Tuesday, June 26, 2012
THE L WORD
I shall be in summer reruns for the remainder of the week while I do some other work. This was a Valentine's Day post.
Gentle Readers,
Today we celebrate the L word, and for those of you who were hoping for some girl on girl action, no, it's not lesbian.
It's LOVE! Remember - What the world needs now? What do you get when you fall in it?
I remember love. I remember my first serious love.
Yes, Gentle Readers, I will share with you, and only you, that I lost my virginity with my first serious love on this date in 19**.
We had been building up to it. I had a bit of a reputation, undeserved, for being a loose woman, easy, a slut. But I wasn't doin' it. I turned everybody down.
Until he came along.
The first time we were alone together, at night, in the dark, in a park, in my car, I felt desire like I had never felt it before. It was months before we did the deed, and the first time, even the second and third times, weren't so great.
But then - sky rockets in flight! Afternoon delight. Yeah, we did it after school.
That love and I moved on in different directions eventually. But oh, boy, do I remember him every year when Valentine's Day rolls around.
But that's enough sex - for now.
I saw "As You Like It" at the Folger in D.C. quite a few years ago. If you ever have a chance to see a play at the Folger, go, go, go!
In "As You Like It," Shakespeare takes the romantic tradition and the language of love and turns it on its head. He plays with love in his play.
Here's some more sex: In "As You Like It," wrestling is a metaphor for sex. There's an entire book, just about sex references in this play, and it's serious. It's a real critical discussion of the play.
Anyway, Orlando and Rosalind meet at a wrestling match and find themselves "overthrown" by love.
Before long, Orlando is out in the forest hanging up his bad love poetry on the trees: "From the east to western Inde, / No jewel is like Rosalinde."
Somehow Rosalind manages to keep her head in the face of these magnificent protestations. In fact, she represents a practical view of love: "Men have/ died from time to time, and worms have eaten them, but not for love."
But, Rosalind and Orlando manage to get together in the end, and presumably, they do some hot and heavy wrestling.
So whether you're a realist when it comes to love, or you're a fool for love, at least you believe the L word exists.
Don't ya remember you told me you L'ed me baby? Here in my heart I give you the best of my L. My L does it good to me. Just an old fashioned L song. L will keep us together.
Still crazy after all these years.
Love, love, love,
Lalalalalalola
Oh love ( and lust) . It's what keeping us and the world.
ReplyDeleteWow what a embrace of the L word.
ReplyDeletewww.thoughtsofpaps.com
Hello Janie, Love can be in June too! FYI, I didn't read past for now :)
ReplyDeleteLove and lust are hard to differentiate until a long time has passed. My first love still gives me quivers. It wasn't HIM as much as the fact I was nothing but hormones in penny strollers. We didn't 'do the deed', but man oh man, the thrills of experimenting has never been equaled in my life.
ReplyDeleteMy first love and I (senior year) have kept in touch all these years. We would never have been right for each other over the long haul, but we are still friends. Oh, young love! ;)
ReplyDeletePretty good L word post. I didnt lose my virginity on valentines day... but it wasnt for a lack of trying. Its just no one took me up on my "I got you my virginity for valentines day" sign!
ReplyDeleteL'd this post!!
ReplyDeleteDear Janie, my favorite song about love is "What I Did for Love" from Chorus Line. I saw the touring company in Minneapolis many years ago and when the character--Diane--sang this song, I cried.
ReplyDeleteSo poignant and so true. Peace.
No L word in my first time. It was in a whorehouse in Yokosuka, Japan. Three hundred yen (less than a dollar back then) and 30 seconds and I was a man. A drunk man, but a man indeed...at 17.
ReplyDelete