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Pallavi B, 33, posts personal stuff on Facebook that you and I would call TMI, aka Too Much Information. She talks about sex. Her fantasies, her intimate moments with her partner, the good ones, the not so good ones…and things that reinforce her conviction that monogamy is not her thing….
By the look of Pallavi’s FB page, Indians, married Indians at home and abroad are going through some soul searching or shall we say sex searching.
Her site also advertises her workshops called ‘Tongue Tied’ in the Delhi NCR, where behind closed doors people discuss India’s most taboo dinner table topic - sexual desires. Just naming one’s desires is the first step to a better sex life and a whole new ‘awakening’ she says.
“I want to lift the lid on these marriages where sex has no passion.’’ says Pallavi, who is waging a war against boring coupledom. “I am divorced, and I am in a live in relationship with my boyfriend and also live with my parents in the same house.”
But is this because her heart bleeds for these sorry couples putting off sex till tomorrow, choosing Netflix over sex on repeat, or is it because she has a point to prove? Her point being that - monogamy - the basic ingredient in a conventional marriage, is totally unnatural.
And to lead the way by example - Pallavi does the sharing herself. A LOT of it, since she askes that those who post, do so without hiding their names.
“As much as I like my partner, and as much as he has been my constant companion and my rock in all the upheavals of life, these days I’m not sexually excited about him. It’s a bitter truth and an inevitable truth of almost all long-term relationships. Sexual passion cools down.”
Said partner, she tells me, has un-friended her on Facebook. Despite ardently supporting her work, her all too truthful posts are understandably just not what he wants to see on his timeline.
But not all those who post totally agree with Pallavi on the topic of monogamy
Pooja, a writer, has her own views on why some Indians are, to put it simply, frustrated - and why Indian women in particular, may find it hard to find sexual satisfaction in relationships.
What’s in it for the men who join the group or workshops? Are they there to improve their sex lives with their wives? Men who come to these forums also come hoping to hook up rather than to help improve their love life with their partner, observes Pooja who has attended these workshops. Yet there are those who post constructive comments on the group and see why sex really needs to be part of the marriage conversation.
Is India ready for a new wave of openly talking sex and marriage? Well, it seems to have started happening, at least with perfect strangers.
(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)
Published: 26 Apr 2019,09:04 PM IST