Archive for The Physical
The Celebrity Clause: Taking Applications for Who’s Next in Line
Posted by: | CommentsMuch fun has been made about marital “celebrity clauses.” In case you’ve been under a rock the last 20 years, a celebrity clause in the marriage contract means that if the celebrity you’ve been secretly fantasizing about all these years suddenly shows up at your doorstep and offers themselves, you are perfectly within your rights to do “whatever” with them. Of course, you’re only allowed one night under the contract. So, make it count.
As a woman who married for the first time after age 40, I had plenty of time to lust after Matthew, Brad, Hugh, Johnny, and Denzel. And, who knew? Someday I really could meet Antonio Banderas. I travelled. I was single. (I never said feasibility was necessary for my imagination to run wild.)
But, then I got married (past my Antonio prime years). I thought all crushing would disappear. Ha.
Ask anyone who has been married a long time and you will find that you still have those little urges toward the bold and the beautiful. You just now have two people in your imagination (not necessarily at once) – Husband and [[Insert Notable Name]].
Of course, as you grow older you realize a star crush, in particular, is totally unrequited, which for me personally means my interest wanes after about a year of mooning. I can only take so much ignoring, even from George Clooney.
And, then, of course, you have to separate the roles they play on screen and stage from the real person. I have had a few hopes dashed by the tabloids when I realized that beautiful mask they adopt for audiences was much more attractive than what the paparazzi dishes up after catching them off guard (stepping out of In-n-Out Burger in Santa Monica, hung over and disheveled).
Today, I find myself “in between” celebrity crushes. In other words, I am up for grabs. (Hey, celebrity world, anyone need a new groupie?) I am presently taking interviews.
Unlike me, Husband has been able to hold his crush for a while. Her name shall remain anonymous to protect Husband. The only time his interest waned a bit is when she emerged from a hiatus with some Gawd awful plastic surgery. But, Husband’s loyalty could not be completely swayed. Not even those joker lips could stop him from swooning a bit. I, on the other hand, am quite fickle.
Who is your celebrity crush? I’m taking names…
Sex.
Posted by: | CommentsThings that arrive in my inbox have no rhyme or reason. This month must be sex month, given what’s shown up. So I’m giving you all the goods. At once. (Writing about sex isn’t nearly as much fun as having it, so you get this one post, K?)
Many lists exist about what creates a long-standing marriage. I like this idea – four simple steps. Guess what number four is? Cultivate a healthy passion. Nice way to put it. Proactive. Succinct. Rich-sounding.
Cultivate = You have to nurture it. It doesn’t just happen.
Healthy = That means not hurtful, manipulative or harmful to psyche or body.
Passion = This speaks to being energetic and enthusiastic.
But, sometimes you need a little help in those areas. So below are some resources to help get you started (or keep going)
- Benchmarking Help. Wonder if you are getting more or less than others? God Bless America. Now, who’s getting laid? All charts and graphs for easy understanding. But, if 42 percent of the men report having sex on the first date and just 17 percent of the women report doing the same, how does that work exactly?
- Aging Help. Feeling a little old for all this in this department? Tips to maintain a healthy sex life later in life provides some sound advice. “Expanding your idea of sex” was one good thought.
- Seduction Help. Want to add a little spice? But, your significant other needs a little, well, help? As in, specific help? 101 Nights of Grrrrreat Sex. This book is incredible. 101 sealed pages. Half are for her and half are for him. If you open one, you are committing yourself to the seduction instructions inside. (You don’t show your partner the “assignment.” You just do it.) Terrific for getting men to think “outside the box” but in ways we females wish they would. And, Husband reports they got it right on the male side, too.
Poll: Give Me Your Body Or At Least A Part Of It
Posted by: | CommentsI have been fruitlessly searching for a piece of research I read once (about 15 years ago) that states when you break up with someone and miss them, it’s not necessarily that your miss the person. But, rather you miss their body. You are used to having regularly snuggle and cuddle time. And, when you break up, you go through body withdrawal.
A girlfriend of mine – during a long spell of no-dating – once said to me about her longing for someone, “I just want to bury my face in a guy’s neck.”
I understand this desire. I have this regularly. Oh, about every other day.
I turn to husband and bury my face under his chin. His reply usually is What. Are. You. DOING?
It’s neck time, I reply, batting my eyelashes.
As you can guess, he takes this as a much larger overture than I mean for it to be. I sincerely just want my face in his neck. He wants my face, well, elsewhere.
So, want to take our poll?
What body part, of your significant other, lover, partner, husband or wife, would you miss the most if it was no longer available to you? No sex organs, please. We’re “PG-ing” it here.
My Three Year Secret: A Fan, A Dance, A Little Romance
Posted by: | CommentsThere comes a time in every relationship when the romance really does leave the building. It takes work to keep the fires going at home.
At first, everything is all wine and roses. Boy cannot get enough of girl. Boy is insatiable. Girl is flattered. Boy and girl promise each other it will never change. But, then, boy has to leave the house one day and go to work. And, then Girl decides to go to bed early one night. Boy decides to stay up late. It all starts to unravel slowly as real life, and its demands, begin to take precedence over mooning over each other.
Bummer.
Psychologists have a word for getting used to something to the point that it doesn’t impact you in the same way. It’s called Hedonic Adaptation. Apparently, we humans are brilliant at this.
In the PBS special, This Emotional Life: Rethinking Happiness, the final part in a three-part series, scientists talk about this. They have discovered the things that make us happy one day, won’t necessarily make us happy the next. We grow used to things. Easily. So, we are, as human beings, always seeking new sources of joy and fulfillment. (Apparently, one way to combat this hedonic adaptation is to cut back on luxurious enjoyment – to make things “treats” versus every day occurances.)
Strike one against craving the same person every day, at the same level.
Strike two on keeping romance alive at home is how society isn’t always that kind to women after a certain age, which dings her confidence tremendously.
When a woman turns 40 she is expected to act like a “mature adult” – whatever that means. Mini-skirts, giggling in public, and any reference at all to a sexual life are meant to be closeted away, never to be seen or heard from again. All this “act your age” talk is really saying “put it away. No one wants to see that.” It’s our society’s little dirty secret. We want to asexualize our older women.
(The “older part” also cracks me up. Because really, if you are going to live to be 90 – which many, many people alive today are going to do – 40 isn’t even half way. How is that old? Shouldn’t 70 – 80 be considered old? And, 40 still be considered adolescence?)
Ah, we are a fickle species.
For Husband and me, we try to buck the trends. While I don’t bother with mini-skirts anymore, I did kind of believe I wouldn’t fall into the trap of feeling like I had to “behave” so much once I turned 40. Ha.
The realization hit after being married for just one year that we were just like every other couple out there. The dreaded cliché of “marriage kills mystery and sexual intrigue” really was a fact.
Fortunately, late bloomer brides bring a number of skills to the marital table – and an independent, can-do attitude is usually one of them. We are do-ers. We’ve had to be.
So, I immediately had the thought that any mature woman of the 21st century might have: I can change this.
I headed out to bring romance behind closed doors. The usuals – more lingerie, more playtime, more whatever.
Then, Oprah intervened. (She’s such a troublemaker, that one.) She had a show in which everyday women were taking exotic dance lessons to lend a little spice to their life.
So, I did the 21st century thing. I googled it. Guess what? Right here, in my own little town, there was a professional dance studio that offered it. All of it – burlesque, striptease, bellydancing, pole dancing, chair dancing, as well as traditional, ballroom dancing.
I registered immediately. It’s been three years now. I am not the same woman.
Recently, someone in my social sphere who discovered my dancing, asked me (and with a serious amount of judgment in her tone, I might add), why would you do that? I readied a speech about empowerment, fitness, increasing body confidence, adding romantic spice to my relationship, developing grace and poise – all the things the dance students truthfully will tell you they have received from learning how to spin, pose, undulate and shimmy.
But, then I decided to tell her the real, real truth. It’s fun.
I started with pole dancing. It seemed the most taboo at the time, and I wanted something drastic. No dilly-dallying around here.
Besides, who would know? All the dance classes are locked down pretty tightly – curtains drawn, doors locked, no men or observers allowed. (Even the male co-owner of the studio isn’t allowed in.) And, if you run into any of your fellow dancers in public, they never, ever let on how you know each other. There is an unspoken oath amongst us.
The women’s ages range from 18 to 76 (no kidding). They come from every background you can imagine. In fact, one of the instructors has a Ph.D. in neuroscience (no kidding). And, their reasons vary from wanting to add a little spice to their life to fitness. One woman lost 20 pounds (no kidding). And, there was no more skin showing than what you’d see around a public American family swimming pool – in fact you’d see more there.
One of my favorite fellow students is in her 70s. “R” has been pole dancing for several years now. She can do a “pull up” on the pole – meaning pull her entire body weight up off the floor with the mere strength of her arms. She’ll tell you that she’s much stronger now than she was when she was in her 60s. Her husband agrees. She is my idol.
When I first started taking these dance classes, I told no one. Husband didn’t even know. I liked having a secret – and thought somehow through osmosis this secret would leak itself into our romantic life. He knew I was taking a class, but didn’t know which kind. I would come home and rub arnica oil onto bruised legs from attempting to spin around this one-inch-in-diameter steel pole and crawl around the floor in an attempt to look, well, graceful.
Side note: Anyone who thinks pole dancing is for women who don’t have any other skills has never tried to fling their body around said steel dowel and tried to make it look good. The women who are really into this – for sport and dance, not men’s entertainment – are serious athletes. Take a look.
Husband would watch my arnica-oil ritual and ask, What kind of class are you taking?
Oh, just a dance class.
Well, be careful.
Then I took a striptease exotic class. Wow. I learned a routine. I decided to “out” myself with Husband. Forget the secret osmosis. I showed him what I learned.
[[The next section has been deleted for your protection. It might melt your computer screen.]]
Introduce more romantic fire into our life? Check.
Then, I started exploring more. Enter burlesque.
Burlesque is flirty, prance-y and a not-at-all serious form of striptease dancing. It’s almost little girl like, twirling and all. The idea is to tease and show off, but never, ever show too much. You won’t see any naked burlesque dancers – just shiny, glittery, feathery costumes. That’s half the fun.
In class each week we would shimmy, shake, and fling boas around until the floor was so littered with feathers it looked like a chicken had exploded – albeit a multicolored, punk rock chicken.
At some point, our instructor introduced Fan work. I am now a fan addict.
Today, I am the proud owner of my very own 50 inch, regulation Sally Rand, black and hot pink, ostrich feather fan. I love this thing.
If our townhouse were to burn down, I would be sure to grab three things besides Husband: my laptop, my Ipod and the fan. Husband has strict instructions to do the same, if I’m not at home when the flames start.
I now have tried just about everything they offer at the dance studio. The interesting thing is – while the romantic benefits of being able to dance for – or let’s say, entertain — Husband turned out as you can imagine – something else happened.
For one, I have made some really great friends. The women I’ve met at the studio are the most inspiring, generous, compassionate people I’ve ever met. They want nothing more than for you – and everyone around them – to feel good about themselves, to feel graceful and beautiful, to feel ageless. It is the least judgmental space I have ever encountered, hands down.
But, something else big happened.
Being a late bloomer has terrific benefits – if you are paying attention. You can avoid other’s mistakes, for one. But, it also can come with doubts, a sense of feeling behind, and – since society says there are certain age for certain things – sometimes make you feel you’ve completely missed out on your time.
For me, these classes gave me something much more than a boost in the bedroom. It really turned out to be about the complete and utter annihilation of the thought that I am too old for, well, anything. And, there aren’t many places in the world that foster that.
It’s ironic really. There you are doing something with your body (and I can’t do half the things that some of the younger women can do), which is usually the first thing that signals your age. Yet, when dancing, age disappears.
I am sure there are people out there reading this thinking, come on, aren’t you proliferating the objectification of women? Isn’t there something else you could do, like read a book, go into therapy, take more ballroom dancing, or continue to watch Oprah’s shows on how age doesn’t really matter, to deal with these issues?
I tried all those. They weren’t nearly as much fun. (Plus, I don’t think a therapist would appreciate me sitting on his or her couch waving a 50 inch ostrich feather fan.)
During an extraordinarily busy time, I once threatened to reduce the amount of time I spent dancing. Husband was honestly concerned. Husband likes to see my routines. But, he will regularly say, to those friends who know of this extracurricular activity, that it really isn’t about him. It’s about me and the other women. He just gets a little side benefit action from time to time. He sees how it makes me happy.
Of course, that doesn’t stop Husband from asking, learn any new dance moves?
Why, yes, I have. Wanna see? Let me go get my fan…
P.S. Husband is a very private and conservative guy. He has nixed a few LBB blog posts in the past. This post, however, was suggested by Husband. He thought my readers should know about the power of this dance program and the contributions it has made to our life and countless of other women’s lives.
Marrying Later: Fun With Medicine…and Body Stuff…and Illness…and….
Posted by: | CommentsI have noticed an alarming development among Husband and I. Our preoccupation with our bodies. And, not in the romantic sense, either.
One thing about getting married later in life, which you are not warned about, is dealing with his-and-her health issues. Or, rather the “lack” of health and various body, let’s say, “comings and goings.” For more than 20 years my romantic partners never even knew I had doctor visits, let alone what went on at them. But now being married means I have a witness to every body ache, pain and shift.
And, while you kinda knew things would, er, change, now someone is watching (other than me). Things start to droop, creak, become susceptible to all kinds of germs, and generally become a literal pain in the ass. And, if you are married, this all will become a terrific topic of conversation. Even at the dinner table.
For instance, not too long ago, Husband had some icky infection near his eye necessitating two trips to the eye doctor and as many trips to the dermatologist. By the end of the week he was on antibiotics, anti-virals and some other cream. (Note: Nagging won’t help, but nothing gets a man to a doctor faster than saying something about “loss of eyesight.”) I was supposed to be uber interested in all of this. I was just hoping it’d clear up and we could go back to talking about our upcoming vacation. But, no. I was now obligated to listen to all manners of infectious disease talk.
And, even if it’s not illness, it’s the other things. Really weird stuff starts happening after age 40. Just the other day, Husband plucked a rather long hair off my shoulder. I was mortified. (Husband seemed nonplussed, as if he were just the alpha gorilla grooming his mate.)
At the same time, I was really, really not prepared for waking up one day and suddenly having 100 strands of hair leave my head, while hair sprouts elsewhere – places you never knew hair could exist. (And, that another human being would be there to see — and in some cases, pluck.)
So, things just start happening. Without your permission. And, there’s nothing you can do about it.
Like, I was really, really looking forward to the hormones shifting every other day. That’s tons of fun. (Note: Husband is far less interested in this topic.)
And, let us not forget the knees and ankles that pop and crack like rice krispies.
And, did I mention the hormones?
Then, there is the sleep disturbances (one night you sleep like a baby, the next night you’re a restless old man), sudden bouts of snoring, and heartburn over the tequila and pizza (which wouldn’t have fazed you five years ago).
Did I forget to mention the shifting hormones? Oh, yeah, your memory starts to wane like the moon. That is if you can still see the moon, because one morning you wake up needing reading glasses. Yeah, I am really, really happy about that one. Because wearing the strongest contact lenses they can manufacture is just not enough anymore.
I know all about “it beats the alternative”, which basically means death. But, living aside, I suppose there is one shining light at the end of the tunnel. When married — especially older — you’re not in it alone. And, you get to talk about it. (Woo-hoo.) On top of that, what is really amazing is you discuss these disgusting things, and they still want to sleep with you.
(This would not have happened at age 25. At age 25, you are still in “princess” mode, where no man would ever learn anything about your beauty regime, let alone hear about the necessity of visiting the electrolysis woman.)
Yet, I still can’t help but wonder — talking about all this body stuff, isn’t that what old married people do?
Oh, wait.
We are old(er) married people. When did that happen?
I Chose Husband For His Smell?
Posted by: | CommentsWith all the talk about H1N1 virus (have you gotten your flu shot yet?), it seems fitting to talk about the real reason we end up together – our germs. At least that’s what Discovery News will have us believe. Technology is being developed to match people up based on their immune system – and how they smell. Apparently, this is important stuff. (At least to a group of investors seeking to set up a new dating service.)
According to the companies highlighted in this article, research shows a person’s odor tells you – however subtly – if their immune system matches yours or not. If it’s a match, you are less likely to be a fit. This is because you need someone whose immune system is, well, different. In other words, their immune system needs to fill in your immune system’s gaps. As in, you complete me. Just like Jerry McGuire said. (See? I can find romance in anything – including combative immune systems.)
If your immune system is too similar, that’s not good. You need their germs. And, there you have it. The real reason we end up with Mr. or Mrs. Right. How they smell.
So, everyone, put down that cologne. Let your true self shine through.
P.S. I don’t know if this research is right, but I always did feel, when I was dating, that if a person smelled “right” they had potential. Oh, go on. Admit it. When you were dating you could tell by how they smelled – good or just “off” – as to whether or not they’d be “right.”
Want More Action in the Bedroom? Fold the Laundry.
Posted by: | CommentsAccording to a recent Wall Street Journal article by Sue Shellenbarger, Housework Pays off Between the Sheets, men all over the country who share the housework burden are gettin’ lucky – and we’re not talking about a winning hand of poker here. We’re talking really lucky.
Wives, in the study discussed, spend 41.8 hours, on average, a week on housework. Their husbands? 23.4 hours. But, apparently, some men are trying to even up the ratio, because they’ve discovered the, let’s say, benefits.
(Please, dear God, let Husband be reading this. It’s time to haul off the recycling again.)
The researchers quoted say that husbands and wives who “chore together” are demonstrating their commitment to the relationship. And, ladies, let’s face it. We like displays of commitment and dedication. Additionally, say some of the men quoted, housework shows off a willingness to respect the wife’s needs. Def. a turn on. Plus, who wants to get it on when the place is a mess? We’re not in a college dorm room anymore.
Not all men are buying it, according to some sources. But, if your husband took over the dishes and laundry, would you find this sexy? You decide.
Slow Sex. And, Turn Off Your Cell.
Posted by: | CommentsI assure you what gets discussed in this article would never happen to me. Husband wouldn’t dare answer a text or his phone during sex. Ever. But, apparently, in our 24/7 world, some people do. Huh.
This Huffington Post article, In Praise of Slow Sex, discusses the ways in which the hyper-connectivity of today’s world is even interrupting our bedrooms.
Well, we LBBs wait a long time to get married (read: having a regular partner – finally). I am not about to dissuade my significant other by thinking he’s less important than my stupid phone. He might get ideas, like answering his phone at the most inopportune time.
I keep reading how the slow movement is gaining momentum. This movement states that our lives would be so much more rich if we would just take time to smell the coffee (or in this case each other).This article says we should start small – like with something basic to our lives. Like sex. Hey, I’m in. Who’s with me?
P.S. Check out the Power of Slow blog by Christine Hohlbaum. She has a new book, titled The Power of Slow: 101 Ways to Save Time in Our 24/7 World, coming out on October 27 about this very thing. It has some juicy tid-bits about how to live a life of “time abundance” over “time deficit.”
Cuddle Parties Might Have Saved Me Some Time
Posted by: | CommentsFrom my desk I have a great view of the Charlottesville pedestrian downtown mall. I sit on the third floor overlooking a busy corner, where I can watch people having lunch at the Nook or hurry themselves to the post office. Today, there is an abundance of couples walking up and down the mall holding hands.
Another great thing I’ve discovered about being married is having someone to touch all the time, whenever you want (provided they are physically there, of course). This human need for physical touch (for some of us, anyway) is beautifully outlined in Gary Chapman’s book, the Five Love Languages, which I talked about yesterday.
Along this theme, a friend of mine once described how she knew whether or not her boyfriend was upset at her or not. If she and boyfriend’s feet would touch under the covers in bed at night – and neither pulled away – then, all was well. If either pulled their feet away, then someone was miffed. I thought that was an interesting barometer. (I’ve tried it with Husband. It works. Try it.)
The sudden lack of touching also is a main reason why you miss your ex, after you break-up. I read this in an article somewhere, which google has failed to deliver after 30 minutes of fruitless searching. (Anyone seen a reference to this?) Personally, I know how that sudden physical deprivation can be a killer. (And, getting that weekly massage just isn’t the same.) So, this may be the reason why “rebound sex” is so prevalent?
Next time you might want to try a “cuddle party.” Seriously – these are workshops that are structured hugging opportunities with other people. (If there isn’t a workshop near you, you can get certified as a cuddle party facilitator.) Had I known about these cuddle parties I probably wouldn’t have been involved with half the boyfriends I had – and maybe not even ended up an LBB, because I would have dumped said boyfriends and gotten to the point much quicker! But, hugging strangers in a hotel conference room might not have resonated with me, either. Hard to say today. Now that I have a built-in hugger with Husband, the cuddle party does not seem as necessary. But, has anyone been to one of these?



