I hope you can help me. I am a
39-year-old divorced mother of four. I’m also a grandmother. I’ve
started seeing a younger man, age 25, who is only a few years older
than my oldest kid. We hit it off great and other than the sex,
everything is beautiful. The problem is that my sex life with my
ex-husband of 20 years was very free. We did everything from toys to
bondage to watching porn together to three-ways. My new guy is not
happy that I have a collection of toys or that I watch porn, have been
to strip clubs, etc. He likes “regular” sex and he refuses to use toys
or do anything in the adventurous realm. How do I even talk with him
about what I like without scaring him off? I love being tied up and
spanked! Plus he has never done oral and doesn’t even want to try!
HELP!!!
The Hole Fucking Truth
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...scaring him off? I love being tied up and
spanked! Plus he has never done oral and doesn’t even want to try!
HELP!!!
Frustrated GILF In Minnesota
You’re not gonna get what you
want—excuse me, Grandma, what you have a right to demand and
expect—from this boy if you’re not willing to risk scaring him
off.
Considering his age, FGIM, it’s possible
that your boyfriend, during his recent childhood, was locked in a
classroom with a sexually repressed idiot who “taught” him that sexual
ignorance is a virtue and that a limited sexual repertoire is pleasing
to Jesus. They call it “abstinence education,” and it induces a kind of
sexual imbecility.
Now you, Grandma Hoses, are going to have to
undo the damage done. Sit the boy down and tell him that you’re older,
wiser, and that you intend to drag his butt up to your level, not allow
him to drag yours down to his. Tell him what you like, tell him exactly
how you like it, and make sure he understands that you’re not
interested in being with someone long-term who isn’t interested in
meeting your needs.
Gay here. The BF and I have a
modestly open relationship—three-ways once in a while, one-offs
very rarely. It spices up the home life and reinforces trust, blah blah
blah. So, the BF was visiting the folks the week between Christmas and
New Year’s. We’d both agreed to have a one-off that week and share the
juicy details when he got back. Saturday night, I had this guy over and
we fucked like crazy. The BF got home Sunday, and we had a sexy time
reviewing the details of our respective indiscretions.
Monday (New Year’s Eve), I was chatting
with our neighbors. They’re crazy, tequila-loving Texans, and liberals
in most respects—except, they’ve hinted, where sex is concerned.
So, they asked how the BF and I were doing, and when I mentioned that
we were great—the BF had just returned from a 10-day
trip—my neighbors’ demeanor TOTALLY changed. Their usually
playful and friendly selves turned immediately to ice.
They didn’t say anything, but I realized
what happened: They heard me and the one-off going at it and thought
that I had cheated on my BF in his absence! I had, of course, but it
was BF-sanctioned cheating! They’ve been very cold to me since. We like
them and don’t want to screw up our acquaintanceship over a silly
misunderstanding! I’m usually very direct with people, but I worry that
admitting that I cheated and that the BF was in on it will solve one
problem and create another. We don’t want our Texans to think we’re a
couple of perverts! Suggestions?
Sissies
Love Understanding Texans
Straight Texans who aren’t bothered by the
sounds of actual queers actually going at it, SLUT, won’t be destroyed
by your nonmonogamous news. That your relationship allows for a little
outside sexual contact—safe outside contact, I hope—may not
delight them, but the current state of affairs has to please them less
than the truth would.
Right now, the neighbors think you’re a
cheating piece of shit and your boyfriend is a fool. So long as you
allow them to go on assuming that you’re officially
monogamous, they’re going to feel like unwilling coconspirators in your
“infidelity.” They’ve probably had more than one conversation about
what, if anything, they should say to your boyfriend. Leaving them in
that position isn’t fair, SLUT, it isn’t neighborly, and they’re going
to come to resent you more and more. There’s only one way out: The two
of you—it can’t be you alone—will have to go and tell them
the hole fucking truth.
Do you know any lawyers willing to
take on a personal-injury suit concerning fisting-induced fibromyalgia?
When I call personal-injury lawyers here in Eugene, Oregon, they get
all flustered.
Fisting Fallout
“It is a little controversial whether
fibromyalgia is a real disease at all or just a mysterious
constellation of symptoms,” says Dr. Barak Gaster, Savage Love’s
long-suffering resident medical expert. “Most mainstream doctors accept
it as real, but it’s still in the slightly dubious category.”
Fibromyalgia’s constellation of symptoms
includes fatigue, generalized pain, and roughly 400 other complaints.
But fibromyalgia sufferers have arrived: There’s a new drug on the
market with a goofy name (Lyrica), an annoying ad campaign (courtesy of
Pfizer), and its own constellation of possible side effects. But
fisting-induced fibromyalgia? Maybe skidmarkalgia can be induced by
fisting, FF, but not fibromyalgia. “That would NOT be considered
credible in any real way whatsoever,” says Dr. Barak. You may have
fibromyalgia, FF, but you don’t have a legal case.
We wanted to let you know that we
appreciated your recent remarks condemning bestiality. We agree that it
is wrong, wrong, wrong for the very same reason that you pointed
out—the issue of consent. However, we don’t agree with your
advice that zoophiles should “get a tall fence.” The zoophile who wrote
you desperately needs counseling and should in no way be encouraged to
have any contact with animals.
Like the pedophile who claims to “love”
children, zoophiles might profess their love and caring for the object
of their sexual desire, but it is without real consideration for the
psychological and physical well-being of their nonconsenting partners.
A recent study shows that 96 percent of offenders who had engaged in
bestiality also admitted to committing sexual assaults on humans.
You do a wonderful job of humorously and
intelligently dissecting the psychosexual conundrums of those who write
to you. We worry, however, that your readers will miss your point and
take away from your column that bestiality is acceptable when it is
done behind “tall fences.”
Colleen
O’BrienDirector of
CommunicationsPETA
Thanks for writing, Colleen. To read more
letters—lots more—about my advice for RUFF, go to www.thestranger.com/savage/ruff.
Download Savage Lovecast (my weekly
podcast) every Tuesday at www.thestranger.com/savage.
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