Can I stop pretending to be sexy now?

Pole dancing parties are among the most-requested fitness parties, and the merrymakers are overwhelmingly young women in their 20s and 30s.

Pole dancing parties are among the most-requested fitness parties, and the merrymakers are overwhelmingly young women in their 20s and 30s.

Published Sep 18, 2012

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London - It’s funny what passes for sexual liberation these days. As I type this, I'm feeling the aching after-effects of having been so thoroughly sexually liberated last week that I can barely move my fingers around the keyboard. When I ate lunch earlier, I had to lower my head to my fork because I was unable to flex my over-sexed arms in the usual cutlery-to-mouth posture. I am a ragdoll whose limbs have been dunked in ice water; my extremities are dangling heavily by my sides, thanks to all the sexual liberation I experienced a few days ago.

Don't worry, I'm not about to regale you with tales of deviancy, of being strung up and spanked with a middle-class hairbrush or fed chocolate pudding while wearing a nappy by a highly paid tormentor working from a back-room in Chiswick.

There's a simple enough reason for my creaky torpor: I went pole-dancing. I regretted it before I went, I regretted it while I was there, and I regret it especially now I've done it and am left so weak I can hardly open the door to my flat. Sexual liberation indeed: I'm trapped on the sofa and can't even change the channel because my fingers hurt too much.

It turns out there's a lot of flinging yourself around in pole-dancing, the bizarre strip-club practice that involves a scantily clad woman heaving herself around a fireman's pole in various combinations of spins, flicks and whirls which is now taught as a hobby up and down the country. Lacklustre housewife? Overworked singleton? Mother who has swapped her carnal appetites for finishing the toddler's leftovers? Pole-dancing is for you. But don't go if you think you'll need your arms again.

Pole-dancing is an odd cross between trying to pull in a nightclub and being part of Cirque de Soleil, the international circus troupe so repellently twee and fantastical that a close friend of mine once soiled himself during one of their shows.

Once inside the chilly exercise studio, I was faced with mirrors on every wall, reflecting the three poles screwed into the floor in so many multiple aspects that they looked like the trees of Birnam Wood coming to get me.

The first thing we had to do was approach the pole with intent. This wasn't a euphemism: it's so profoundly evident that the pole is a massive substitute penis that it isn't even worth skirting the issue. So when the music goes on at full blast, you're supposed to march up to that shiny metal penis, feet moving in your heels like a Nazi soldier's (this is not the sort of exercise you wear trainers for), facial expression either coy or brash according to your wont and inner wanton, and grab it - ahem - “like you mean it”.

I didn't know what I meant by grabbing it so I sidled up to the pole nervously, like a sweaty teenage boy who knows he is crap with girls and doesn't even need telling that the one he's about to try to talk to thinks he's a loser and will just walk off. I sidled like a pervert and put my hand limply on the cool metal.

Ten minutes in, I was trying to fling myself around it, walking in circles at its base as I used to with our whirligig clothes line in the garden for the temporary thrill of getting so dizzy I'd fall over. In pole-dancing, you basically hold on, walk and then throw yourself in a circle, sometimes wrapping your legs around, sometimes kicking them out, and sometimes - if you're really good at it - kicking yourself upside down and slithering down to land on your face. Sexy times.

Twenty minutes in, I was drinking cava in the corner, claiming to be the official photographer so that I didn't have to pretend to be sexy any more.

The odd thing about being totally sexually liberated (and I use this phrase ironically, just in case anyone still hasn't realised that pole-dancing lessons are just about the least liberating thing on the planet except for cupcakes and wearing your hair in postmodern bunches) is that there's nothing sexy about it all.

Compare these two scenarios and see if you agree. In one room, a group of young women are talking about how successful they are and laughing about all the vast and varied life experiences they've had. Maybe one of them has just bought a house; another simply loves the fact that she's allowed to vote. Down the hall in another room, a group of young women are standing around looking as though they're either frightened of or turned on by a giant knitting needle, which an instructor keeps telling them to wipe down with their hands.

It was as my too too solid flesh came squeaking down that knitting needle, making a sound like a wet dog being smeared across a window, that I realised which room had about 3,000 times more sexiness in it. I bet those other women can still move their arms, too. - The Independent on Sunday

 

COMMENT FROM A READER

Dear Ms. Walker,

I read your recent article on your experience taking a pole dancing class. While I appreciate your adventurous undertaking and your personal opinion on the class, I'm afraid you got it all wrong. I have been pole dancing for over three years and teaching for about a year and a half. Pole dancing does not always need to be sexual by nature. It can be a visceral and emotional experience. You can let out rage, sadness or joy. It is as versatile a dance form as any other. No, the pole is not a phallic symbol. This has more to do with one's own perspective and judgments than what pole dancing actually is.

I consider myself a progressive feminist. What this means is I take ownership of the fact that I'm a woman. I don't compare myself to men, because it's impossible. I cannot do what a man can do. I'm not as strong and my body is built completely the opposite inside and out. Instead of being frustrated by this and trying to compete with men, I remove myself from that unbeatable fight. I have different strengths. I'm a woman, I'm unique and I'm proud of that.

Here are some benefits of pole dancing that you may not have received from just one class:

1. Excellent form of resistance training. Most women don't receive this form of exercise. You are lifting your own body weight so you build lean muscle tailored for your body.

2. Cardiovascular exercise that benefits the health of your lungs and heart. Spins and climbs at a consistent pace will increase your heart rate.

3. Increases flexibility. Pole is very reliant on remaining limber by performing yoga-like moves and splits.

4. It's an emotional release. As any form of dance is, the mood changes depending on the dancer and the music. You can listen to rock and let out rage or you can dance to classical and be completely lyrical and flowing in your movement.

5. It builds self-esteem. It is inspiring to try something, fail. Try it again and succeed. When you complained of the pain you felt in your arms, that was due to the incredible workout you received. If you tried again you would find your muscles to be stronger. The first time you master a trick you once thought impossible, you reach a high and have a sense of accomplishment.

6. It opens you up to your own sensuality. You wear minimal clothing (for the purpose of having your skin exposed to grip the pole). This is initially uncomfortable for some, but you will soon get past this. Moving your hips and exploring your own sexuality in a safe environment is liberating. You don't need to move like a stripper or video girl, you need only to move to the rhythm that your body calls for.

7. It helps you accept your body. Wearing little clothing also forces self-acceptance of your body. Learning tricks helps you understand how your body works, its limits and its strengths. This is empowering.

8. The pain you feel from burns and bruises is challenging. This is a metaphor for life. You will try and fail. You will fall down and hurt yourself. Your battle wounds are scars that show your journey. I compare it to fire walking. You mentally get used to the feeling of your body on metal. You learn how to manipulate your body in a way that avoids pain. You bruise less and you get stronger.

9. It builds a strong community. While men do pole dance, the majority of those participating are women. All too often there seems there is cattiness between women. There is natural competition of who is prettier or thinner. In pole class, you will find women cheering each other on for mastering a new move or clapping at a performer's sultry style. There is a notion of not only acceptance of other women, but celebration. That is a beautiful thing.      

10. It is FUN. Swinging around a pole is a natural instinct that is just plain fun to do. Watch a child near a pole on a subway car or playground. They will inevitable grab onto the pole and play around it. Are they doing this because they watched a stripper do it? No, they are doing it because it's a freeing and a blast.

So there is my case. I recommend you try a class in a different setting. Watch videos of professional pole dancers (Natasha Wang, Jenyne Butterfly, Oona Kivela). Visit my Youtube page: poledancer212. Read a copy of Vertical Art and Fitness magazine. Talk to a pole dancer. You don't have to enjoy it, but at least experience it for what it really is before placing such strong judgments on it.   

Sincerely,

Irmingard

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