Category Archives: Love


Can’t have a good story without complications

Remember that old Fredric March movie, Death Takes a Holiday? I have a new one for you: Fate Takes a Dump.

Yeah, I know: nothing original about Fate taking a dump. But when it happens to you for the first time, it feels pretty damned original. It plays havoc with your world view, too.

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Thirteen things I learned from Cosmo

As promised.

1. Women need help shaving their pubes into dumb designs.
Guy tip #1:
shave it all off. That’s what we really want, not furry “landing strips.”

2. Bronze eye shadow is “in.”
Guy tip #2: Bronze eye shadow is only “in” if your guy is “into” heroin chic.

3.“Damp, chilled tea bags work wonders for sleepy, puffy eyes.”
Guy tip #3: Surprise your guy with teabagging and he won’t give a damn about your sleepy, puffy eyes.

4. “Plan Two Hot Dates With Him. Instead of orchestrating a perfect evening you’ll both love, make a deal that you’ll do whatever he wants one night as long as he does the same for you the other night.”
Guy tip #4: I like this advice. I can’t think of a better way to assess incompatibility. Two dates, and you’ll either be engaged or broken up.

5. Don’t leave your contact lenses in at night, says Monica L. Monica, MD.
Guy tip #5: Monica L. Monica? I’m going back to my old name, Doug E. Fresh.

6. Astroglide has massage lotion!
Guy tip #6: I learned about Astroglide from a gay Bay Area psychiatrist. Instinctively, I realized this guy knew more about lubricants than a score of Pep Boys employees. I’ve never gone back to KY.

7. Brighten up your hair color by adding Kool-Aid powder to your shampoo.
Guy tip #7: Guys dig cherry Kool-Aid powder. We’ll lick it off anything. Anything.

8. According to actor Owen Wilson, “When girls put lipstick beyond their lip line to make their mouth look voluptuous — that’s no bueno.”
Guy tip #8: When guys throw dippy Spanish expressions into their conversations, that’s muy estupido.

9. To make her feel sexy naked, compliment her sexy parts.
Guy tip #9: It really doesn’t work to say, “Honey, your clitoris looks just like a wee penis!”

10. He says: “My buddies really like you.” He means: “Okay, we’re officially dating now.”
Guy tip #10: Be sure he doesn’t mean, “I hope you’re into bukkake.”

11. 57% of guys have accidentally zipped part of their member.
Guy tip #11: If your man does this, DON’T blurt out, “Frank and beans! Frank and beans!” or else he might offer you some of his style gel.

12. Big, fake eyelashes are sexy, but big, fake boobs are not.
Guy tip #12:
Oh yeah? Says who?

13. If you cheat, don’t tell. You’ll be doing more damage to the relationship if you come clean.
Guy tip #13:
Don’t cheat in the first place, dumbass! Jeez. If you care that little about a relationship, leave the relationship. Unless it’s one of those open relationships. Yeah. That would be cool.

Have you learned anything new today? Leave a comment, and I’ll link to your Thirteen.

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Man-tush over at Darla’s place!

May dishes on food

Dusty gives us the latest on the Rove & Leopold show (not a 13, but what the hey)

Samantha, the dog whisperer

Thirteen smiles from Pat (With Wallace and Gromit cookies!)

D.

For love

This is challah, love in bread form. One of these days I’ll learn how to take a decent digital photo.

Karen appreciated my challah, but my little heathen, a focaccia fanatic, gave my challah the thumbs-down. That’s okay — it just means he doesn’t love his dad. (KIDDING, Jake, KIDDING!)

Today’s Smart Bitches Day post will focus on the following question:

What do your characters do to show their love? 

Because, you know something? Protestations of an eternal bond are like, feh. Just feh. Screw the words, I want to see actions.

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Why do fools fall in love?

What amazes me the most about Groundhog Day is that I love it as much as I do, even though Andie MacDowell and Bill Murray are light-years away from my ideal vision of romantic leads. Goes to show what a kickass script can do for a film. More on Groundhog Day in a moment.

As you folks know from yesterday’s post, my muse has decided she wants to write a romance. Or a romantica. Or an erotica. The muse doesn’t get out a lot, hasn’t read much from any of those genres, doesn’t care about the distinctions between them. But she has a story to tell and damn it she’s going to tell it. From past experience, I know better than to get in her way, but I also know she needs proper nutrition. Hence this evening’s post.

If it’s romance the muse is writing, my protags ought to fall in love, right? But, but, but . . . why?

Why do people fall in love?

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Thirteen crushes

Funny, how some of them still own a piece of me.

1. T. I’m two months shy of my third birthday. She’s an older woman, maybe four or five, a head taller than me, and she won’t let me stand on top of that hill. Damn it! The game’s called King of the Hill, not Queen of the Hill! No matter how many times I try to fight my way to the top of the hill, T pushes me down again and again.

This establishes my lifetime attraction to doms.

2. S. I hope you’re still reading my blog, S, cuz this bit is about you. Remember how I chased you around in kindergarten, trying to steal kisses? Kinda scary to think what would happen to me now, behaving like that. Expulsion for sexual harrassment, no doubt. Back then, I spent countless hours (okay . . . minutes) in that gulag known as The Kitchen, Mrs. Bisetti’s time-out zone, but it did no good. The next day, I was back at it again.

3. Shirley Temple. Yes, there was a time in my life when I dug giggly, chubby-cheeked blondes. Imagine my consternation when I found out she was as old as my mom.

4. Elizabeth Montgomery. Okay, Liz Montgomery I knew had to be as old as my mom, but she was just so cute in Bewitched. One day, I was home with a fever, and I decided Liz was the gal for me. That crush lasted all of a day. It broke with the fever.

5. G. On to more age-appropriate interests. G held my fascination all through first grade. I’ve quite forgotten why.

6. B. What can you say about a ten-year-old girl with boobs? That she was beautiful. And brilliant. Yet extremely slow to realize why I loved playing touch football with her.

7. T. Towards the end of 7th grade, T’s friend told me, “She likes you. She thinks you’re cute.” Then she dragged me out of the library, where T waited on the steps. T wouldn’t look me in the face. She was trying very hard to explain my appeal to another friend of hers: “He’s cute!” Then she noticed me standing there and ran off.

I thought about her all summer. I’d never noticed her before, but that didn’t matter — she liked me! She thought I was cute! Those were two very potent aphrodisiacs, and indeed, they seemed like perfect (and sufficient) prerequisites. At long last, I would have a girlfriend.

Beginning of 8th grade, I learned that T had moved down to Rosemead. I never saw her again, but it took me two years to get her out of my head. Not that there weren’t others vying for head space . . .

8. L. Cute li’l thing and fellow brainiac. We danced the slow dances together in 7th and 8th grade. By 9th grade, she had developed an interest in older boys. She would still flirt with me, but that was the limit. Unless I suddenly developed facial hair and my wallet sprouted a driver’s license, I wasn’t in the running. No way, no how.

After I broke up with GFv1.0 (#11), I wrote L a letter. She wrote me back, telling me about her ambitious and soon-to-be-wealthy her fiance. I recall the phrase, “I know where to butter MY bread.” I never wrote her again.

9. L. We could never manage to be interested in each other at the same time, dammit. Certainly one of my most beautiful crushes. (Candace Bergen, circa 1975: my most beautiful crush.) Eventually she married young, and the marriage ended in disaster. But before she divorced that creep, I met up with her again. I hadn’t seen her since 9th grade. She told me, “Don’t ever get married,” but it was the depth of her pain that touched me — and made me fall in love with her, if only for that instant. She has a permanent bit of my cerebral real estate.

10. S. In 10th grade, I relocated to Alhambra High School. One of the first girls I noticed was S. Mornings, she volunteered in the school library. I couldn’t take my eyes off of her hair. It was amazing! A year later, I confided this in J, AKA GFv1.0, who laughed at me. “You idiot. That was a perm!

Nevertheless, S served to distract me from my growing interest in J.

11. J. She sat behind me in 10th grade biology and entertained me with a seemingly endless supply of snark on the other kids in class. If Smart Bitches had been around back then, J would have been a founding member. For my part, I did her dissections for her, and I suspect I was pretty funny back then, too. It took me a whole year to realize I’d fallen in love with her, can you imagine? A whole year. And when it hit, it hit like a semi.

This was the girl I would marry. We’d raise a family and grow old together. I couldn’t imagine a future without her in it.

Things flew apart in our second and third year together, largely thanks to me. But even as I was busy sabotaging the relationship, I was still talking marriage. “You know,” she said about six months before the break-up, “you keep assuming I want to marry you.”

Yeah, I took a lot of things for granted. Which was the problem, really.

12. C. Towards the end of my second year at Berkeley, I met C — aw, Carmela, okay? God knows I’ve talked about her enough. We took German together. One evening, our class went as a group to a German restaurant in downtown San Francisco, and Carmela wore ruby slippers. Ruby slippers! How can a guy not fall for a girl who owns a pair of ruby slippers? But what really hooked me on Carmela was her schtick. One day after class, we sat together on a patch of lawn near Wheeler Auditorium, and we started riffing off each other. It was . . . oh God this is trite . . . it was magical. Somehow, we had launched into a mutual standup comedy routine, unplanned, unscripted.

Carmela had a gold necklace of the number 13, a gift from her grandmother, a Northern Italian witch whose workbook the villagers burned after her death. Carmela had a recurring dream of herself in ancient Greece. As Carmela got older, the girl in her dreams aged, too. When I knew Carmela, the dream girl had recently married, and her husband had left her to fight in a far-off war. The girl remained behind, like Penelope, biding her time, waiting for her husband’s return.

Sometimes, I wonder if he ever came home.

13. Karen. Long-timers here know the whole story (here, here, and here) of our courtship, but I thought I’d add one detail. After my friend Stan and I crashed Karen’s apartment two or three times, I called him one night. “What do you think?” I said. “Does she love me yet? Why is this taking so long? Gaaaaaaaaaah!

I don’t recall being particularly coherent. I do recall Stan’s exasperation. He must have felt like he’d created a monster.

Funny thing is, I don’t think I was in love with her at that point. Fascinated by her, yes. Wanted to be around her, learn everything about her, be a part of her life.

I guess that’s love. As I’ve posted previously, I have a problem with the word.

D.

Get the Thursday Thirteen code here!

Drop a note in the comments, yatta yatta.

or

as we yids say

yatata yatata

Don’t get on Trish’s bad side.

The Red Queen has some reading to do.

Ms. Bizarre thinks twice about a piercing. (I think she should have told her husband, “I will if you will.”)

Sapphire Writer gives us her 13 favorite first scenes. (Better late than never, eh, Sapph?)

Gemini leads a busy life.

Kate’s never happy when it rains.

If Sting is the King of Pain, Darla is the Queen of Spam.

Thursdays suck.

Let’s talk consummation

For Smart Bitches Day, I’ve decided to cede the stage to Bare Rump. For her last SBD, my lovely Tromatopelman gal introduced you to her favorite author, Bronwyn Webweaver. I wonder what she’ll write about today?

Just in case you don’t remember the salient details of Bare Rump’s appearance, here’s a picture of her at a cast party for All My Children. She’s a big, BIG fan.

***

You know what I find most puzzling about your President Bush? He’s so old. On my world, males rarely live more than three years past their sexual maturity. At first, I assumed he had to be a virgin, but then I learned he has two daughters! How mysterious is that?

At first, I thought: Laura, you devil!

Of course, when I met President Bush’s lovely wife, it all became clear. Of course! He’s had the old girl defanged.

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Q&A

Knock knock knock.

Me: Go away.

Walnut: You’re being ridiculous. You know that, don’t you?

Me: I am never ridiculous.

Walnut: I see . . .

Me: If I remember correctly, you received a D in Defense Against the Dark Arts — and that was a gift.

Walnut: Your point?

Me: Given your shortcomings, I would be careful to whom you direct your sarcasm.

Walnut: Oh. Great. Now you’re threatening me. You’re a guest in my house, and you’re threatening me

Me: Cautioning you.

Walnut: . . . and you’ve grabbed the laptop and locked yourself in the bathroom. REAL mature, Professor. One little blow-up with Mrs. Snape, and you’re taking it out on the rest of us.

Me: Hardly a little blow-up —

Walnut: Want some advice? If Mrs. Snape is still screaming at you? Not a good time to ask for make-up sex.

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, May 2, 2006. Category: Humor, Love, Sex.

Professor Snape holds forth on love and romance

An Introductory Note from Walnut

This week, Balls and Walnuts is delighted to have Professor Severus Snape as our guest blogger. Since he is here “in the Colonies” to oversee the final stages of his plan to wed Michelle Duggar, he graciously agreed to take on some of my customary duties. This morning, I told him he would need to write a post on Smart Bitches Day.

Grudgingly, he agreed (when he realized that my assistance in the Duggar affair would not necessarily include me cooking for him all week long and laundering his magical robes) but griped about the name.

“I cringe at the word smart,” he said. “I am sagacious, and reliable, and courageous. Smart does not capture the full scope of my essence. And I am no one’s bitch.”

Without further ado, I give you Professor Snape, who explains why Romance is a repulsive genre.

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Internal consistency check

For Smart Bitches Day, I thought it would be fun to see if my views on the romance genre are stable over time, or if I am thoroughly full of shit.

Remember the post where I went on and on about what I wanted from a romance novel? Well, I found one I really, really liked: Jennifer Crusie’s Bet Me, recommended by the wonderful, insightful Darla.

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Love’s a bitch

Once again, I will wade out into my Sea of Ignorance, get in deep over my head, and cough, sputter, and puke my way through yet another Smart Bitches Day. Today’s topic, since I received very few orgasms from y’all (and, besides, Beth has already said every damned funny thing about orgasms possible), is breaking up.

I shall begin with a quote from that other expert in love, Matt Groening:

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, March 27, 2006. Category: Love.
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