Sep 15 2009

what I heard

It’s been a grueling week. First, a close colleague of M’s died suddenly and young, like M did. Same church, same requiem mass, even the same weather. So, last Friday I re-lived my husband’s funeral.

Then, my family came to town for my birthday. I love them. I’m hugely grateful for them and for the way they show up for me. But it all just made me want M and miss him even more. I have so many wonderful friends and kind, loving people in my life, yet I don’t feel any more attached to life than I did a year ago, for the most part.

s youngralphThe sermon on my birthday spoke of many things, but the one that struck me was the Rector’s exegesis on Take up your cross and follow me. Crucifixion is no longer a form of capital punishment, he declared. So what, he asked, is this cross? His answer: the cross is this mortal flesh, this mortal life. We are none of us getting out of this world alive, he said. And yet we are tasked with taking up this mortal life and living it, fully, faithfully, despite every attendant suffering. I want to do that. I want to be capable of doing that. I am always comforted and somehow excited—is that the word?—by the emphasis, at least at my church, that this life we are given is fundamentally and indispensably physical. We are not designed as ethereal, purely spiritual or purely mental beings. (Natty wrote a moving and theologically astute post about this a while back.) So on my forty-first birthday, I heard this instruction: take up your cross, your humanity, your mortality, your body, your sexuality, and your broken, empty, amputated heart, take it all up and follow me. I have ears to hear, at least.

In other news, my father was in a reminiscing mood, and for part of the weekend I was treated to stories of his wild 1950s boarding school days, when he would go with his roommate—Holden-Caulfield-like—down to Greenwich Village on the weekends, stay out all night hearing Beat poets and jazz singers, then repair back to the roommate’s family home in New England to sleep it off before returning to the dorm Sunday night. Needless to say, folks back in the industrial Midwest had no clue about his exploits, nor could they have understood them, probably.

h08Then today I hear from my brother that Dad had been reminiscing an entirely different chapter to my sister. This chapter plainly titillated and appalled the siblings, the gist of it being that my maternal grandmother apparently gave herself daily enemas for most of her adult life. The revelation that prim-and-proper grandma was perhaps a closet klismaphiliac caused quite a stir amongst my un-kinky sibs. I asked, bulb or bag? Bro didn’t really know the difference. They looked things up on the internet. I’m thinking, Yeah, I know that site but there are better ones I’d recommend

And if that wasn’t enough, apparently grandma also gave enemas to her children (ahem, our mom) at times, and our late aunt was supposed to have done some paintings on the subject, including one of grandma self-administering. I’m thinking, Where the hell are these paintings?! but I say, That might be too much information, lucky they’re lost. Sis informs us that the DSM has Things To Say about giving children enemas. It can be a form of sexual abuse, she says. Anal violation. One track of my 8-track mind is thinking, Anal violation? Yes, please! Track 2 is thinking: What a big fucking deal social workers make of a simple home remedy. Track 3: Oh, bless grandma. That’s where I get it from. Track 4: You guys had better not look too far into the bathroom cupboards upstairs. Track 5: Maybe the DSM is right because it’s fucking hot. Track 6: Oh, but it can also be very calming, I can attest. Track 7: Have either of you ever had anything in your ass? Track 8: You really do not know me at all, do you?

My interest in That Thing was adult onset. It was not employed in our house, except once (not to me) on doctor’s orders. I had scarcely heard of it in those years when my mind was glomming onto spanking and then to English schoolboys getting the cane. I must have been corrupted when I found the internet; on second thought, I think it could have been Anne Rice’s Beauty series. I believe that series is also what introduced me to the idea of anal play generally. I’m glad she didn’t return to the church before she finished writing those. Not—NB!—that a return to the church should necessarily preclude writing such awesome erotica, but in her case, I think it probably would have.

I am dying to know more about my grandmother. How did she self-administer That Thing? Was it really every day? Why? Did she enjoy it? How much did she take? What started her out? Unfortunately, I think it would be way too embarrassing for me to ask either of my parents for elaboration. I do know from my grandmother’s diaries (which I possess) that she had a very sensitive digestion and often had trouble eating. If she was having That Thing daily, though, I’m not surprised. That can’t be good for you. I do wonder if there is a genetic component, though. I am positive that there is one for spanking. Anyway, amazing what you can hear if you listen when family are feeling loquacious.


Sep 12 2009

3f#20 – birthday

Casey was turning nine, and at each birthday, memory grew fuzzy. If she had once been fifteen, or thirteen, or ten, recollections carried no more authority than a dream. Even if she protested (I’m eleven!), Mr. Prior dismissed such wishful thinking: Don’t be ridiculous. Casey is nine, full stop.

Now that she was nine, Mr. Prior said, she would be old enough for the cane. Only the junior cane, and only if she was very naughty.

I’m not naughty. I’m good! But I don’t care. And anyway, at least I’m too old —

She was not too old, he’d interrupt, for anything. Not too old to have her temperature taken that way, not too old for That Thing, not too old to be put across his knee, and not too old to sit on it afterwards.

Mr. Prior would never be in league with her false maturity, he told her, any more than he would condone her false modesty, false niceness, false anything.

She didn’t see why he bothered so much. He had his real kid to care about, his real kid to buy birthday presents for. Not her.

This notion made its way down the pike almost as often as I’m-too-old, and Mr. Prior afforded it about the same respect. You are my real kid; I love you as if you were my own. He would hold her, at times wiggling, until she gave up, gave out, gave in. Surrendered to a birthday, again nine, again his, still loved.


flash What is Flash Fiction Friday?

Read other folks writing this week:


Sep 10 2009

3f#20 afoot

flashWelcome to Flash Fiction Friday. Come write a 250-word story (erotic? tgi oriented?). Start any time Friday, finish by 6pm PDT Saturday. Post the link to your story in the comments below or on Twitter (@caseydamnmorgan). Try to include the wildcards. Thanks this week to @nettagyrl and @travisking.

  • league
  • pike
  • the number 9

Spread the word, and have fun!


Sep 9 2009

mmc10 – the pump

Did I see you at the pump yesterday, out of the corner of my eye? Your red Music Man t-shirt: “Trouble.” Your beat-up cargo shorts? How could I be sure, as I clenched the nozzle, that you wouldn’t emerge from the store bearing cheetoes and a cup of coffee, thick as oil?

I’ve pumped up seven bike tires, four inflatable mattresses, seventeen gas tanks. I’ve grown used to doing the driving, all of it, all the time. I’m used to walking the dogs, month in and out. I can handle all the chores, the garden, the grilling. I found the drill. I’ve grown used to having the bed to myself even if I still keep to my side. I’ve grown used to our rings on my right hand where they don’t belong. I don’t want to be used to any of it.

The footsteps in the hall yesterday sounded like yours. Even the dogs stood up to listen. They, too, wanted you to walk through the door. They wanted you to put down your backpack and your Post, lock the door, and say Daddy’s home.

Your shoes are waiting. Your shaving foam is waiting. Your bedside drawer is waiting. Even your dirty laundry is waiting.

He sounds like you now, my stepson, more every day. He jokes like you, reasons like you, inflects, strides, and dresses like you. He isn’t you.

I’m not me, either, but I’m living our life. Didn’t I see you yesterday, at the pump, beyond reach?


Dear me, sorry. And I was all ready to write a fun, sexy one full of lust for a hot young man! Then this happened. Oh, well, caveat lector.

Come write your own missed connection – real or fantasy, who will know? Post the link today (Wednesday) here or on Twitter (@caseydamnmorgan). What is Midweek Missed Connections?

Read other missed connections this week:


Sep 8 2009

midweek missed connections 10

missed

Welcome to Midweek Missed Connections! Optional setting this week: the pump

What is MMC? Finish anytime Wednesday and post the link here or on Twitter (@caseydamnmorgan). Spread the word and have fun!


Sep 5 2009

3f #19 – just friends

Louis was a senior when I was a sophomore. His were the first male lips that kissed mine. Ok, it was onstage in Cinderella, but we did have to hold it for twelve bongs of the clock. At the first rehearsal I was so scared that I kept bursting into giggles and flinching away when the kiss came. He tried to put me at ease. His lips were chapped. He never tried to open his mouth. On closing night, I started to like it.

We both skipped lunch every day to do homework in the library. In reality we talked, anything and everything, his navy blue eyes as open as the sea. I wanted to feel those chapped lips again, but he was dating a girl called Koozie. No one understood. He was smarter than anyone in our high-school of 4000. She, apparently, was a ditz. He told me things he’d never told anyone – about his brother’s mental illness, about his longing to live as a monk back in time on Lindisfarne, painting illuminated manuscripts in the scriptorium, the world cut off in a tidal cloister, ocean lapping at the pebbles, chant de-rattling his nerves. I picked at the stitching of my LeSportSac purse and exercised restraint, day after day. He liked me, lots. He could undress before me in that library as with no one. I had the mind and the heart to match him, but Koozie was the girl he wanted to kiss. I was doomed to Just Friends.


flash What is Flash Fiction Friday?

Read other folks writing this week:

A stern note: I have noticed that several people [cough, cdm] have grown slothful in their ways and have begun regularly to abuse the deadline for Flash Fiction Friday, as generous as it is. This will never do. Be advised, therefore, that as from next week, late entries for 3f will incur automatic whacking. No exceptions! [cough - casey!]


Sep 4 2009

3f#19 afoot

flashWelcome to Flash Fiction Friday. Come write a 250-word story (erotic? tgi oriented?). Start any time Friday, finish by 6pm PDT Saturday. Post the link to your story in the comments below or on Twitter (@caseydamnmorgan). Try to include the wildcards. Thanks this week to PapaTomLA and Rafi.

Spread the word, and have fun!


Sep 3 2009

sometimes people are listening

Sometimes people are listening, and hearing, more than you imagine. A week or so ago I had a cookout for some friends from church who had known M well. They are very kind, but I can’t say I know them that well outside church. Then yesterday, at the end of a highly frustrating and quite emotional day, I got around to sifting through the mail, which I typically find oppressive, and found a card from one of the people who’d been to my house. It was a very beautiful handmade thing and inside was a piece of paper with this poem on it:

Wait

Wait, for now.
Distrust everything, if you have to.
But trust the hours. Haven’t they
carried you everywhere, up to now?
Personal events will become interesting again.
Hair will become interesting.
Pain will become interesting.
Buds that open out of season will become lovely again.
Second-hand gloves will become lovely again,
their memories are what give them
the need for other hands. And the desolation
of lovers is the same: that enormous emptiness
carved out of such tiny beings as we are
asks to be filled; the need
for the new love is faithfulness to the old.

Wait.
Don’t go too early.
You’re tired. But everyone’s tired.
But no one is tired enough.
Only wait a while and listen.
Music of hair,
Music of pain,
music of looms weaving all our loves again.
Be there to hear it, it will be the only time,
most of all to hear,
the flute of your whole existence,
rehearsed by the sorrows, play itself into total exhaustion.

Galway Kinnell

I’ve never heard of this poet or read this poem, but as you can imagine I was in tears, not merely because it is a moving poem, but from the surprise of it arriving as and when it did. And I realized the sender had seen me more truly than I recognized, or perhaps saw the love that still lingers in this house, and then through an act of compassion came to feel with me. The card said nothing more than xxooxx + a signature. I do pray everyday for help, big help. Sometimes it comes, and turns out to have been on its way for some time.

Hair will become interesting. Pain will become interesting. Their memories are what give them the need for other hands…


Sep 2 2009

mmc9 – the rain

I keep thinking of your face in the rain. Dripping, mud-streaked, flushed on the rugger pitch. Do you remember my hand in the scrum, that afternoon just before I charged you and wound up in the San with my arm in a sling? Everyone knows what goes on when the ref’s not looking, but I’ve always wondered if you knew it was me. I remember how your cock felt inside your shorts. I haven’t been able to stop thinking of it since.

Who was the one to show you what cocks are for? As our changing rooms are worlds apart, you never got to appraise mine. One doesn’t like to boast, but it’s worthwhile I’m told. Some rather incendiary reading material has come my way of late. I can’t seem to stop thinking of it, and you, and what would happen if the two were combined.

I watched you and Rees the afternoon before that night, though you didn’t know it. I still can’t believe it – not what you did, but that you did it with him. I never got to ask you what you saw in him. He’s such a dreary cold shower. The perverseness of it (if you’ll forgive my choice of words) has, since then, driven me slightly mad.

I want to forget your body when they carried you back that morning. I want to forget everything about you. It’s hopeless when I’m asleep, like now. Dreams are the most unforgiving of traitors.


Come write your own missed connection – real or fantasy, who will know? Post the link today (Wednesday) here or on Twitter (@caseydamnmorgan). What is Midweek Missed Connections?

Read other missed connections this week:


Sep 1 2009

midweek missed connections 9

missed

Welcome to Midweek Missed Connections! Optional setting this week: the rain

What is MMC? Finish anytime Wednesday and post the link here or on Twitter (@caseydamnmorgan). Spread the word and have fun!