Are You Satisfied? Ebony Asks Black
Women
For too long, African-American women and their sexual needs have been
ignored. Over the decades, media-glorified studies have claimed to break new
ground in regard to sexuality, but they seldom addressed the needs and
concerns of African-American women. In fact, studies that addressed Black
women usually focused on transmission of disease.
HealthyPlace.com Audio
Women and Sexual Desire
A low
sex drive in women has been linked to hormones, and is often diagnosed
as a dysfunction. But what are the external factors that influence
sexual desire? What about stress, lack of self-esteem, or the
relationship a woman is in?Author of the book Reclaiming Your Sexual
Self, Kathryn Hall Ph.D., is the guest.
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Ebony magazine readers wanted to know more. What turns us on, what turns us off?
What are our major problems and concerns? Where do we go when we have
problems or questions?
In response to the thousands of reader queries the magazine continued to get,
Ebony undertook a major study to answer some of these
questions. Ebony has commissioned Hope Ashby, Ph.D., a psychotherapist based
in New York City, to help design a groundbreaking new sex survey that
delved into the hearts and sex lives of Black women. The survey results were
published in October 2004. The magazine wanted to hear about the issues that
affect the quality of black women's lives and relationships. In the end,
they hoped to
shed some light on personal concerns and let black women know that they are not
alone; other women have the same problems that you do. And there are
solutions that can lead to a healthier, more fulfilling sex life.
Here, Dr. Ashby, offers some insight into Black women and sexuality.
Question: What are the sexuality problems affecting Black women?
Dr. Ashby: A major sexuality problem facing Black women today is
HIV/AIDS. Another is the lack of information available in our communities.
There is a lot of misinformation or just nonexistent information about anorgasmia,
low libido,
painful sex and even simple things such as the
effect of hormones on sexual functioning.
Question: Are there sexuality issues that affect Black women more so than
other women?
Dr. Ashby: A continual complaint about their partners not wanting to wear
condoms. Black women also bring up the inability to have an
orgasm and low
or lost libido as White women do.
HealthyPlace.com Audio
A Look at HIV/AIDS and African-American Women
We examine the effect HIV/AIDS has on women of color -- and what can be done
about it -- with Phill Wilson, founder and executive director of the Black AIDS
Institute, and Dr. Celia Maxwell, assistant vice president for health sciences
at Howard University and director of the Women's Health Institute.
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Question: Are there aspects of sexuality that Black women seem to enjoy an
advantage?
Dr. Ashby: I think that the one advantage that Black women have is high
body esteem. We tend to be more comfortable in our bodies, especially Black
women who are plus-size. Having high body esteem helps to enhance one's
sexual feelings about herself.
Question: When a Black woman has a problem with sex, where does she go for
help and advice?
Dr. Ashby: Black women tend to go to their friends; it is rare that they
go to their doctors with sex issues because they are unaware that there is
help out there for these types of problems. There are professionals, like
myself, who specialize in sexually related issues and can help. Some medical
doctors are beginning to listen to their patients' sexuality complaints and
learn about the area of sexual medicine.
Question: For those who are not comfortable talking to their partners, what
advice do you have?
Dr. Ashby: First and foremost, don't choose to start having these
conversations when you're about to have sex. That is the wrong time. It is
important to begin these conversations in a neutral, non-threatening place,
especially if you haven't been having orgasms and you have been faking.
Begin by asking your partner what he thinks about your sex life. Are there
fantasies he would like to explore?
Question: How do history and culture affect our sexuality?
Dr. Ashby: Throughout White history, Black women have been
portrayed in two paradigms--that of Jezebel and that of "mammy." Jezebel
being the slut, promiscuous woman and "mammy" being completely asexual but
always passive and caretaking. Because Black women have generally been
looked at through these two lenses, it has been difficult for us to find
middle ground. How can you be a comfortable sexual being when you could be
perceived as a slut? This message is also pervasive in American culture.
Little girls are taught that sex is to be saved for marriage without ever
hearing any mention of enjoyment. It gets conveyed in a subtle way that
pleasure is reserved for your partner and that you are the conveyer of that
pleasure. Thus Black women are often caught between being a "good girl"
(nonsexual), or a "bad girl" (sexual). Another aspect of Black history that
is tied to these paradigms is that as slaves Black women were regularly
raped and sodomized by their masters, and also sold off from their families.
This traumatic history is still an unconscious remnant in the lives of Black
women.
continue
Written in 2004. Last reviewed: 11/05.
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