sex


16
Feb 10

Fucking Is A Feeling

Fucking is a feeling.

You don’t think “I should fuck that person.”

You have a feeling. An urge. You want to fuck.

This feeling carries us through a story. We buy emotionally. On page one, in the first few minutes of the movie — we buy in. We get turned on. We want to fuck.

Doesn’t matter what kind of story. It’s the feeling. That sense of drawing forward. Because we’ve seen something in there that’s mysterious, or vulnerable, or heroic — something small starting down the road to getting big. We get turned on. We want to fuck.

Give us something we want to fuck. We’ll go.

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18
Dec 09

How Porn Teaches You How To Tell A Story

“Make the screwing scene advance the story,” the producer said. “Wherever the story stands when the actors start banging each other, I want it to have moved to the next level by the time they finish.”

In other words, he said, if it’s a private eye and his gorgeous client, by the time they finish, their relationship has to have advanced—she confesses something, he reveals some secret, whatever. The story has “turned” and mounted to a higher level.

This was the porn producer’s first instruction to young Stephen Pressfield, who would go on to write “The War of Art ” — a must-read primer on how to overcome your blocks — as well as “The Legend of Bagger Vance” and many other fine things. The other instruction was:

“Never write me a sex scene where nothing happens but the sex. Always have something else going on at the same time.”

Example: “The wife is getting it on in the bedroom with the horny carpenter. Now the husband comes home unannounced. He enters the front door. The husband doesn’t know the wife and the carpenter are in the bedroom. They don’t know the husband has just come in the front door. Now we’ve got something! We can cut back and forth and milk the suspense. It’s not just two people screwing, see? And when the husband discovers what his old lady’s up to, we’ve advanced the story!”

“Sex scene” can mean “action scene” or “emotional outpouring” or “exposition dump.” Whatever the thrust of the scene, give it a layer of tension and suspense and depth by adding another complication, ideally one that contrasts the tone and tells us something new about a different side of the story.

Pressfield went into the meeting prepared to condescend to this man who was about to give him a job. Instead, he received insightful storytelling advice that he went on to use in every piece he ever wrote.

Read more at Pressfield’s blog here.

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7
Nov 09

My Worst Secret

I am abandoned. That’s my worst secret. The secret that gave birth to the rest.

That was the secret behind those two football players in college –

I am abandoned.

That was the secret behind every relationship I’ve ever had –

I am abandoned.

That is the secret that made me a writer –

I am abandoned.

I’ve made it my life’s work to protect this secret like a child, nurture it and let it grow. I understood early that no one could know the worst thing about me — this was mine. I should keep this secret locked inside, never to see the light of day, never to get out and converse in public and come back changed. I would never abandon it — it was me. I couldn’t abandon myself.

I was five the day my dad left. He sat me down, alone, and said “I’m leaving and I’m never coming back.” Fat tears rolled down my cheeks, and I fought to hold them in. He said “don’t cry.” Later that day, as he packed all his stuff in a moving truck, I got stung by a bee. And I was glad — I could scream.

My mom used to play Simon & Garfunkel’s “I Am A Rock” and say to me “That’s you, Julie.” Because — a rock feels no pain. And an island never cries.

This week I told my dad — in a text — that I wasn’t going to speak to him anymore. It was the most cowardly way possible to do it. By text. In the middle of the night. After dodging his calls for a few days. I wrote “Our last conversation was extremely upsetting to me, so I’m not going to speak to you anymore for a while.” I added the “for a while” to soften it for him. And for me. Because I’m too cowardly to just end it here and now.

He didn’t respond.

Since leaving that first time when I was five, my dad has found colorful and newer ways to abandon me again and again. When I was 11, he disappeared off the face of the earth — only to call from South America a few months later to say he was sailing around the world with his then-wife. And to say how much fun he was having. Once, he admitted he loved my sister but not me. He once said to me “no man has ever loved you, and no man ever will.”

When I remind him of these things — and more — he asks me why I can’t just get over it. Because we both did wrong.

I never did anything wrong. The only thing I’ve done wrong is stay too long in a losing fight.

John August says the villain doesn’t always know he’s the villain. That’s part of what’s kept me swinging in the mud this long — I am an empathic person. I see myself in my father. We give to others what we want them to give us. Consciously and unconsciously. All my life I’ve tried to nurture him, and counsel him, and care for him, and empathize with him, and help him, and have compassion for him. I see in him the wounded, abused, abandoned creature I see in myself. I have tried hard to show him how to love that person. To do it for both of us. I have pursued him like a lover. I have been rebuffed.

Choosing no longer to speak to him is big and terrible and freeing and sad for me. It means giving up on my lifelong dream, the goal I’ve spent my life chasing — to get that man to love me. I know cutting him off now is just a gesture — no doubt I’ll continue this pursuit in various forms until I find a way to put it to rest. Still, this was very difficult for me. People have been telling me for years I needed to do it, and I resisted. I told them I felt it would be a heavier psychic burden to deal with the fact of not speaking to him — of having cut him off — than to have to live with that cloud hanging above my head.

Because now I have abandoned him.

In the hours and days after I did it, I watched my phone. Afraid a raging, wailing, screaming child would rise up from that phone to recriminate me — the child I see in the mirror. I relaxed as I realized — nothing was going to happen.

So long as I needed to keep this secret, he had power over me. He had me in his thrall.

I am abandoned.

And I loved him. I love him. I love him the way you do a child you’ve raised, who doesn’t love you back. The way you love a person who doesn’t want your love. I have a long history of loving men who don’t love me back. It started here. I know it’s not enough to just end it with him and expect my lifelong patterns to fall away. But it’s a signal. Instead of busying myself, anxiously chasing relationships and sidestepping the truth within the heart that wants them — I now say –

I am abandoned.

And I thank those football players in college, because, while it was hell living across the hall from them for an entire year, I now see they were on my team. As painful as that night, and the following morning, and the following year was — they were there to show me what I am –

I am abandoned.

As painful as it is to love someone who doesn’t love me back — and know I’m doing this to myself — I’m glad and I thank you — because your not loving me opens my eyes to the place where I live –

I am abandoned.

Keeping secrets is resistance. Resisting what’s true. Resisting moving forward. Resisting the opening of the space the secret takes inside you. Revealing secrets releases resistance, allows you to say –

I am abandoned.

Stories are secrets revealed bit by bit. You can start with the secret and take the long road to reveal how it happened. Or you can start with the consequences of the secret — what just happened because of your character’s secret? What happened before that to cause it? How did The Secret cause these things to happen, and how can you invest these events with a sense of depth, gravity, significance, reality, purpose and comedy, because you know what The Secret is — and we don’t? Most importantly, what happens next? How does The Secret inform what happens next? Does anyone know The Secret, including the character it’s about? The Secret doesn’t have to be some big hairy deal. Entire lives can be built around a secret as simple as –

I am abandoned.

Find the secret, and you’ll find your story.

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9
Oct 09

The Letterman Experience: How To Sell An Unlikable Character

Many women who have held or want to hold jobs have a Letterman cracking jokes in the hallways of their psyches.

Like most industries, Hollywood is built on relationships. If you’re trying to make it, you’re constantly being told (reminded, warned, threatened) that you need to be meeting as many people as possible, that contacts are the only way forward, that it’s all just who you know. And that under no circumstances can you afford to jeopardize a relationship with a contact or future contact.

Fuck that. I’ve decided I can afford to lose relationships with a lot of people — people I have known. People I have yet to meet who may not approve of what I’m about to say. People who might circle the wagons against those who speak truth to power, whom they may perceive (rightly or wrongly) as troublemakers.

So the prevailing wisdom round these parts is you never ever burn a contact. You never stop pretending you like someone no matter how they fuck you. You never just draw a line in the sand and say here is my integrity. Anything you do that falls outside this line is something I’m going to have to call you out on. Because they might be willing to help you some day (though they never do, because a person who has acted badly just wants to forget about it and you). Or, God forbid, they might keep you from getting a job. They know people.

So you keep other people’s secrets for them. Because you want to work in this town, you want other people to like you. You don’t want their emotional failure or indiscretion or moral problem to reflect badly on you.

And you wonder if it wasn’t your fault.

Here’s how it goes down:

You get a job. Maybe it’s your dream job. There’s lots of competition, lots of back-biting, cattiness from other women, dick-measuring from other men. And then there’s one person there who’s like, the star. He’s the boss, or the team leader, or the cool guy, or literally, the star of the show. Everyone looks up to him, the entire focus of the operation revolves around him. His personal charisma drives the machine forward and puts food on everyone’s table. People get excited when he smiles or calls them by name.

And suddenly, for whatever reason, this star takes an interest in you. It’s not like you’re amazing looking — you’re just a nice girl from whereever you came from, and that’s what makes you fun. Because you’re unspoiled, because you’re still capable of blossoming under the light of a powerful sun, because he can still make his mark on you. He’s as good as married, or he is married, or it doesn’t matter, because he isn’t having a real give-and-take relationship with you. He’s giving you as little as he possibly can in order to take what he wants—he gives you crumbs of attention, charisma, the illusion that he cares.

He has a good time, and so do you. Or you think you do at the time. You’ll never be unspoiled again.

As the gnawing unease of what you’ve done sets in, you wonder how you caused this to happen. Was he responding to something he sensed inside you? You could have stopped it before it started, or before it got to this point, or before you did. And now, you won’t tell anyone — because you’re ashamed. And he’s your friend.

Most of us have some kind of Letterman.

Say you’ve just spent years writing your first novel only to be told by editors that if you revised it it might be published, so you’re fighting your way through clinical depression in order to make the revision, throwing two more years down that rabbit hole. Say you finally made your way out to L.A., say you don’t know many people, you’ve got no money whatsoever, all you’ve got is this novel you’re trying to revise and the fact you know it’s good and will be published because people said it might. Say you’re living on hope, literally living on someone’s couch. And say because you don’t have health insurance, you’re taking an experimental antidepressant that makes you gain thirty pounds. You hate the way you look; you feel dead inside. Say you don’t know yet that that novel will turn out great but will never be published in the end.

And then in the middle of all this, some Hollywood guy befriends you. He’s married, but that doesn’t matter, because you’re just friends, and you’re supposed to be developing industry contacts, right? In a very hard, lonely time, he gives you attention, support, advice, counsel. Career perspective. You sincerely believe it’s totally innocent, that you’re just friends and he has no intentions otherwise. You certainly have no intentions otherwise.

You gradually feel more dependent on him emotionally. He tests your boundaries. He talks often about how wonderful his wife is, how great it is to be married. Occasionally you do get those red flag feelings, but you dismiss them because he keeps throwing carrots in your path. How he can help you. Why it would behoove you to stick around. And because you’re in Hollywood, you’re surrounded by the relentless drumbeat: You need more contacts, more contacts, more contacts ….

One day he calls to say he’s in your neighborhood and wants to take you to lunch. He’s at your door, then somehow, he’s in your apartment. Then he’s pinning you to the wall, he’s kissing you.

You feel gross and guilty and excited at once. Betrayed. So, so confused. This was someone you looked up to like a father. You thought you could trust him. You’re shocked, frankly, that he would do this—you’re also very naive. You feel humiliated, like you did this. Like you were some kind of cocktease, spending months leaning on someone emotionally … what the hell did you expect? And you’re excited too. Because here’s a man who is interested in you, despite what a mess your life is, despite how fat you are, despite everything you’ve revealed to him. And who are you not to repay him for his months of investment, if this is what he was doing it for? He’s been so kind.

I sucked his dick. The whole thing took less than an hour, and it’s haunted me for years. That was the only time—we didn’t see each other again. I get a knot in my stomach every time I think about it. Because before that moment I never ever thought I would do something like that. I’ve felt very ashamed of it ever since it happened. But I’m talking about it now, this publicly, because I’m tired of guarding myself, monitoring that everything I do and say is okay. Fact is—everything I do and say is okay. I have nothing to hide, and the more open I get, the more connected I am to the world.

I seriously hesitated to write this post, afraid I would alienate a whole lot of people. People who could hire me or get me work. And I didn’t want to sound like a victim or like I was blaming someone else for my mistakes. But you know what? We’re all going to get a lot further a lot faster if we tell the truth. And not just individually, but as a gender. As an age group. As an industry. As a people. We’re all in this together, and it doesn’t matter what you’ve done, what you’ve been doing. You can start now and decide to get honest with yourself and free yourself of the daily psychic burden of carrying your own secrets and those of other people.

I want to speak out for other women who don’t feel ready. For all of us who want jobs and are afraid that if we tell the truth, it’ll reflect badly on us. That no one will hire us. Because each one of us that does it makes it a little more okay for the next and the next. That’s how we help each other.

I’ve been thinking a lot lately about my blocks–what stops me up emotionally, what keeps me from writing, from relating to other people, what keeps me closed and afraid and frozen. What keeps me telling myself “I can’t,” “I won’t,” “I shouldn’t.” My blocks are mostly made of secrets, and shame, and fear. The fear of being found out.

But I’m a writer. I want to be found out. That’s what I wake up and do, every day. That’s what I strive for. So this is me, narcing on myself.

This was one of my Bad Secrets. The kind of thing I had only told a therapist. Until here now, where I’m telling the world. And ever since I started contemplating this post roughly a week ago, I’ve felt a little freer, a little less blocked. Just the thought that I could tell everyone something that previously I had told no one made me feel pretty okay.

The lesson here is this: I don’t like people who mess around with married people. I haven’t liked myself because of this incident. But your main character doesn’t need to be likable. Just tell your audience enough about her so they can grip emotionally. We don’t have to relate to what we find out about her — we can know a lot and not relate to a character. But knowing more sometimes helps us understand and at the very least helps us care about what happens next. We don’t need to like her, we just need to want to know more about her. And the more we know, the more we want to know.

Letterman played us like a fiddle in his series of apologies — wry and jokey and just a good old Indiana boy, mugging for the audience’s sympathy in finding out he’s a normal guy with flaws just like them. And that’s another strategy for selling an unlikable character: give him charisma, the power of persuasion, the ability to sell a crowd on the idea that despite his larger-than-life intensity and flaws, he’s really just like them. This is what makes us want to know more. Letterman’s apologies were a master class in how to develop an unlikable character that an audience would … like. But let’s not be duped by the charisma of a master showman who has spent a lifetime learning how to read and play on an audience’s sympathies.

Everyone made pains to point out that Letterman’s relationships were consensual. My relationship was consensual as well. And while I have no interest in outing or humiliating that man, I believe there were many factors that made us un-equal. The experience has been a deeply troubling burden I’ve carried ever since.

But now, having spent about a week digging around in this painful little place, probing it and really learning about what’s there, I like myself more.

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4
Oct 09

Anorexia: Make It Work For You

I was a teenaged anorexic. I wasted away while others watched in alarm. I got noticed.

I lost my period for a year and a half. Teachers called me in after class because they wanted to “have a talk”. I was shy and geeky and awkward and had no idea how to engage men. But as I got thinner, I became more vulnerable, more fragile. My outside matched my inside, telegraphing to the world how much I wanted to be cared for.

I’ve read that a woman’s sexual body language includes physical gestures intended to make her appear smaller. At 16, I had no sexual voice, but I knew enough to make myself smaller. Anorexia plagues high-achieving smart girls (it was rampant at Princeton) — no doubt because there’s a logic to it. It’s a way of succeeding, competing in the sexual arena. Against other women, against ourselves, against estrogen-rich bodies that want to keep us fat.

I didn’t have a lot of friends as a teenager, but anorexia changed that. Inexplicably, the most popular girl in our class befriended me. Another anorexic. One night, I was spending the night at her house. We were changing out of our school uniforms, and as we stood there in just our tights, she said “You’re getting really thin. I’m really worried about you.”

“I’m really thin? You’re really thin. I’m worried about you.”

Our friendship might have been a case of keep your enemies closer: suddenly, I was in danger of becoming thinner than her, more fragile, more noticeable, more starving on the inside and thus able to starve on the outside. More deserving of love by virtue of my neediness, fragility and discipline. This was a rival she needed to keep tabs on.

It takes courage to carve your story down to the barest flesh and heart and bones. We cloak our work in extra material, extra words, extra flesh, fat, because we’re afraid of showing our true selves.  We’re afraid it’s not good enough, so we pad it out with more dialogue, more description, more scenes, more jokes. If you’re really afraid it’s not good enough, chances are you need to get leaner.

Find the emotional heart, track that and don’t be afraid to show what you’re made of. Your story is an anorexic carving out her body so that her tenderest, most vulnerable frame will show. She has an intuitive understanding, a radar, for detecting exactly what she has to do to inspire love, care, nurture, attention. She’s a smart girl. She shivers in the glare of scrutiny, exposed, eager to show you the curves of her bones, all the well-traveled paths to her heart. Her body screams: SEE ME. NOTICE ME. CARE FOR ME. LOVE ME. Your story starves its frame to focus maximum attention on its most tender parts. And you want your audience to feel like concerned teachers and parents and competing anorexics, so moved on seeing it they can’t help but help. You want your audience to feel so sucked in, they’re part of it now. You want your story’s starved drama to be emotionally compelling, and your audience’s response co-dependent.

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29
Jul 09

Four boys charged in the rape of an 8-year-old girl – Los Angeles Times

This story is devastating and incredibly tragic. All four of these children’s lives are ruined–not to mention the parents who now have to live with the fact of having refused to take their raped daughter back–and it brings up all kinds of questions about culture, identity, sexual and gender politics considering everyone involved are Liberian immigrants living in the United States. Would make for an incredibly powerful novel or feature for anyone able to take it on.

A 14-year-old boy is charged as an adult. The other boys — ages 9, 10 and 13 — are charged as juveniles. Authorities say the victim’s family has rejected her for bringing shame on them.

Associated Press

July 24, 2009

Phoenix — Authorities said Thursday that four boys ages 9 to 14 took turns raping an 8-year-old girl for more than 10 minutes after luring her into a shed with chewing gum, and now her family has rejected her for bringing shame on them.

“The father told the case worker and an officer in her presence that he didn’t want her back,” Phoenix Police Sgt. Andy Hill said. “He said, ‘Take her, I don’t want her.’ “

The victim is in the care of Child Protective Services, authorities said.

The 14-year-old boy was charged Wednesday as an adult with two counts of sexual assault and kidnapping, the Maricopa County Attorney’s Office said. He is being held without bond.

The other boys — ages 9, 10 and 13 — were charged as juveniles with sexual assault. The 10- and 13-year-old boys also were charged with kidnapping, the county attorney’s office said.

Phoenix investigators said the boys lured the girl to an empty shed July 16 under the pretense of offering her gum. The boys held her down while they took turns assaulting her, police said.

“She was brutally sexually assaulted for a period of about 10 to 15 minutes,” Hill said.

Officers responded to an emergency call about hysterical screams. They found the girl partially clothed and the boys running from the scene.

via Four boys charged in the rape of an 8-year-old girl – Los Angeles Times.

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