The Debut Of Our New Gay Sex Advice Column
If you’re looking for warmth and compassion, you’ve picked the wrong sex column. Try books like Chicken Soup For The Cock.
This is going to be a sex advice column with fangs. It’s a resurrection of an old column I used to write called, Need Wood? Tips for Getting Timber.
Throughout the years I wrote the column I managed to enrage just about every gay group in existence. There’s a reason for that. I make fun of people who aren’t used to being made fun of, I’m judgmental as hell, I leer (if it’s possible to leer in print) and I brag a lot.
Oh, and I give accurate medical advice.
That’s what enraged the critics the most, I think. Yanking threads off the fabric of gay piety would be one thing, but I do more than that. Thanks to my panel of board-certified physicians, therapists, and psychologists, I club my politically correct victims with medical facts, not just common sense. And if there’s one thing that easily offended hate, it’s being clubbed with common sense.
I write this column the way men talk about sex. Brutally, with a sense of entitlement, and a breathtaking gift for the gratuitous insult. Sound familiar? It’s you and your friends at Brunch.
Smarm Alert!
Gay sex advice, when it’s published at all, has that kind of “everyone is beautiful in his own way” and “isn’t it all wonderful,” Kumbaya hogwash that makes even the biggest dick pigs cough up what they’re swallowing.
At first, it was hard to get papers to carry the column. “It’s too controversial,” said one editor, worried about all the headaches that come with controversy. “Can’t you tone it down?”
Well, no. I offered to throw in a year’s supply of Advil in a bottle of Insta-spine, but he declined. Years later, the column became one of the most successful syndicated properties in the gay press.
You won’t really learn how to be a better lay with this column. I mean, there’s plenty on techniques but that’s not the point of the column. The point is to show the real struggles, the real problems, and our real behavior or rather misbehavior close parent in the face of our all-consuming desire. In other words, this isn’t a manual; it’s theater.
From the inane to the insane, from the good to the bad, from the ingratiating to the infuriating, the questions and answers in this column will leave you laughing, crying and sometimes spitting nails.
Many of the questions come from guys who are not “out” to their doctors, making honesty and forthrightness a scarce commodity during office visits. They’re also too embarrassed to ask their friends, particularly if it’s a painful and potentially shaming problem like having a small penis or being hiv-positive.
I Like To Watch
The letters give you a voyeuristic glimpse of other people’s sex lives. The questions tend to run a lot longer than those in other advice columns because, in my humble opinion, the questions are often more interesting than the answers.
I said “often” not “always.” Give me some credit, for chrissakes.
Critics–and there were many – loathed my column because they felt society-at-large already judges and ridicules gay men, and here I am joining them.
If I were making fun of men loving each other, they might have had a point. But I don’t make fun of male love. I make fun of the way we go about getting it, maintaining it, losing it, and looking all over for it again.
Nothing is more entertaining to me than watching gays rationalize the excesses of their vanity and their promiscuity. That’s why I relish whacking the piety pinata. I love watching the canonized candy that sprays out of it.
Look, when straight men don’t tell the truth about their sexual lives we call them liars. When gay men don’t, we call them “dissidents.”
The truth is, we won’t allow ourselves to be honest about our sexual natures. We won’t allow ourselves to say that we’re sexual beings, and that the organizing principle for most of us is to get us some man meat.
We’re not allowed to say, for example, “Yeah, we hit on this idea to use abandoned warehouse space, awful music and mind whacking drugs to get laid more often.” Instead, we say bullshit things like “Oh, I go to raves because they give me a sense of belonging, or because it’s a “difficult and necessary Spiritual Journey.”
We’re the only group I know that can make the pursuit of plain old dog-yard scrumping sound like some noble, spiritual quest for a better life.
What Are We Afraid Of?
Both gay men and straight men are afraid to admit we want to have as much sex with as many people as we can. Where we diverge is in the strategies we use to cover up our inconvenient natures. Straight men pretend they don’t really feel that way; gay men admit they feel that way but for righteous reasons.
I constantly get letters from people who marinate in what Philip Roth called the “Ecstasy of sanctimony.” No group drips with this kind of moist sexual self-righteousness like the kink crowd. Well, with the possible exception of the safe-sex Nazis. Or the “just say no to drugs” crowd, or the monogamy mama’s or the… Wait, I’m running out of groups.
My point and I do have one, is that we’re humorless hypocrites when it comes to sex and I consider it my life’s mission to poke fun of the hypocrisy till it goes away.
When it comes to sex all of us, at some point, fall off the stupid tree and hit every branch on the way down. Consider me the guy who helps you up, dust you off, and shows you a better tree to climb.
While making fun of you the entire time.
Hey, it’s enough that I’m helping. I have to be nice, too?
I get a lot of satisfaction from writing this column. What could be more rewarding than liberating people from their fears, their preconceptions, their hesitancies? What could be more rewarding than helping people achieve a deeper understanding of their nature, their problems, their struggles? What could be better than knowing you help someone overcome their shame and have a more rewarding sex life?