Fifty Writers on Fifty Shades of Grey (11 page)

BOOK: Fifty Writers on Fifty Shades of Grey
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Third, we must stop buying into the media obsession with equating female fantasy with female fulfillment. Discussions of
Fifty Shades of Grey
often include sly suggestions that reading the book will revitalize your sex life, that it will tell women what they really want from their men, and men what women want from them. It can be a satisfying fantasy without being anything else.
Fifty Shades of Grey
and its sequels are not, and shouldn’t be touted as, nonfiction self-help books. Encouraging readers to emulate them is irresponsible in the extreme.

Finally, readers have to accept that if they’re going to indulge in books with problematic themes, they will hear some criticism, and this criticism isn’t personal. Many women reading the Fifty Shades novels are reading them as their first experience with erotica. The tie (no pun intended) between the sexual content of the book and the sexual fantasies of the readers builds a minefield critics have to navigate cautiously. In the company of other ardent fans, readers are safe to lavish praise on the books and the characters without any attention paid to the undertones of abuse and control in the story. Faced with criticism, many fans of the series interpret it as a direct attack on themselves and their sexual desires. Then the cycle of excuses starts all over again: “Christian bought her that computer because he loves
her! He spanks her because he had a bad childhood!” When this happens, the reader isn’t defending the series; they’re defending their right to be turned on, which shouldn’t be a part of the discussion. Or the fan resorts to ad hominem attacks on anyone who doesn’t like the books, calling detractors “prudes” and suggesting they don’t have satisfying sex lives. What was once a discussion about books is dragged into a quagmire of personal attacks.

Ideally, we would live in a culture where abuse and romance weren’t so easy to confuse, where women could look at a man like Chris Brown or Christian Grey and see them for the predators they are. We would be able to draw a line between what women want in fiction and what they want in reality, and we would be able to draw a similar line between what we feel comfortable fantasizing about and our social consciences. To get there, we have to face some uncomfortable truths about ourselves and our culture.

So, imagine your daughter. She can be real, or hypothetical. If you’re child-free, imagine your sister, or a friend. Imagine
Fifty Shades of Grey
never existed, and this woman you love has brought home her new boyfriend. He’s rich, he’s handsome, he’s charming, although you suspect his charm is carefully tailored. He emails and texts her often, demanding to know her whereabouts. He has her cell phone traced, so he can follow her against her wishes. He reacts with jealousy to her friends. He physically hurts her when she’s made him angry, but she assures you that she’s okay with that, she’s agreed to it and signed paperwork that makes it okay. Every time she talks about him, she’s vague and moody. She cries often. She believes she can change him.

This is the deciding moment. Do you pick up the vibrator and fantasize about him, or do you pick up the phone and call the police?

JENNIFER ARMINTROUT
is a
USA Today
bestselling author of urban fantasy and paranormal romance. She also writes award-winning erotic romance under the pseudonym Abigail Barnette. She lives in Michigan with her husband and two children.

JUDITH REGAN

Fifty Shades of Play

A dame that knows the ropes isn’t likely to get tied up
.

—M
AE
W
EST

H
E WAS THE UGLIEST MAN I’d seen in a while. Bad teeth. Fat. Bald. Not at all the image of what my friends imagined I’d find desirable. At first glance he repulsed me. As did his atrocious grammar, stunning narcissism, and cocky demeanor, which were laughable.

But then something happened that turned my repulsion to attraction, my disgust to lust.

I was seated beside him at a dinner when he suddenly, boldly and unexpectedly, grabbed and squeezed my leg under the table.

His wife was seated across from us, which no doubt added to his thrill.

Here I was, a fiercely independent woman who’d loved and lost and loved again. I’d built a dazzling company, had beautiful, bright, loving children, an array of scintillating friends
worldwide, and a bank account with enough fuck-you money to last a lifetime.

I had no time for romance, no interest in marriage, and a hot affair was the last thing on my mind.

He pursued me with a vengeance. He was powerful, too, and had his aides deliver a seemingly never-ending array of gifts: thousands of long-stemmed red roses, endless lingerie, and a life-sized stuffed lion with a motion detector that groaned and roared in his voice when I walked by. He even sent an Audi in my favorite color and a laptop fully loaded with erotic photos of a stunning twelve-inch cock attached to a hand masturbating it.

With each gesture I was repulsed and shocked and more and more titillated. It had been years since I felt so pursued. And despite all of his negatives, his allure was electric. He wanted to possess me, to own me, to make me his. For weeks he’d call at 1:00
A.M.
and in his lowest, deepest voice he’d speak of the one thing every woman loves to hear: his desire for me.

I loved it. I wanted it. I fully imagined each and every cruel thing he said he wanted to do to me. He would make me beg for his cock, make me watch while other women prepped it for me. He would teach me to worship it, to run for it, to kill for it. He would handcuff me while he placed the large fat tip in my mouth and force me to sit still while he masturbated and poured his come down my throat, he would force me to put two fat dildos in my cunt while he pumped his throbbing meat into my ass. He would instruct me to lick the dicks of all of his friends under a table while they played cards, after which they would gangbang me.

I was his, and I would be his whore. When he called I would run. I would do as told. He would have me open my blouse while driving and expose my tits. I would have implants to make them huge for his pleasure. I would bring him women as toys, and I would hold their tits up for his sucking pleasure. I would lick them to prepare their juicy cunts for his hot cock. And if I pleased him, he would reward me with Take 3, his code
word for one in each hole. In these late-night calls he reminded me again and again that I was his, that he would possess and control and own me, and that if I ever tried to leave him, he would kill me.

I started to believe him.

And as any forty-six-year-old woman with years of experience and a log full of memories of men would do, I agreed to meet him.

In a hotel room. Of his choosing. At his expense.

We set the time. One of his aides would arrive in advance and deliver the key to me after checking us in under an anonymous name. He was famous and didn’t want to get caught.

The suite was huge. I was to arrive thirty minutes before him. He was military precise in his plans and maneuvers. Everything down to the second.

I was waxed and buffed and polished with new pearly white veneers, freshly covered grays, highlights, lowlights, brows shaped, seven pounds lighter, firmed up, semi-permanent lashes, stunning mouthwash, seven-inch Christian Louboutins, a black lace push-up bra peeking through my hot pink satin blouse and a desire that burned inside me in a way I’d never known.

After setting out my toys and gadgets (he’d had one of his aides hand-deliver the list) I sat on the plush, teal velvet couch in this massive suite, my leg bobbing nervously, freshly doused in Déclaration, his favorite Cartier perfume.

I was nervous, thrilled, excited, and ready.
Loaded, cocked, and ready
.

Thirty minutes passed. Then forty-five. Fifty. Sixty. For a man with a fierce dedication to detail, this was another surprise. I called his cell. No answer. I called his cell again. No answer. I called his cell a third time. It was off.

Was this to show me that he owned me? That my time was his? That I would wait? That he could keep me waiting? With each passing minute I grew more anxious. Should I leave? Had something happened to him?

He arrived eighty-two minutes late. He announced it as he came in, tore off his clothes, and jumped in the shower.

“I ran into Anna Kournikova at the airport. Her driver was late so I gave her a ride into the city. She invited me in. I didn’t have time to call you,” he said as he walked out of the bathroom soaking wet.

I was to wait. I was to submit. To accept. To take his crumbs. To honor his every move. Every word. I was to stroke his ego, to open myself up to any and all of his desires. I was to sit at his feet awaiting his next order, ready to serve, and be thrilled for the asking.

He pulled a whip and handcuffs out of his bag and threw me on the bed.

He placed the handcuffs beside me.

I told him I was nervous. I needed a drink to relax. I asked his permission. I begged him to join me in a toast to his cock.

I poured the champagne. We clicked. Sipped. Then gulped.

Within minutes he was drowsy and barely able to move. The drug worked quickly as promised. He collapsed on the bed and I quickly handcuffed him to the bedposts.

He was having a hard time comprehending what was happening but I lifted his knees to his chest, strapped a double dick strap-on to my waist, and told him to beg for more as I penetrated his eager ass.

He didn’t know what he was saying, but I fed him line after line.

SAY IT!

I worship your dick
.

Fuck my ass
.

Rape my ass
.

I am a cock lover
.

I want to be fucked
.

I am your cock slave
.

Finally, I shoved a large, thick, black glass dildo into his mouth, two in his ass, and said, “TAKE 3, MOTHERFUCKER.”

He passed out after that. I collected my things, including the hidden camera I’d installed in the room, turned on the iPod player on which I had downloaded our tape-recorded phone conversations, and pumped up the volume. I wanted him to hear it as his wake-up call.

Mae West said it best: “A dame that knows the ropes isn’t likely to get tied up.”

JUDITH REGAN
is a publisher, talk-show host, and producer. She hosts
The Judith Regan Show
on the SiriusXM Stars Channel.

SUZAN COLÓN

Forbidden Fruit Is the Sweetest

W
HEN I WAS ABOUT seven years old, I was at my very best friend Elizabeth’s house when she took me aside and told me a secret: her mother had a stash of
Playgirl
magazines hidden somewhere in the house. “There are pictures of naked men in them!” she whispered.

When her mother said she was going to the supermarket and would be back in half an hour, we promised we’d be good. The moment the door closed behind her, the hunt was on: we ransacked that place like federal agents acting on a hot tip. And we found the magazines! Oh, the mysterious male anatomy, finally revealed … I think we even sneaked one of her mom’s cigarettes to double the decadence.

We had only a limited time to fill our eyes and imaginations before Elizabeth’s mother was due back, and almost as good as the discovery we’d made was covering it up. We ran around, giggling with nervous hysteria, as we tried to put the magazines back as we’d found them, then opened the window and fanned out the cigarette smoke. We might have gotten away with it all
if we hadn’t been standing stiffly in the living room, side by side, like two good little soldiers, when Elizabeth’s mother returned.

That was my first sample of the unique and luscious flavor of a guilty pleasure, and understanding the ingredients—harmless naughtiness, mixed with a hint of secrecy—that went into one. I’ve been addicted to guilty pleasures ever since.

I’d read erotica before
Fifty Shades of Grey
, and each time I remembered the lessons I learned that day with Elizabeth: pleasure is fun, but a pleasure that gently tests the conscience and remains covert is even better. So I kept erotica, which sometimes overflows into mainstream popularity, as a hidden indulgence, one for me to enjoy in private. Especially when partaking of erotica that was rough.

Erotica has always been present in books and films, just out of view of the public eye. But every few decades, BDSM comes out of the dungeon (or, in this case, the Red Room of Pain) and has its moment in the mass market sun. Regular folks whose preference for whipping items usually extends only as far as a whisk for cream will line up to see Kim Basinger handcuffed in
9½ Weeks
, or to buy brutal and sexual versions of fairy tales by Anne Rice, writing as A.N. Roquelaure. And now everyone and my godmother have read
Fifty Shades of Grey
.

Why does BDSM have that mass moment? Maybe because we reach a saturation point with vanilla sex, as Christian Grey would call it, and we want a little … more (though not the “more” Anastasia asks Christian for, meaning a real relationship). If our society perceives sex as being naughty, and it does, then BDSM is the naughtiest of the naughty. BDSM is more than sex; it is potentially dangerous, not just physically, but emotionally. BDSM is sex with paddles and floggers, with handcuffs and clamps, and what truly makes traditional sex pale vanilla in comparison is the understanding that one person holds the flogger and the other is being flogged. In BDSM, sex is secondary
to the true game of seduction: power and trust. The submissive must trust the Dominant to employ bondage, to administer corporal punishment, and, most important, to play by the rules: when the safeword is uttered, the submissive must have faith the play will stop.

But—and that is a big safeword in this scenario—BDSM is not generally considered completely unacceptable in the way that something truly harmful might be. Christian’s own list of hard limits could have been taken directly from a romance publisher: no puppies or kitties, no kids, no fire, no unmentionable acts. Such high moral standards from a man who has a special drawer filled with whipping canes of varying lengths and widths.

Christian is also a man who knows the value of a guilty pleasure. Is he proud of the fact that he gets off on flogging the ladies? Not really, as Dr. Flynn’s surely impressive therapy bill might suggest. But Christian isn’t truly hurting anyone. Therefore, that guilt doesn’t stop him from luxuriously kitting out an entire room for the discerning Dominant with taste and means, purely to indulge his, yes, guilty pleasure.

There’s guilt, and then there’s shame.

Shame can scare us off an action for life, or turn it into a hidden activity that can lead to obsession, which usually ends in remorse. Anyone who’s been made to feel ashamed about the natural exploration of sex as a child has hopefully undone the damage with his or her own version of Dr. Flynn.

Guilt, though, is a lesser emotion, on just on the right side of that fine border between pleasure and pain that Christian tells Ana about. The difference becomes clear in the way Ana feels about her exploration of Christian’s lifestyle. “Why does this feel so good?” she asks herself—usually right before asking for more.

In theory, being tied up and flogged by one’s lover shouldn’t feel good; in practice, however, it may. Even if it does, though, one generally doesn’t admit it, for fear of being judged. The social stigma against such acts keeps them behind closed doors,
safe in Red Rooms. (And think about it: if BDSM were acceptable enough to be spoken about over bagels at brunch, would it be as much fun?)

What keeps women who swap their bracelets for handcuffs quiet about it is the thick skin required to withstand not just a good spanking, but the withering stare that follows such admissions. Conventional society’s judgment of anyone who likes painful games? They’re weird, crazy, depraved, sick, and setting feminism back to the Stone Age. That nondisclosure agreement isn’t the only thing that keeps Ana from telling her best friend, Kate, about what Ana and Christian do in private. Christian’s binding (pun unavoidable) contract notwithstanding, Ana still can’t bring herself to tell Kate, or anyone else, about what Christian wants to do to her … or why she wants him to do it.

Part of her silence may be due to embarrassment; Ana knows what people will think and is afraid of people talking her out of her own investigation. Another part may be the scandal that would ensue if word got out about what Christian, a well-known businessman and philanthropist, has going on in that Red Room of Pain.

Mostly, though, I like to think that Ana doesn’t talk about what she does with Christian, or, more to the point, what Christian does to her, because she likes having a secret.
Yes, my boyfriend is a Dominant—and I think I like being his submissive
. Not exactly a line heard at most dinner parties. If it is, chances are good that the ante will soon need to be upped, because pleasures that come easily and become commonplace also get dull fast.

A few months before my wedding, I went on a diet. High fiber, low calorie, no fat, zero fun. Caning had nothing on this regime.

When the wedding day finally came, I had my first piece of cake in months. This was the best cake I’d ever eaten. This cake was like mind-blowing drugs in IMAX, it was so good. Deprivation had done more than get me thin; I’d developed a taste
for forbidden fruit. To a mind trained to diet, the cake was still technically verboten. A cheat.

After the wedding, with a renewed hunger for sweets and no big event to diet for, I ate sugar with abandon. Chocolate craving in the afternoon? Have some. Want dessert? You bet. But when I gave myself permission to eat what I wanted without thought of consequence, that treat wasn’t as good as when it was a cheat. The missing ingredient? The sweet taste of mild guilt, of doing something that I “wasn’t supposed to do,” and of having to hide my deed.

This is the problem with permissiveness; it’s just not that much fun. In high school, the most messed-up kids I knew were the ones whose parents smoked pot and drank with them. How can a kid engage in rebellion—necessary for growth—against that?

My parents weren’t terribly permissive, but there were some disappointingly easygoing moments. Every week I’d get together with my biological father, who my mother divorced when I was young. On one such visit, I remember finding
Story of O
in his bookshelf. (It wasn’t even hidden.) He’s an artist, so the version of
O
my father had was illustrated—what would now be called a graphic novel—by Guido Crepax. My father had a tendency to treat me, his teenage daughter, like an adult in matters of culture, so he didn’t see why I shouldn’t be allowed to look at a graphic novel about graphic sex. Graphic, sadomasochistic sex.

Well, I was thrilled. Not only was I being treated like an adult, I was being given free rein to look at penises and sex—very artistically rendered, of course. Fantastic! And yet … there was something missing from this transaction: everything that had been so fun the day Elizabeth and I found her mother’s
Playgirl
s. The sweetness of doing something naughty, the mild guilt of harboring this secret from authority figures, like my parents—hell, one of my parents had very nonchalantly given me permission to read it. Sure, I was going to look, but some of the thrill was gone before I even opened the book.

We love rules and boundaries. They keep order, but they also keep forbidden fruit sweet.

Women have a rich history of cheating on diets, starting with Eve. There was only one thing she couldn’t have, and that was the only thing she wanted. I like to think of her in exile, wearing her fig leaf minidress, and saying to Adam, “Yeah, but it was
sooooo gooooood
. If I find more of that stuff, I’m making an entire pie out of it.”

Pandora also had a craving. Only one thing she wasn’t supposed to do. Only one thing she wanted to do. Cue the sound of a box being opened—consequences,
shmonsequences
. Which was more alluring for these women: the taste of the apple and the satisfaction of knowing what was inside that box, or doing these things despite the
thou shalt not
? There’s something so bright and shiny about the thing you can’t have or shouldn’t do.

The recipe for a delicious guilty pleasure, then, is:

Naughtiness
. For a guilty pleasure to work, it must have a piquant hint of being taboo. Remember, though, the guilty pleasure must be only slightly forbidden and not outright harmful. Anything that would harm you or another being is not a guilty pleasure, but something destined to bring on true pain. Conversely, if a relatively harmless action brings on too much internal agony, then an appointment with Dr. Flynn is in order.

Secrecy
. Telling everyone about a guilty pleasure nullifies the guilt. The people who love you will say there’s nothing to feel guilty about. Some people may admit that they do the same thing, in which case you’re no longer the heroine of your own story; if everybody’s doing it, what makes you special?

Yet what makes a guilty pleasure even better is telling someone what you’ve done. You need some sort of accomplice, even if it’s only a diary. For Ana, that accomplice is Christian, who is deep inside his lifestyle, yet is brought outside of it by Ana’s questions of how he became this way.

Long before
Fifty Shades of Grey
was discussed on the
Today Show
, my friend Donna said, “Have you heard about this book?
All the girls in my office are whispering about it.” Whispering. Not discussing it openly, but speaking in hushed tones so the boss didn’t hear them talking about how sexy a book about bondage could be. They knew how to keep a guilty pleasure good.

Recently, I was on the train and saw a woman who exuded an air of permissive entitlement. She was a person of size, possibly because she ate what she wanted, weight be damned. She defied societal norms by letting her hair go gray. Under her somber charcoal business jacket, she wore vibrant batik patterns. She was fierce.

The woman was reading
Fifty Shades of Grey
. I knew this because she had a paper copy instead of an e-reader in her hand, and she wasn’t even attempting to hide the cover. A man was watching her read; he’d clearly heard the hype, knew what the book was about, and couldn’t help a tiny
Tee-hee, you’re reading lady porn
smirk from forming on his face.

The woman shot him a defiant look. She was going to read her erotica in broad fluorescent trainlight, and to hell with anyone who tried to imply that she couldn’t.

Of course she could. But I felt like taking her aside as my friend Elizabeth had done with me many years ago and whispering an important bit of information: Madame, you’re missing the point. I’m reading
Fifty
in public, too—but on my iPad, so no one can tell. Not because I’m ashamed, but because it’s more fun this way. There’s nothing more delicious than a guilty pleasure. The sauce, my dear, is in the naughty secret.

BOOK: Fifty Writers on Fifty Shades of Grey
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