july 1 1 2 0 0 4 » Let’s do a swap! For some, versatility is a way to break down what they see as a stymied, rigid, no-longer-useful sense of masculinity. Mike Moulton, a gay Port­ land bookkeeper who identifies himself as a “ver­ satile top,” says: “Unfortunately, the gay commu­ nity continues to look to the straight community for affirmation of gay men’s ideas of masculinity. Being a bottom is likened to the woman’s sexual role in straight relationships, thus ren­ dering any gay man who is a bottom as less masculine.” It becomes even more com­ plicated when dealing with bisexuality and transsexualism where notions of masculine/ feminine behaviors and aggres- sive/passive attitudes becomes blurred at best. When my co­ worker asked me about my preferences as a bisexual, how was 1 to answer? I enjoy both aggressive and passive roles with my female partners and my male partners. No top/bottom model works for my sexual history. And what if my answer to Jon is, “I’d like to fuck Henry Rollins or get fucked by Alan Cummings”? How does this response reconcile with our notions of top/bottom behavior? Can two tops get it on? Can two bottoms? DAVIS “Only tops” preferred partners to be their age or younger at the level of 73 percent. These statistics hold relatively stable for height and weight preferences, hairy/smcxtth preferences and rough/gentle sexual preferences— all of which seemed to match the top/bottom type. 21 Doesn’t queer theory have something more interesting and multifaceted to tell us about the way men fuck? urtis Mackay, who works in transporta­ tion in Portland, is a 23-year-old gay man in a long-tenn relationship. “I’ve loved me some daddies but prefer equal roles,” he says. “My partner and I have been together a total of 4 1/2 years and are 100 percent versatile.” To Mackay, men who stick to only being a top or a bottom miss out on opportunities for prolonging pleasure. “W ho doesn’t want to stop when you get too close [to coming] and switch?” he asks. “More guys should try it.” Versatility, it would seem, does not need to mean a lessening of one’s appetite for either one sexual role or another. Many queer men find that switching between being the top and the bottom opens sex to fresh new possibilities. “Sexual versatility is one of the assets and pleasures of gay life,” according to Picano and Silverstein. “Many gay men are capable of changing their sexual role depending upon the sexual circumstances or the physical character­ istics of their sexual partner. T he sexually flexi­ ble man has opened his body for pleasure.” Kinksters mix it up ne would think that S/M, uniform, daddy/son and bear subcultures, all of which thrive on dichotomy, would be a place where the traditional vision of sexual roles would stand fast. But this is not necessar­ ily the case. “Men do switch roles,” says 4Tyear-old Earl A. Coffman, “and, no, ‘versatile’ is not a myth.” Coffman, a gay Portlander who holds the title of Mr. Oregon State Leather 2003, doesn’t think categories define the man but rather the man defines the category. “It plays out how the individuals allow it to play out,” Coffman says. “Basically, everyone needs to be who they are and who they want to be. W hat other people think doesn’t matter. And, yes, you can be a top and get fucked.” Tbe leather/rubber community and its part­ ner subculture of dominance and submission thrive on sexual versatility, where a man who identifies himself as a master can fulfill his fan­ tasies of being the slave and vice versa. The bear community has its roots in a broader vision of masculinity, a manliness that encompasses both harder and softer aspects, both ferocious aggres­ sion and gentle passion. Although the daddy/son subculture imparts a familial, mentoring role beyond the bed­ room, the role-playing aspects can move into sexual roles as well. Andy Mangels, best-selling novelist and publisher of InUniform.com, says: “Recognizing and exploring role-play should bring diversity and excitement to the bedroom, not restriction and boredom” — Andy Mangels (left, with “son” Paul Smalley and partner Don Hood) “Sexually, the top is generally the fucker, not the fuckee— or whatever activity is going on. However, psychologically or emotionally or sometimes physically, the top can be on the bottom, or the bottom on the top. A daddy telling his boy to fuck him isn’t that rare.” This plays out in the uniform subculture as well. “We partake in roles all our life,” says Mangels, who is in a triad relationship with his partner and their “son.” “We have work roles, home life roles, roles with our family, roles with our friends and roles with our lovers. Rec­ ognizing and exploring role-play should bring diversity and excitement to the bedroom, not restriction and boredom.” In all of these subcultures, the sur­ prise is often the norm. “Sexual roles rarely correspond to the outside life," Mangels says. “Many drag queens are tops in the bed­ room. Many CEOs and construction workers and cops are bottoms. Most bot­ toms I know are pretty masculine. The phrase ‘take it like a man’ is a part of our culture for a reason. Straight guys don’t get how homoerotic that phrase is.” These role-expanding ideas shouldn’t sur­ prise us. Subcultures are often bom out of a sense of being the “outsider.” As a group feels left out by those within their own culture, they often define their group through experi­ mental sexual roles, open-minded affection and a lack of judgmental criticism. A matter of attitude n the final analysis, top and bottom roles in the bedroom are, by the nature of the beast with two backs, here to stay. But through exploration and play, the many forms these roles can take allow gay and bi men the chance to redefine the nature of sexual relationship, the characteristics of masculinity and act of sex itself. “T h e gay com ­ munity should no longer look to the straight communi­ ty for role models regarding gender and sex,” says Moulton. “They do not apply to us. There is no ‘mas­ culine’ and ‘femi­ nine’ role in gay sex, only in attitude.” It’s a brave new (homo)sexual world. And we can make it whatever we’d like it to be. i n I With more than 60 percent of the respondents iden tifying as some form o f versatile, the categories o f top and bottom seem less rigid than popular opinion suggests G lenn S cofield W illiams writes poetry, prose, plays, periodica and pom in Portland. TALK IS CHEAP, i flCTIOn TALKS! el«"? Train! Job Hotline: 503-988-5035 TTY: 503-988-5170 an equal o p p o rtu n ity em ployer ■ M. 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