From Wikipedia:
Disinhibition can mean:
- Loss of inhibition, as through the influence of external stimuli such as drugs or alcohol, or as a result of brain damage.
- Unrestrained behavior resulting from a lessening or loss of inhibitions or a disregard of cultural constraints.

“Please know from my heart that I am not an anti-Semite. I am not a bigot. Hatred of any kind goes against my faith.”
Drunk.
Lunatic.
Anti-Semite.
Add to the list:
Liar.
Hypocrite.
And to think I used to keep a poster of him (as the Road Warrior) on my wall during college. Mel, I thought you were cool. I was such a dumbass.
D.
RWA attendees, did you miss me? Here’s a Smart Bitches Day post for y’all, to welcome you back.
Aside from our third trip to the beach for kite-flying (yay! Success this time!) (and the woman sunbathing in the nude — she’s worth a yay, too. Yay!) I spent the weekend writing 8000-and-something words, half of which comprised a chapter-long sex scene.
Beta readers, never fear, you’ll be getting it soon enough. But I have a question for the general audience. Being a guy, I like my sex scenes nasty and graphic. Are there any boundaries Which Shall Not Be Crossed? Writing this scene, I didn’t give much thought to the question. I merely tried to write a scene which worked for me. And, oh boy, did it ever.
What are the rules?
D.
Oops! Edited to add (so as to fit Beth’s theme, ‘What kinda romance will you NOT read’):
What kinda sex scene will you NOT read?
My answer: any sex scene in which, at the moment of orgasm, the universe is mentioned.
D. For real this time.
Twenty minutes ago I discovered a new low to which I would sink in order to be the center of attention. But to be violated by three women — how could I pass up an opportunity like that?
We all know Republicans hate sex*, particularly if they suspect everyone else but them is having it. Well, a crafty bunch of liberals has devised a way of using this weakness — call it an Achilles’ Scrotum — against them:
A new website tells sexy liberals how they can help beat Bush by promising to fuck a conservative in exchange for his or her guarantee not to support Bush.
Fuck the Vote is part satire and part activism, taking cues from both MTV’s Rock the Vote campaign and from the porn industry; the website shows pictures of the growing number of liberal male and female models ready to knock boots to knock out Bush.
It chokes me up, thinking of all those brave young men and women willing to take one from a Republican in exchange for a single vote. Now that’s selfless sacrifice.
In other news: Mel Gibson preempts the tabloids by posting a photo from his recent bust for driving under the influence. Yes, Mel, your arrest facilitates the International Jewish Conspiracy‘s plan for world domination. We’re still pissed over The Passion.
D.
*There must be a name for the rhetorical trick of assuming a fact without providing any proof. On the other hand, there’s a Latin legal phrase for situations in which the facts are so plainly obvious no one would dare disagree: res ipsa loquitur, the thing speaks for itself.
In preparation for tonight’s live video blogging session (8 PM to 9 PM PST, longer if Dean shows up), I’ve decided to set out some basic ground rules for my personal behavior.
1. Do not rub, scratch, or otherwise fondle your nose. No matter what you do to your nose, everyone will think you’re picking it.
2. Floss your teeth before going live.
3. Unless you look like Erin O’Brien (and I know you don’t, Hoffman), keep your shirt on. No one wants to see your hairy man-tits.
4. Do not verbally upbraid, badger, beat, or maim your son, or inflict any damage which might cause Child Protective Services to rain heavily down upon your ass.
5. Try to ignore all the flaky sex-chat folks who come around looking for a good time. Then again, maybe you should lead them on. It could be fun for the others. Hell, let’s have a verbal orgy!
6. SMILE for a change. You are so grim sometimes.
Now go out there and break all the rules!
D.
Here’s some linky love to go with your morning coffee:
Michelle posted a great list of editing tips. No matter how many of these lists I read, I always learn something new.
Michelle has also been infected by the cheesecake meme. First, Dean feted us with calories, and now Michelle wants to make me fat, too. But you won’t see me posting any cheesecake recipes. My son doesn’t like it and my wife never eats more than a slice. I’ll give you one guess who winds up eating 90% of the cheesecake.
I’m feeling loose this morning. Do you have a post you want hyped? Leave a comment, and I’ll give you some hot linky love.
D.
After a long hiatus, our favorite Latin blogger is back in action! Mel Gibson comments on his recent arrest for suspicion of DUI:
They told me that drinking the blood of Jesus was a crime. If being a true Christian is a crime for which I may be
persecutedprosecuted, then I will demand the death penalty!
Go give him some love, people.
***
Who wants to see me go live?
I’m going to try to go live with my webcam tomorrow evening at 8 PM PST. Come on over for a chat if you’re in the mood. Who knows, it could be fun.
But I have to warn you . . . for some reason, I seem to attract lots of strange sex chat people. Folks with really limited imaginations.
Stay tuned.
D.
I don’t know how well these books stand up over time. Fond memories do not often equal a pleasurable reread. Recently, I tried to reread Lloyd Alexander’s Prydain series and thought it a pale imitation of Tolkien. And I’m not even all that crazy about Tolkien.
A list like this is a biography of sorts — or, at the very least, a growth chart. Here we go.
1. Sailor Jack and Bluebell, by Selma and Jack Wasserman. I’m amazed you can still find this book online. Why do I remember it? (A) It was the first book I memorized and was able to ‘read,’ and (B) as a 4-year-old, it provided no end of chortling entertainment, owing to the wilful mispronunciation of Bluebell as ‘blueballs.’ Oh, I was quite a card.
2. Curious George, by H. A. Rey. With my sister’s help, I learned to read thanks to the Curious George series and the L.A. Herald Examiner Sunday Comics. (Oh, Prince Val, will you ever come out of the closet? And Lois was one of my early crushes. Look at the rack on her, will you?)
3. Amazon Adventure, by Willard Price. Here’s the set-up: brothers Hal and Roger travel the world with their father, who captures exotic animals for a metropolitan zoo. In this, the first novel of the series, dad gets taken out of the picture early (stabbed by spies, or something like that — I haven’t read this book in nearly four decades!) so the boys have to finish the job on their own, battling Amazonians (nothing PC about this book, no sirree), army ants, anacondas, and some sort of predatory cat.
Recently, I picked up a copy of this book, thinking Jake might like the series. Atrocious writing, laughable dialog — I couldn’t get past the first chapter. As a kid, I read the whole series.
4. Dorp Dead, by Julia Cunningham. Orphan boy gets adopted by ladder-building freak who keeps him locked up in a cage. Creeeepy. According to the publisher, this novel “dramatically changed children’s literature in the 20th century.” I don’t know if that’s hyperbole, but I do recall this book was way different than anything I’d read up to that point (3rd of 4th grade, that is).
5. Bless the Beasts and the Children, by Glendon Swarthout. Maybe I liked the tragic ending. Maybe I was a closet conservationist as a kid. Or maybe I was a twisted little perv who loved the scene in the movie when the in-crowd kids piss all over our hapless heroes. Yeah, one of those. I certainly didn’t love it for the sappy Carpenters song.
6. The Tripods series, by John Christopher. Another early introduction to tragedy — and I’m still a sap for unhappy endings.
7. Lord of the Flies, by William Golding. Even as a kid I understood that other little kids were beasts. Not me, of course. The rest of ’em. Golding merely confirmed what I had already suspected.
8. Earth Abides, by George R. Stewart. I went through a long post-apocalyptic phase wherein I inhaled Earth Abides, Erewhon, Lucifer’s Hammer, and God only knows what else. That’s about the time I saw the movie A Boy and His Dog, one of my all-time favorite SF films. What I remember best about Earth Abides: a stranger comes to live with a group of survivors. Somehow, the men in the group figure out that this new guy has VD. They ask themselves: we have a good thing going here. Do we really want to have some guy with the clap screwing our women? And so they kill him. That made a big impression on my as a kid.
Another near-apocalyptic short story I remember well and still love: Larry Niven’s Inconstant Moon, a romantic story about a man and woman on the eve of disaster. Here’s the full text.
9. Relativity, by ???. From 2nd grade until 6th grade, I must have checked this book out twenty times. In the beginning, I loved the bug-eyed looks the older kids gave me when I read it in the library. As I got older, I loved the book itself. Great explanations of the twin paradox and the expanding universe, the red-shift, and the Doppler effect. All of the math got stuck into the appendix (I remember puzzling over the Lorentz transformations — way beyond me, even in 6th grade). Those were the days, when a guy could impress girls by reading a gnarly-looking book.
10. To Live Again, by Robert Silverberg. What if you could collect the souls of famous or talented dead people and stuff ’em into your skull? And what if they didn’t particularly like being there? Sadly, my memories of this one far exceed the experience of re-reading. I tried it recently and couldn’t even get through the first 50 pages.
11. Inferno, by Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle. Thirty years ago, Niven and Pournelle took a cheap shot at Kurt Vonnegut by imagining his gravestone in hell, with the inscription, So it Goes. Well, ha-ha, Vonnegut’s still going strong (well, he’s still going, at any rate). Despite this cheap shot, I enjoyed Inferno well enough to read it a few times. It’s a modernization of Dante’s Inferno, in case you hadn’t guessed, and one of the better fictional treatments of hell, in my opinion.
12. All the old Vonnegut: Breakfast of Champions, The Sirens of Titan, God Bless You Mr. Rosewater, Mother Night, Slaughterhouse Five, and especially, Cat’s Cradle. As a pre-teen and young teenager, these were my primers on cynicism, religious skepticism, and irony.
13. Xaviera! Her Continuing Adventures, by Xaviera Hollander. I lost my literary cherry to Ms. Hollander, the woman who fed my teenage obsession with sex. I don’t remember this book as being erotic, so much as nuts-and-bolts graphic. Thanks for all the woodies, Xaviera.
D.
Leave a message in the comments, and I’ll give you some cool linky love below.
Pat’s List of Literary Wunderkinds (wunderkinden? help me out, Gabriele)
Invisible Lizard has 13 of his own favorites, too
Thirteen sucky flowers from Kate (seven, actually, but since there’s multiple flowers in each photo, we’ll let her slide)
Erin O’Brien searches for her G-spot, with a little help from her friends (so it’s not a 13. so sue me.)
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