pheromones

Scents and Non-scents

Fri, 2008-08-15 15:13

Commons
Photo “Drue checks Heather’s pheromones” by Flickr user Brouhaha (Jonathan). Used under a Creative Commons license.

Oh Noes! Teh Pill! It affects Woemenz Nozez! ZOMG!**

Because you know what windup little smell-driven automatons women are. Because without that nasty Pill bollixing your nostrils you’d all go back to sticking with your partners no matter how big an asshole they turned out to be. Better outlaw them pills then.

Whatevs.

Actually, I heard about the study, or maybe something along the same lines, some time last Winter, before it got picked up and politicized as some kind of reason women shouldn’t be allowed to take the pill. Instead fellow classmate brought it up during her student research presentation on the effect of scent on sexual arousal.

The way she told it was that non-pregnant women are often more attracted to the smell of men who are genetically unlike them, but when they are they prefer the scent of men they’re more closely related to. She said that since hormonal birth control simulates pregnancy that going on the pill can alter one’s preference for the scent of one’s partner.

That actually made sense, and a number of women in the class nodded and said they’d noticed something like that when going on or off the pill during a relationship.

But here’s the deal: neither the presenter nor anyone who nodded their heads indicated it was a particularly big deal.

Which suggests, as with the stupid oxytocin-burnout argument for (only women, naturally) avoiding multiple partners***, the scent-preference-altering phenomenon, even if it does exist, can’t be all that strong, right? I mean think about how the ‘winger vision’s supposed to go

A) Non-pregnant women like the way unrelated men smell, so
B) They form lifelong, abstinenet-till-marriage, monogamous-afterwards relationships with these unrelated men, and
C) Become pregnant, whereupon according to these theories
D) Their scent preferences just as they would during pill-induced artificial preference change meaning… what?
E) While they lose interest in these genetically heterodox-scented partner for the duration of their pregnancies?

Except, well
F) I don’t think it works that way. Or
G) If it does it’s not a very strong effect, because
H) Pregnant women would always avoid their genetically heterodox-scented husbands and hang out with their genetically “homodox”-scented male relatives, which
I) We don’t, um, actually see because
J) Scent isn’t the only attraction criteria in the first place, nor
K) Even if scent was the only criteria items A-I suggest it couldn’t be terribly determinative because, y’know, most people stay together
L) Whether they’re pregnant, or on the pill, or not

[** In other words a lot of people have been commenting on the peculiar conclusion anti-contraceptive types have drawn about a very small, not-even-all-that-recent study about hormonal contraception and scent. —fl]

[** The claim is that repeated oxytocin release with multiple partners causes women to burn out on romance. The fly in that ointment is that pregnancy releases a gazillion times more oxytocin and yet after birth most women a) continue to harbor romantic feelings after birth and b) consider having additional children. Part b being, for me, the bigger deal breaker. If a little too much oxytocin is supposed to make one unable to form romantic attachments ever again then lots more of the same stuff ought to make women disinclined to get pregnant again or, especially, disinclined to love subsequent children. And not to put too fine a point on it, in most cases where we encounter women burning out on romance or childbearing the reasons tend to be a lot more clear cut than hormone-receptor exhaustion. But I digress… —fl]

From (Monkey) Shinola™

Sat, 2008-04-26 07:14

Oh yeah, and speaking of rhesus monkeys and how the “no-sex” class paradigm — like any paradigm good or bad — makes certain questions very easy to answer and others almost impossible to even ask, here’s another interesting point from Mary Roach’s new book Bonk: The Curious Coupling of Science and Sex.

One question you might not ordinarily associate with the no-sex class paradigm or any other, for that matter, would be “why did 62 married American women smear synthesized rhesus monkey “sex pheromones” onto their chests before getting into bed with their husbands every night for three months back in 1977.”

In fact if not for Mary Roach only a few hundred people might have ever asked, or been asked, that question at all.

The answer? Well…

The short answer is that the researchers paid them. ... The long answer is that monkey-observing scientists used to believe that the reason rhesus monkeys have more sex around the time the females ovulate is not that the female is under the sway of hormones that push her to make a move, but rather than the female has pheromones — chemical triggers of behavior — that prompt the males to make a move.

Source: Bonk, pg 289

Emphasis mine. In other words, yes, scientists were willing to consider that females might have some sort of hormones that triggered sexual interest when they ovulated. But they were so wrapped up in anthropomorphism (which might be even more accurately termed androcentrism) that those female hormones wouldn’t affect the actual female but would instead cue males to (as romance novels so quaintly put it) “take” them.

Roach adds that the turns-out-to-be-unsupported, passive-pheromone-releasing female theory…

...set our understanding of female hormones and female sexual behavior way off down the wrong boulevard. It implied that when it came to sex, the female primate was a passive receptacle with no drive or interest of her own.

And so…

y’see…

...it’s like

Pardon my textual sputtering but look. Y’know what I kept wondering when I read about the old behaviorist B.F. Skinner who claimed people are just big bags of reaction-formation-izing reflexes? I just kept wondering what the hell he thought was going on when he was lying in bed late at night, listening to the breathing of his partner, staring through darkness and contemplating the ecstasy and/or agony of existence.

And so I also wonder what stories we — men and women, or more accurately men and at men’s unconscious-but-enforced insistence women — have been able to tell ourselves for all these generations that could have so blinded us to something so amazingly obvious. And I’m not talking about female monkeys and I’m not talking about anything as B.F. Skinner-y as “behavior.”

Anyway, just to be clear, the idea of the “no-sex” class ideology is pretty clear: men grow up with the idea that women are intrinsically, biologically disinterested in sex and, therefore, that leverage must be used to “get” women to have sex***. Ignoring what’s evidently fairly blatant-once-you-see-it initiating/courtship behaviors of female monkeys in favor of assaying their sweat for aromatic proteins that might get males off the dime is not the biggest consequence either.

[** None of which, Roach points out, ever amounted to anything. Except, I’d point out, yet another bogus product for spammers to hawk along side penis enlargers and herbal viagra. —fl]

[*** Leverage can mean anything from “proper” offers of marriages to trickery or violence… with the only difference being whether one or another form of leverage is polite or rude, fair or unfair, legal or illegal. The only thing that’s never questioned inside the ideology is that one way or another women have no sexual agency and therefore must be prompted or activated by men. —fl]

Nose, No's, and the "No-Sex" Class

Thu, 2008-04-24 20:16


Photo by Flickr user Daveybot. Used under a Creative Commons license.

So one of the quirkier (but, I swear, no less real) consequences of my “no-sex” class theory is that because men are invested in the idea that women aren’t interested in sex we make choices that enforce that belief.

Case in point from Mary Roache’s book Bonk: The Curious Coupling of Science and Sex, in about the role hormones internal and external (i.e. pheromones) play in sexual attraction.

According to a press release from the Smell and Taste Treatment and Research Foundation in Chicago, Illinois: Men’s colognes actually reduced women’s arousal levels as measured by pelvic vasocongestion.** (Of ten other aromas tested cherries and charcoal barbeque are turn-offs while, for some reason, a mixture of cucumber and the candy “Good n Plenty” got higher marks.)

The point being, though, that when given a choice men of scents to make themselves more attractive, we choose scents that turn women off… After which we log in to MRA and PUA forums and grouse about how “them dames just ain’t intrestested.”

Me? I think soap and water, and maybe just a bit of unscented antiperspirant, might be the best bet. That’s what I’ve always liked best in other people, and what I’ve been wearing most often when partners have grabbed me and said “mmm you smell good.”) So I’m just guessing that’s probably what most other people prefer as well. You, evidently, could do much worse.

[** Researchers use an insertable photoplethsymograph to measure the amount of blood flowing through vaginal walls. Hospitals use sort of similar devices on earlobes or fingertips to measure things like our pulse and oxygen levels. As with penile plethysmographs that measure arousal in men there’s some controversy as to whether they measure what everyone thinks they measure, but there’s enough consensus that researchers feel comfortable continuing to use them. —fl]

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