocteau, Kandinsky,
Calder, Picasso, Klee, Magritte, Miro, Chagall, Pollock and Ernst--was her own
personal art form, her way of creatively expressing herself in the world, her
creative outlet for the vital libidinal life forces of the daimonic.
The question of
whether Peggy Guggenheim engaged in promiscuous sexuality to avoid inner
feelings of emptiness, anxiety and
loss is very much to the point: Could that have been the reason she frantically
flitted from bed to bed? Because of exactly what you cite May as saying: That
in a purely sexual (i.e., merely physically intimate) relationship, "it is
only a matter of time before the partners experience feelings of
emptiness." This is exactly what sexual (or any) addiction is all about.
The initial "high" from sex, from orgasm, from infatuation, from novelty,
from romance rapidly fades away. And then the sex addict searches for that next
"fix." That new lover. That next conquest or opportunity to "get
off." Over and over and over. As with any addictive behavior, such a
pattern can serve as a kind of self-medication,
a way of managing or avoiding depression and anxiety, and of filling the vacuum
created when feelings of sadness, grief or rage are chronically
repressed. What really motivates sexually addictive or compulsive
behavior? Extraordinary sex drive? I would disagree. It is more
likely the same thing that primarily motivates any addictive behavior:
Avoidance of anxiety, anger, grief or pain. Or, perhaps in this case, loneliness.
That too can be a powerful motivation: avoidance. As Freud well understood.
Sometimes even more motivating than the pleasure of sating one's sexual
appetite and releasing sexual tension. (Whether Ms. Guggenheim's sexual
escapades were fueled at all by alcohol or
other disinhibiting drugs is yet another relevant question.)
Rollo May did not,
as you allege, confuse "individuality with abnormality." He had great
respect for individuality, and tended to de-pathologize rather than moralize or
pathologize individual differences. (See, for example, his groundbreaking
book The Meaning of Anxiety, in which he normalizes the
experience of existential anxiety.) I don't think he would have judged someone
like Ms. Guggenheim moralistically. It is true that he (like two of his
teachers, psychoanalysts Alfred Adler and Erich Fromm) in Freudian tradition
felt that the capacity to love, to form close and lastingly intimate
connections or attachments with others, is one of the fundamental pillars of
mental health and meaning. While I don't fully agree (see my prior post),
I believe Dr. May would probably have conceptualized Ms. Guggenheim's
promiscuity as being neurotically driven by the daimonic in
this case. I would say it is likely that poor self-esteem and feelings of
emptiness and inherent unlovability may very well have been a driving force in
such behavior, and that her hypersexuality, and its consequences, though
probably engaged in to boost her ego, continually eroded her self-esteem. This
can result in a vicious cycle of endless sexual activity. Moreover, it may well
have served as an unconscious defense mechanism against authentic intimacy.
This is the distinction you refer to that May makes between "libido"
and "Eros": Although both aspects of Eros, sex and love are not the
same thing, and, indeed, sex can sometimes unconsciously be engaged in to
defend against love and intimacy. Someone who has been severely wounded during
childhood in the way Guggenheim reportedly was would typically avoid situations
in which they could be rejected and abandoned again. That becomes their primary
motivation: the frantic avoidance of abandonment, even if that means engaging
in ultimately self-destructive, superficial, sometimes abusive sexual
relationships with emotionally unavailable partners.
My own guess is
that, to the extent they were in fact "purely sexual" (which I tend
to doubt), some of her serial encounters might have veered toward
superficiality, and, as a result, lacked substantial meaning in the long run.
And, more importantly, that her sexual promiscuity was somewhat compulsive,
defensive and avoidant in nature. A form of what Freud famously called repetition
compulsion : An unconscious adult re-enactment of seeking love from
but being rejected, uncared for and abandoned by her emotionally and physically
unavailable parents. A self-defeating narcissistic defense against a
deep-seated sense of insecurity and unlovability. A neurotic, constant turning
to her lovers for something she felt she had missed out on. Or for some aspect
of her own personality she was unable or unwilling to accept or fully develop,
the "masculine" element in her psyche Jung called the animus.
Her repeated pregnancies (representing creative potentiality) and subsequent
abortions might, for example, be taken to symbolize her own aborted efforts at
becoming an artist herself.
None of this is,
for me anyway, a moral judgment, but rather a purely clinical one. If Ms.
Guggenheim was happy with her lifestyle, if it worked for her, who am I (or
anyone else) to say it was pathological, immoral or wrong? But if she or
someone like her turned up in my office, miserable, dissatisfied,
distraught and seeking psychological help, we would have to take a good
hard look at her repetitive relationship patterns, their significance, and how
they both stem from and negatively affect her self-esteem, integrity and mood.
We would need to determine what she really wants regarding relationships rather
than how she rationalizes and aggrandizes her sexual behavior. And we would
need to examine how what happened to her in the past profoundly affected her
then--and is still affecting her now. We would need to confront what Dr. May
called the daimonic,
which, in this case, would likely include her repressed or dissociated feelings
of hurt, abandonment, rejection, sadness, anger and rage toward her parents,
herself. And possibly her own repressed creativity. Since the daimonic (not
unlike Jung's concept of the shadow) by
definition becomes stronger and destructive the longer it is repressed or
dissociated, usurping control of or taking over the whole personality, we might
expect to see some prior early history of sometimes religiously motivated
sexual abstinence or chronic suppression of the sexual instinct in cases of
promiscuity or nymphomania. This is related to Nietzsche's notion of the
"return of the repressed." I have no idea whether Ms. Guggenheim had
such a history. But my point is that, both psychodynamically and existentially
speaking, such a person's inordinate "sex drive" can be symptomatic
of far more than some intrinsic, biological motivation, as you propose. To
paraphrase Freud, sometimes a cigar is just a cigar. But sometimes it's more
than a cigar.
As for the matter
of meaning, which is so central to May's existential
psychotherapy, you say that Ms. Guggenheim's "promiscuity"
(your term) was indeed meaningful for her, and provided a primary source of
meaning in her life. You may be right. But what did it really mean to her? That
she could seduce a man? That she was desirable? That she was lovable? That she
was worthy of love? Why did she find it necessary to flit from man to man
so incessantly? Was she happy doing so? Or was she suffering? Lonely?
Frustrated? And why was she so fond of artists in particular? Clearly, she had
a deep love and appreciation of art. And of artists. During the 1920's, she
lived a thoroughly bohemian life-style in Paris for many years in the company
of struggling artists, and, decades later, married Max Ernst, remaining married
to him for several years. But to conclude that she behaved the way she did
simply because of her unusually strong sex drive does little if anything to
explain, for instance, why she couldn't have satisfied her sexual appetite
within a more traditional, monogamous relationship. Unless, of course, her
sexual instinct specifically demanded promiscuity per se, a premise I believe
our fellow blogger Chris Ryan presents in his new book Sex at Dawn.
And concluding that she was promiscuous because she didn't really care about
her "honor" or social standing would, for me, be equally
unconvincing. Ultimately, sex, in such cases, serves as a symbolic substitute
for love. And that is what makes it so meaningful.
Curiously,
the daimonic (not unlike the "Force" in the Star
Wars saga) seems to have been strong with Ms. Guggenheim. Hence her
self-reported sexual vitality and passion. For me, this represents a positive
prognostic quality. Rollo May was quite insistent that the daimonic is not only
about destructiveness, pathology and evil, but can also be positive,
constructive and creative. It's all about how we channel the daimonic. What we
do with it. How we use it. Here is what he wrote in his brief foreword to my
book: "The daimonic (unlike the demonic, which is merely
destructive), is as much concerned with creativity as with negative reactions.
. . . That is, constructiveness and destructiveness have the same source in
human personality." For May, that source is the daimonic or
"human potential." Peggy Guggenheim apparently sublimated or
discharged her daimonic energy into her love of art and her art of love. Since
the daimonic demands some expression, had she not directed her life
force into art and love, had she merely repressed or suppressed it in order to
live a more conventional and respectable life-style, she might have fallen into
despair, or the daimonic could have come out destructively, negatively or even
violently. So it may well be that for Ms. Guggenheim, sexual promiscuity was
the best possible and least destructive choice. Short of some good
psychotherapy, that is.
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