The fact that there is a chemical mechanism for love does not demean love, but instead elevates chemistry to the exalted status of the physical mechanism of transcendence
Tag: love
Super embarrassing things Madeira does:
Every time D and I have a fight (ain’t frequent) I play this when we’re making up.
This being Touch Your Woman by Dolly Parton
Today is D’s birthday. Happy 33rd, gorgeous. You don’t look a day over 28 (and that’s pushing it)
I made him Portuguese sweet bread French toast and bacon and a pot of assam for breakfast (later I’m making him a strawberry cheesecake for birthday cake) and got him Laibach tickets for May (in New York, we’re going for two days, and doing a bunch of museums too). Also while making his birthday breakfast I realized what birthday breakfast making means in terms of how you feel about someone, and then I felt really really loved.
Not to toot my own horn, but I’m pretty sure I’m wifing to my greatest potential right now.
Oh And Don’t Date Anyone Who Refuses To Compensate Sex Workers For Their Labor
I’m looking at you doesn’t pay for his porn guy.
15 Signs Your Relationship Isn’t Working
- They’ve got shifty eyes
- You find a horse in the stable where your horse oughta be.
- They explain the horse away as a milk cow.
- IDK screaming?
- They tell you “I think this relationship isn’t working”
- Uncontrollable itching
- “Here I Go Again On My Own” by White Snake playing constantly in the background
- They correct your pronunciation of hasenpfeffer
- A flock of ravens passing westward over your house
- Your orchard blooms out of season
- Roosters laying eggs
- Old women cross themselves when you pass by
- The well goes dry
- Bad harvest
- You can’t stop reading these goddamn stupid listicles about whether or not your relationship is working.
Off The Clock Lurve: A guide to recreational dating for sex workers
So you’re a sex worker, and all you want is to date without dealing with A: People’s shitty attitudes towards your profession, B: People being ultra creepily into what you do, C: General bullshit.
This is hard because society is a shit, and treats us like we’re dirty and chronically unfaithful (fun fact: Sex work is a shitty customer service job, we may actually be less likely to cheat on you because work makes us hate people)
So how’s a sex worker to get a decent date in this whorephobic shit hole? Now first, let me acknowledge that I am in many ways ultra privileged in this respect as I’m conventionally attractive, thin, and white, but I think I have some tips that are applicable in general to wading through creeps.
1. Don’t date people you meet at work, it’s just generally a bad idea because they got used to the idea of you they were paying for and they may very well have some “different from expectations” bullshit baggage. There are exceptions, but generally it’s a bad idea. I’ve never done it, but I’ve seen it, and it ain’t nice.
2. Do date people who hang out with sex workers, and even people who’ve dated other sex workers. If they’ve gotten used to thinking of sex workers as people rather than an a monolith of sexy-dirty stereotypes, and can treat sex workers well enough to hang when they’re not trying to bang them, then they have a pretty good chance of being decent.
3. Other sex workers are often a great choice, I mean we’re awesome. Pros banging pros, just be sure to check for lateral and internalized whorephobia. They’re less likely to get jealous over stupid shit and more likely to understand that, yes Virginia, it is just a job.
4. If you can afford to make the dynamic you have at work very different from the one you have at home. For example, I’m a pro-domme, and a lifestyle sub. It makes for a nice work/life boundary, and means that I’m less prone to taking work home with me and seeing client when I look at spouse.
5. Date other people who society disapproves of, the fringes of society have to stick together in a gigantic matted clump if we are ever to trip up the stomping ogre of social disapproval (that metaphor got weird) but the point is? If society hates em’, they’re more likely to empathize and not use your job as a weapon during arguments/generally be a complete shit. My husband experienced dire poverty, and being on the dole. People who are like us, acceptable targets, are more likely to be sympathetic to and understanding of our experiences.
6. “Savior complex” is a red flag.
7. Anti-Legalization opinions are a red flag.
8. Mooching is a red flag, now I don’t think any partner you support is a mooch, if a partner is there, backing you up, providing emotional labor, cooking food, doing house work, they’re being a good partner and holding up their end of the bargain, which is the “you support me, I take care of you when you come home burnt out from your job” bargain which can be a great bargain, but if they don’t hold up their end of the deal, then kick em’ to the curb.
9. Be upfront about what you do, it helps you weed out the dickheads right off the bat.
10. If they only want to talk about sex once they find out you’re a sex worker, they’re angling for a one night stand.
11. Generally, if you want a real partner, the high roller who spoils you with cash is better as a client than a lover, that guy is great for $$$ but he’s paying not to have to deal with your feelings, or any of the hard shit. Keep the high roller and continue to take his money, invest your feelings in someone who while not a fucking cheapskate (note: cheapskate is proportional to how they’re doing financially, if they’re poor themselves, little things can be a big proportion of income and gestures in these relationships are more about showing a willingness to put you before them, you do the same for them. That said, I can totally understand wanting to date someone who won’t be a drag on your finances, because being pragmatic is often super important, but on the other hand a stay at home partner can save you a lot of money by doing things home cooked meals, housework, home repairs, garment mending and childcare) isn’t paying not to have to deal with you when you’re crying, or hard to deal with, or need emotional support.
12. Don’t go out with people who contact you through your ads, they’re usually just looking for a freebie and have fallen in lust with a version of your work persona they’ve embellished with their bullshit fantasies.
13. Watch for power dynamics, if you feel like they’re with you on a conditional basis because of your job, then dump them, you deserve better than that shithead. Similarly, if your relationship feels like a job, your partner might have been better as a client. You deserve a partner who doesn’t feel like bringing work home with you.
14. I’ve had good luck with activisty types (after they’re screened for manarchism and brocialism) and artists, both are prone to comfort with the non-traditional.
15. Sex worker and musician is a classic pair for a reason, although in my experience monogamy may not always be on the table there, but for some people non-monogamy is great. I’ve met a lot of rock dudes with girlfriends who worked in various areas of the sex industry who were totally chill about it and down with sex workers as a whole. IDK why this is, but musicians just seem to be more down with sex workers than the average civilian.
16. Anyone who’s insecure about their ability to satisfy you sexually is probably a no. Anyone who’s excessively confident about their ability to satisfy you sexually is also probably a no. The best is someone who knows they can by asking you questions, and communicating about desires and preferences before, during and after sex. D knows D is good in bed, but D knows D is good in bed because he asks questions and cares about his partner’s pleasure not as a function of ego, but because D cares about the happiness of other people.
17. You will have to wade through a lot of shit, but the people who are good partners for sex workers are also just some of the best partners period. They’re kind, generous, open minded, and not prone to pointless jealousy (even if you are in a monogamous, and yes sex workers can be monogamous, relationship.)
18. If they’re dating you as an act of rebellion, dump them. Don’t be someone’s piss off their mom prop.
19. Remember that generally like dates like, and sex workers being outsiders often find the best matches in other outsiders, civilians and people who’ve never experienced being the fringe are more likely to be shits about the whole thing, I’m not saying never, I’m just saying that that’s not the main pool to be drawing from generally. If you end up with someone really non-marginal who for whatever reason hasn’t absorbed all of society’s toxic shit, that’s fantastic, but those people are rare.
20. Don’t sell yourself short because of what you do for a living. People tell you that your partner is “settling” for you, and that is bullshit, no one who is truly a good partner will think of being with you as settling
Oh and
21. If you’re the kind of person who pisses with the door open and they’re the kind of person who’s not cool with that it ain’t gonna work.
A Few Things They Don’t Tell You About Love
- It’s not enough on it’s own, you can love someone to the moon and it doesn’t make you compatible.
- Even a good partner will make you cry, they’ll never do it on purpose, but humans are clumsy oafs, and one day they’ll say the wrong thing because they were distracted trying to find their shoelace and your feelings will be deeply hurt and they’ll apologize and mean it, but everyone fucks up and if you can’t deal with fuck ups, you can’t deal with people.
- It’s been repeated a million times, but it’s not going to save you, or them, and you really really need to understand that. Love is wonderful and transcendent but it’s not your savior and it’s not your meaning in life.
- Being someone’s whole world is shitty and exhausting.
- You need more than each other, like friends, and books and a sense of purpose. You can’t be each other’s whole purpose in life because that’s just circular and weird and if one of you is the other’s purpose in life and not the other way round that gets real ugly real fast.
- If it’s easier to die for em’ than live with em, you may love em’ but you’re not suited.
- Destroying yourself for someone else isn’t romantic. Like sacrificing yourself in very VERY rare situations is… sort of, but what’s more romantic is coming up with a way to save you both.
- The idea that there is one true perfect love for you is fucking up your relationships and it’s not even that romantic. Cause like which is more romantic, their being some preordained perfect love with whom everything is simple and easy and you never have to put any effort in because if you did it would mean it’s not perfect and so you should move on to someone else, or two humans who meet and fall in love and choose to be together and compromise and deal with each other even when it’s hard or they’re grouchy and accept clashes and rough edges and just keep being with each other even though there are other options because they love each other.
- Sometimes communicating will be hard and you will have to work at it.
- Your partner, provided they are not asexual, will probably masturbate. It’s really really common. It’s probably something you need to be okay with them doing.
- No matter how much you love them if the porn they like upsets you, you’re not suited to each other.
- Common interests are important, but don’t expect your partner to share all your interests, but it’s good to take an interest in each other’s interests. Example: my mom LOVES textiles. My dad finds hearing my mom talk about textiles interesting even though they’re not a huge interest of his on his own. Similarly, WWII is not a pet subject of mine, but it’s a pet subject of D’s and I find hearing D talk about it interesting. That said my mom can’t stand scifi (which my dad LOVES) but does take an interest in his interest in philosophy, and my dad can’t sit still to watch TV shows or movies generally. D doesn’t like detective stories on D’s own, but will take an interest in my interest in them, but generally hates perfume. I hate incredibly bleak Russian dramas (which D loves) but I respect them and we have a lot of other stuff in common and that’s what’s important.
- D is the love of my life, a passion for the ages, but here’s the thing with calm, lasting love, it’s not that it’s not as deep or passionate, it’s more that after a certain point you don’t actively feel the emotional intensity of it constantly anymore, because it’s not under threat. Shitty “breakup-get back together” not actually suited to one another relationships often feel emotionally intense because they’re always under threat from their own internal instability. Now, the instant something were to threaten my relationship with D, all those big operatic emotions would come bursting forth and I would climb oceans and swim mountains (and yes, I do mean climb oceans and swim mountains, because that’s harder) if I had to, because I love D with every fiber of my being, but day to day? Those big passionate emotions are quiet because they’re not needed. It’s not that they’re not there, they’re just not being called upon to keep us together because we don’t torture each other.
- You gotta accept them, and they’ve gotta accept you, and you’ve both got to try and make allowances for each other. I accept that D will never put the sugar away, and D accepts that I will strew random garments in random places forever. That said D tries to remember to put the sugar away and I try not to strew so many garments in so many places.
- You’re gonna have fights, but if you’re suited they’re not usually going to be super ugly, so like disagreement, irritation and maybe some raising of voices, but no personal attacks and no insults aside from “You’re being an asshole” maybe occasionally.
- You’ve gotta respect them, and their beliefs and those beliefs won’t always be the same. D and I are very much the same politically and our religious beliefs don’t conflict in ways that bother us, but for example I believe in absolute morality, and D doesn’t… that said in practice we’re morally similar but the way we get there is different. I respect D’s way of getting there and D respects my way of getting there.
- Sometimes you are both going to have the flu and it is going to totally suck.
- Sometimes your partner is going to majorly put their foot in their mouth with your friends and you are going to have to stand by them because you want them to do the same when you inevitably put your own foot in your mouth.
- Alright, so if you’ve ever had roommates you know how even someone who’s super cool is going to do occasional stuff that drives you up the wall, just by virtue of sharing your space with them? Imagine that, but you’ve also let them into the deepest recesses of your emotional self and share one of the most intense intimacies people can share… yeah, sometimes they are really really going to get on your nerves.
- When they’re suited to you, it is SO, SO, SO worth it.
I Think I’m The Galivant Of My Life
D’s the princess, the smart one and I’m the doofy over confident asshole.
I Gotta Say
I’m really glad how deeply chill I am about sex, it’s really emotionally intense and involved for a lot of people and for me at this point a shtup is a shtup, and I mean it can be a profound act of intimacy and overwhelming transcendent experience, an act of the most complete love and trust between people possible but also it can just be, you know, a shtup, and that doesn’t even mean the sex was bad, just you know, didn’t see the lights of Andromeda when I came, didn’t feel souls connect and earth move, but I can still have come really fucking hard.
The casual sex I’ve had in my life, has usually been pretty good, the “deeply in love” sex has varied wildly, with D it is that earth shaking, soul poking, holy-shit-I-just-saw-god type of thing, but that’s not the only way to have sex, and frankly, being chill about it has made me a lot more loving and appreciative as a partner.