• hopilavayi: an erotic dictionary

memories of my ghost sista

~ the dead are never satisfied

memories of my ghost sista

Tag Archives: zipless fuck

slut shaming

24 Thursday Oct 2013

Posted by babylon crashing in Erotic, Feminism, Poetry, sonnet

≈ Comments Off on slut shaming

Tags

bisexuality, feminism, Marquis de Sade, poem, Poetry, Sappho, silencing, slut shaming, sonnet, zipless fuck

Are you the one,/ who hates me in life,
but masturbates wildly/ in secret from your wife?

—-Esperanza Hidalgo

Never slut shame: whatever I might say
or do, how I love, why I love, beyond

asking you, “come to bed or stay away,”
lies my damned love. Damaged love, vagabond

love, lost love: but still love. If you can’t see
that then I’m not the damned one. “Cocks, cunts, juice

flowing freely,” as if it’s all just free.
That is both the freedom and the abuse

that these doggerel zipless fucks try to claim.
If the flesh is weak then the flesh is weak.

This is not your sweat-fuck poem. Don’t quote
boring de Sade to me, you still slut shame.

To me that’s neither wild, rare or unique.
“So, please, fuck off;” for you that’s all I wrote.

][][

notes

It’s curious how certain figures in history have had their names attached to things that rarely reflected who they were in life. For example, Sappho (as much as we know about her from scraps and fragments handed down over the centuries) was bisexual, at least by today’s understanding of the term. She was married to a merchant named Cercylas, had a daughter she called Celis. Despite all the wonderful love poems to women that she wrote legend has it that she killed herself by jumping off the Leucadian cliffs for her love of Phaon, a village fisherman. While in the 19th and 20th century her name has been attached to lesbianism, when Sappho wrote, “coming off heaven/ throwing off/ his purple cloak,” it was a love poem addressed to one of her male lovers. Of course the marginalization and silencing of bisexual artists in both the larger heterosexual and gay and lesbian communities is nothing new, and will continue as long as people only see the world in black and white dualism: you’re either gay or straight, there is nothing in-between, although Sappho wrote again and again, “your love can be any [gender] that the gods have chosen for you.” I would argue that all there is in this world is what’s in-between. Dualism is a myth that needs dismantling.

Donatien Alphonse François, better known as the Marquis de Sade, is another curious case. Even though he gave the world the word “sadism,” I’d rather poke my eyes out with a rusty fork than try to read what his admirers call “erotica” once again. This has nothing to do with subject matter. Yes, yes, I know he was, in theory at least, an advocate for extreme freedom, unrestrained by morality, religion or law (what hipster isn’t?) When I was in Peace Corps I brought two anthologies of his collected works with me, since he was an author I had heard a lot about but had read nothing that he had written. Sadly, when I was done, I had to conclude that de Sade is boring. He spent 32 years in prison, which was when he wrote most of his work. His writing style was to come up with an outline and every day simply rewrite and expand each paragraph until it collapsed under its own dry weight. There is no flow or poetry in his work. It has all the erotic sensibilities of a college term paper. I had made the mistake of watching Pier Paolo Pasolini’s Salò, or the 120 Days of Sodom (1975), which updated Sade’s novel by placing it in the fascist Salò Republic during WWII. As Italian snuff films go it was horrific. When I sat down to read the novel I wasn’t sure if I even wanted to … until I started and realized it really wasn’t a novel, more like long lists of what de Sade wanted to write about if he ever got around to do so. The legend goes that he actually did write 120 Days, but when the Bastille was liberated during the French Revolution the manuscript was lost. He never got around to producing a second draft. Justine and Juliette are vaguely interesting, if you can get beyond his utter loathing of women. The only work I enjoyed was the comedy Philosophy in the Bedroom, partly because it was short but mainly because it didn’t take itself seriously. It revolves around Eugénie, a 15 year-old girl who, at the beginning of the story, is a naive virgin of all things sexual but by the end has become a depraved libertine (of course she does). “Lewd women,” de Sade writes, “be heedless of all that contradicts pleasure’s divine laws … be as quick to destroy, to spurn all those ridiculous precepts inculcated in you by imbecile parents.” I suppose if French philosophy is your aphrodisiac then de Sade’s work will be highly titillating. It certainly got Michel Foucault excited, but since I despise Michel Foucault that really isn’t a plus in my book.

mino’s bull

05 Tuesday Mar 2013

Posted by babylon crashing in Erotic, sonnet

≈ Comments Off on mino’s bull

Tags

Asterion, bisexual, cyclone orgasm, Greek myth, homorerotic, Mino's Bull, minotaur, mythology, Theseus, yaoi, zipless fuck

And then, lying deep inside you, I wait
to be kissed. But your face is pressed into
the wet grass, fast asleep. You are deadweight
under me. Is twenty minutes all you
have to offer? I was just warming up.
Tsk. I was born in Crete, far to the east.
A beast-like child. “They will fear you, worship
you,”
father said. But he wasn’t a beast,
only a fiend. I was Mino’s Bull.
My real name is Asterion. Theseus,
wake up. You are seeping and flooded, full
of my love; fagged and shagged, fashed and lifeless.
Child of clay, I want another tumble.
I want to make the ground scream and rumble.

age difference anal sex Armenia Armenian Genocide Armenian translation ars poetica art artist unknown blow job Chinese translation conversations with imaginary sisters cum cunnilingus drama erotic erotica erotic poem erotic poetry Federico Garcia Lorca fellatio finger fucking free verse ghost ghost girl ghost lover gif Gyumri haiku homoerotic homoerotica Humor i'm spilling more thank ink y'all incest Lilith Lord Byron Love shall make us a threesome masturbation more than just spilled ink more than spilled ink mythology ocean mythology Onna bugeisha orgasm Peace Corps photo poem Poetry Portuguese Portuguese translation prose quote unquote reblog retelling Rumi Sappho sea folklore Shakespeare sheismadeinpoland sonnet sorrow Spanish Spanish translation spilled ink story Taoist Pirate rituals Tarot Tarot of Syssk thank you threesome Titus Andronicus translation video Walt Whitman woman warrior xenomorph

electric mayhem [links]

  • Poetic K [myspace]
  • aimee mann
  • poesia erótica (português)
  • cyndi lauper
  • sandra bernhard
  • discos bizarros argentinos
  • armenian erotica and news

Meta

  • Create account
  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.com

Blog Stats

  • 399,567 hits

Categories

ars poetica: the blogs a-b

  • afghan women's writing project
  • mary biddinger
  • sandra beasley
  • aliki barnstone
  • armenian poetry project
  • brilliant books
  • the art blog
  • megan burns
  • stacy blint
  • emma bolden
  • tiel aisha ansari
  • clair becker
  • Alcoholic Poet
  • wendy babiak
  • american witch
  • afterglow
  • alzheimer's poetry project
  • lynn behrendt
  • sommer browning
  • all things said and done
  • cecilia ann
  • kristy bowen
  • black satin
  • margaret bashaar

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 44 other subscribers

Archives

ars poetica: the blogs c-d

  • natalia cecire
  • abigail child
  • lorna dee cervantes
  • linda lee crosfield
  • julie carter
  • cheryl clark
  • roberto cavallera
  • flint area writers
  • jackie clark
  • lyle daggett
  • CRB
  • cleveland poetics
  • juliet cook
  • jennifer k. dick
  • maria damon
  • michelle detorie

ars poetica: the blogs e-h

  • carol guess
  • carrie etter
  • Gabriela M.
  • julie r. enszer
  • elizabeth glixman
  • jeannine hall gailey
  • pamela hart
  • joy garnett
  • maggie may ethridge
  • hayaxk (ՀԱՅԱՑՔ)
  • bernardine evaristo
  • maureen hurley
  • sarah wetzel fishman
  • liz henry
  • jessica goodfellow
  • ghosts of zimbabwe
  • jane holland
  • Free Minds Book Club
  • amanda hocking
  • elisa gabbert
  • herstoria
  • joy harjo
  • human writes

ars poetica: the blogs i-l

  • megan kaminski
  • lesbian poetry archieves
  • language hat
  • dick jones
  • diane lockward
  • renee liang
  • maggie jochild
  • emily lloyd
  • donna khun
  • a big jewish blog
  • amy king
  • gene justice
  • Kim Whysall-Hammond
  • charmi keranen
  • lesley jenike
  • miriam levine
  • las vegas poets organization
  • kennifer kilgore-caradec
  • irene latham
  • laila lalami
  • Jaya Avendel
  • IEPI
  • sheryl luna
  • meg johnson
  • sandy longhorn
  • joy leftow

ars poetica: the blogs m-o

  • michigan writers network
  • michelle mc grane
  • wanda o'connor
  • adrienne j. odasso
  • sophie mayer
  • My Poetic Side
  • mlive: michigan poetry news
  • the malaysian poetic chronicles
  • iamnasra oman
  • michigan writers resources
  • nzepc
  • Nanny Charlotte
  • maud newton
  • majena mafe
  • new issues poetry & prose
  • ottawa poetry newsletter
  • motown writers
  • heather o'neill
  • caryn mirriam-goldberg
  • marion mc cready
  • sharanya manivannan
  • january o'neil

ars poetica: the blogs p-r

  • rachel phillips
  • ariana reines
  • joanna preston
  • sophie robinson
  • Queen Majeeda
  • kristin prevallet
  • nikki reimer
  • split this rock
  • maria padhila
  • helen rickerby
  • nicole peyrafitte
  • susan rich

ars poetica: the blogs s-z

  • southern michigan poetry
  • shin yu pai
  • tuesday poems
  • womens quarterly conversation
  • ron silliman
  • vassilis zambaras
  • Trista's Poetry
  • scottish poetry library
  • tim yu
  • sexy poets society
  • Stray Lower
  • switchback books

  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • memories of my ghost sista
    • Join 44 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • memories of my ghost sista
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar