Posts tagged: personal experience
“This needs two people,” the man unloading the U-Haul called out. He pushed a padded bondage chair toward the edge of the truck. Several volunteers appeared near him. They lifted the chair a few inches off the ground and began moving it towards the party space.
The chair was facing me head-on. I stared back at it, and that’s when I saw her. She was naked, and ugly. Her flesh was molting like a sick bird’s feathers and her bony face and hollow cheeks made her whole head resemble a skull. Her eyes were large and what thin layer of skin was stretched across her jaw curled into a mean smile. Her legs and arms were bound to the heavy wooden frame of the chair the volunteers were carrying and as they moved it into the play space the ghost turned her head, locking her eyes on mine.
[…]
“No way I’m helping,” I said aloud to myself. I turned my back and walked to the street corner without ever saying goodbye to anyone on the PLA dungeon crew.
Most submissive men hate themselves. That makes it easy for us to hate other people. That also makes it easy for other people to hate us. The BDSM Scene wouldn’t have it any other way; The Scene-State’s corrupt plutocrats have too much riding on it.
I hated myself for a long time because I want to be sexually submissive and yet I was unable to access a relationship that felt good to me. I didn’t hate myself because I wanted to be sexually submissive, I hated myself because I felt incapable of being attractive and I felt incapable of being attractive because I wanted to be sexually submissive; no one wants a submissive man.
The hatred didn’t start that way. It started as hope. I used to keep a coil of rope beneath my pillow, and I would wrap it around my wrists to comfort myself at night. I hoped that one day someone who loved me would sleep next to me, our naked skin keeping one another warm, the weight of their arms on the sides of my exposed chest as my own arms were kept above my head by the ropes.
When I first joined the BDSM Scene in 2002, I naïvely believed people there gave a shit about me. By the time my then-partner, Cookie, had burned through two relationships, I was still coiling rope under my pillow hoping I could be sexy like she was. I saw Cookie on a trailer for Kink, Inc.’s Wired Pussy porn site before I ever really played.
That’s when the hope dissipated, never to return. In that moment of invasive surprise at unexpectedly seeing my ex-partner show up on my screen as I browsed for porn, all the hope I had mutated into confusion: Why doesn’t anyone want to play with me the way I really want? Why am I not attractive? What am I doing wrong? What’s wrong with me?
Years pass.
This blog is my job. If it moves you, please help me keep doing this Work by sharing some of your food, shelter, or money. Thank you!
Originally posted at Facebook, for reasons I can not yet explain.
Getting screened for STIs is a LOT more fun when you do it with your partners. I’m so used to that conversation being so routine:
“When was your last screening?”
“Six months ago.”
“And how many partners have you had since then?”
“One.”
“And do they have any other partners?”
“No.”
But this time my answers were very different:
“When was your last screening?”
“A year and a half ago.”
“And how many partners have you had since then?”
“Uh…*mentally counting*….”
“Okay, how about just the last 30 days.”
“Uhm. Three.”
“And do they have any other partners?”
“*nods*”
“Are any of them sex workers?”
“Yes.” (And then we had a conversation about sex work.)
“And what are you going to do once you get your results?”
“Tell my partners.”
“Great; how soon can you do that?”
“Well, two of them are right outside….”
“Oh! It’s wonderful you’re all getting tested together.”
“Well, yeah…we all suddenly had a lot of reasons to get updated screening results.”
I’m waiting on the results of the syphilis test, but everything else came back negative, happily.
(And on a meta-note: no, I’m not sure why the fuck I’m posting this to Facebook, but I figure it’s time to Do Something Different in my life, so here we go.)
Update July 10: Negative on the syphilis test, too.
This blog is my job. If it moves you, please help me keep doing this Work by sharing some of your food, shelter, or money. Thank you!
On the way to a housewarming party, I wrote an email to a piece of my past. A snippet:
[M]y dreams have subsided but my memories are resurfacing. I’m spending some time for the first time in years reading the archives of my own blog. And, as part of that, writing (drafts of, until the story about CV and Ken) the stories important to me. I’ve done a lot of learning over the past year or so and am recognizing things I once overlooked, like the power of storytelling.
Other memories that pop up often as I do this are all the times you asked me to write about us, which I’m sure you recall, as well as all the times I sat down in front of a blank screen to try, which you may not recall because I was alone. I want to say, so that you know if you don’t already and to be reassured in case you do, that I would have written more about us, and I wanted to, but I was hurting and I could not bear the task. I’m sorry I wasn’t strong enough to accomplish that.
When I arrived at the party, things immediately felt at once unnervingly familiar and yet disconcertingly foreign. I did not know such a strange self-contradiction was possible. Everything from the way people looked—the slender, long-haired man in the Utilikilt serving drinks; the sharply-dressed fast talking woman whom he called “sweetie”; the animal lover and perpetual student in the green dress; and others, too—to the music on the stereo—Gaelic Storm—to the layout of the apartment—not quite a bullet house, but close—was eery. Pieces of them each reminded me of people I had once seen almost daily.
It felt like a combination of being in bizarro world mixed with blasts from my past, all in a parallel universe. I floated from one conversation to the next, throughout the evening feeling as though one half of me was not really in attendance but rather observing the other half of me that was, except for the brief reprieve in which I dropped to the floor to commune with the household’s feline pets. I stayed for a couple hours, then caught a ride back over the bridge, towards home and far too much NyQuil.
I feel emotionally irradiated by the experience, and it hurts.
On the car ride back, a thought occurred to me as I shared a little bit of my history with my couriers. I used to work as a web developer fixing other people’s broken code. I never could find a situation or make myself any significant, sustainable opportunity to just write my own damn code. Now, I’m an activist and I’m trying to fix other people’s worlds, but I don’t feel like I have one of my own.
I walk a lonely road
the only one that I have ever known.
Don’t know where it goes
but it’s home to me and I walk alone.[…]
My shadow’s the only one that walks beside me.
My shallow heart’s the only thing that’s beating.
Sometimes I wish someone out there will find me.
‘Til then, I walk alone.I’m walking down the line
that divides me somewhere in my mind.
On the border line
of the edge and where I walk alone.Read between the lines of what’s
fucked up and everything’s all right.
Check my vital signs to know I’m still alive
and I walk alone.
I always felt I’d make a great lost boy. I had such a crush on Peter Pan, too.
This blog is my job. If it moves you, please help me keep doing this Work by sharing some of your food, shelter, or money. Thank you!
When I was a teenager, I disappointed my mother by disengaging from the juggling group I regularly attended, the Carmine Street Irregulars.
“It’s your only social outlet,” she lamented.
“Mom,” I said, “please understand that being surrounded by people I don’t feel close to, no matter how much I like them, does not make me feel social. It just makes me feel even more lonely.”