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'10 Authors Insider Tips
Cooking Up A Storey by Donna George Storey Have More Good Sex I Can Do Better ... Trying to Get the Feeling Plotting and Planning Character Profiles Discovery Draft Be Bad to Be Good E-Book Revolution Naked for Halloween Sex With Pilgrims FictionCraft by Louisa Burton The Music of Words The Balancing Act Your Fictional World Backstory & Foreshadowing The Fine Art of Submission by Shanna Germain Nailing the Query Letter Banish the Boring Bio Becoming a Market Master Become a Market Master, 2 Backstory & Foreshadowing Enticing An Editor, Part 1 Enticing An Editor, Part 2 Contracts, Money & More Serious about Smut by Vincent Diamond No More Horsing Around Short Stuff Selling Short Stories Editors' Pet Peeves Settings: Beyond Time & Place Beating Up Your Scenes Selling Your Books in Person Staying in the Saddle The Write Stuff by Ashley Lister Broken Rainbows Talk the Talk Equations 10 Commandments for Writing Plotting to Avoid Cover Story Rewriting '10 Smutters Lounge Ashley Lister Submits by Ashley Lister St Valentine's Day Renaming Body Parts Sex, Cigarettes & Erotic Fiction Between the Lines with Ashley Lister C. Sanchez-Garcia Emerald Kathleen Bradean Lucy Felthouse Neve Black PS Haven Tracey Shellito Tresart L. Sioux Cracking Foxy with Robert Buckley Plenty of Miles Left Don't Worry, Be Happy Fly the Unfriendly Skies Coffee Time Castrated Words Virtual vs. Actual Romance Bait The View from Gallows Hill Get All Worked Up with J.T. Benjamin The Fashion Industry The Same Old Same Old Writing Porn About the Closet ... About Spirituality Making Sense of Religion Worked Up About Monogamy What's Next All Worked Up About Nature Still All Worked Up... Sex Is All Metaphors by Jean Roberta Holiday Ghosts Love and Romance An "Interracial" Epic Trying to Make It Go Away Sexual Etiquette Sex and Children People Against Bad Things Virtual Acceptance His Cold Eyes, His Granite Jaw A Flash of Northern Light |
All Worked Up About Spiritualityby J.T. Benjamin
Stop me if you’ve heard this one. One day during Sunday School, the teacher asks her students, “When someone goes to Heaven, which body part gets there first?” Little Timmy raises his hand and says, “Your head, Teacher.” The teacher says, “Interesting answer, Timmy. Why do you say that?” Little Timmy says, “Because Heaven is up and so when people go up, they go head first so the head gets to Heaven first.” The teacher says, “Very clever, Timmy. Does anyone else have an answer?” Little Susie says, “I know, Teacher! Your hands go to Heaven first.” The teacher says, “Why do you say that, Susie?” Little Susie says, “Because when you pray you hold your hands out and put them together, so your hands are the first things to go up to Heaven, teacher.” The teacher says, “Very interesting, Susie. Does anyone else have an answer?” Little Dirty Johnny says, “I know, I know, Teacher! Your feet go to Heaven first, Teacher!” The teacher says, “Why do you say that, Johnny?” Little Dirty Johnny says, “Because, Teacher, I was hiding in my mommy’s closet watching her and the mailman on her bed and her feet were in the air and she was yelling, ‘Oh, God, I’m coming!’ and if the mailman wasn’t lying on top of her, she’d have floated up to Heaven right then and there!” Thank you! Don’t forget to tip your waitresses! Seriously, though, when you think about it, spirituality and sexuality really fit like a hand in a glove. Although, for that matter, the fit might be better described as being like a penis in a vagina, or if you prefer, a penis in a mouth, or a tongue on a clitoris, or a three-speed vibrating dildo in a…never mind. I’m getting distracted. Where was I? Oh, yes. Sexuality and spirituality go together more easily than one might think. Consider, for example, some of the terms used to describe both spiritual and sexual enjoyment: rapture, bliss, sublime pleasure, delight, high spirits, and so on. Any student of comparative religions and mythologies can’t help but notice the essential role that sex plays in virtually every belief system known to mankind. Pick up any book of mythology and read about how this god fornicated with that goddess or this mortal and produced a great hero or a terrible villain and launched a thousand adventures. Babylonian myths, Chinese myths, Hindu myths, Japanese myths, Greco-Roman myths, Native American myths, and on and on and on. I bring all this up for two reasons. First, this month’s theme on the ERWA email list is “Mythology,” and I’m sure you’ll enjoy the resulting mythologically themed stories that will appear in the July edition of ERWA's erotica gallery. (Shameless plug, here). Secondly, I’m discussing sexuality and spirituality this month because I got into it with one of my conservative friends a few weeks ago about the current state of sexual affairs (pun intended) that has been hitting the news recently. We were discussing the Tiger Woods scandal and my friend (we’ll call him Mitch) said he approved of something FOX News commentator Brit Hume said last January. Namely, Mr. Hume said that Woods’ Buddhist faith was inadequate for him to adequately atone for his numerous infidelities. Mr. Hume said, “The extent to which he can recover seems to me depends on his faith. He is said to be a Buddhist. I don’t think that faith offers the kind of forgiveness and redemption that is offered by the Christian faith. My message to Tiger would be, ‘Tiger, turn to the Christian faith and you can make a total recovery and be a great example to the world.” Mitch’s opinion was that Mr. Hume’s commentary was spot-on. Only Christianity would adequately address Mr. Woods’ sexual issues, or those of anyone who strayed because “only Christianity puts sexuality into its proper place.” That is, sexuality’s only proper role is to create families and to bring babies down from Heaven. Sex for anything other than procreation was, in Mitch’s opinion, abhorrent, and the Bible reflects that, he added. To which I retorted, “Which Bible do you read?” The Bible is chock-full of sexy, lustful, carnal stories of every type in which reproduction plays no role whatsoever. David and Bathsheba. Tamar and Judah. Samson and Delilah. “Yes,” said Mitch. “But all those stories are about physical lust. And people are punished for their lusts.” “What about the Song of Songs,” I answered. “That one’s all about sex.” “No it’s not,” said Mitch. “It’s describing the love God has for the Church.” Seriously? My friend was as serious as a heart attack. “The Song of Songs is a metaphorical love poem between the bridegroom, which is God, and the Church, which is His bride.” I whipped out my copy of the King James Bible, which I keep handy for just such an eventuality. I said, “Seriously? Listen to some of this language. ‘1:13. A bundle of myrrh is my well-beloved unto me; he shall lie all night between my breasts.’ 5:4. My beloved put in his hand by the hole of the door, and my bowels were moved for him. 7:2. Thy navel is like a round goblet, which wanteth not liquor: thy belly is like a heap of wheat set about with lilies.’” I said, “This book is about sex. Two lovers are describing their feelings about each other. They’re talking about each other’s body and about how they look and feel and smell. If this is about how much God loves the Church, why does God bring up the Church’s breasts over and over and over? 4:5 ‘Thy two breasts are like two young roes that are twins.’ Mitch looked at me with thinly veiled disgust. “Leave it to you to find a way to put sex into everything.” I said, “And leave it to you Holy Terrors to TAKE sex out of everything. This is a poem about two young people, in love and in lust for each other. They’re basking in each other’s presence, each drinking in the other’s sexual identity. This book is in the same vein as Romeo and Juliet’s conversations with each other.” Mitch said, “If this book is about sex, then why is it in the Bible?” He folded his arms in triumph, indicating that he had me boxed into a corner. I said, “Maybe it’s serving as a reminder that love isn’t all about devotion to a divine being that can’t be touched or seen. It can be about physicality as much as it’s about spirituality. It’s about embracing the feeling of touching the divine not just with the mind, but with the body, too.” Mitch looked at me with disgust. One more story. There was this Buddhist monk who’d spent years and years trying to obtain enlightenment, which is the highest state of consciousness or awareness, the ultimate goal of Buddhism. He stayed in his monastery with no contact with the outside world. While his fellow monks sometimes snuck out of the monastery and cavorted in the nearby city, this particular monk maintained his discipline. He studied and meditated and pondered for more than a decade, with no satisfactory result. Finally, the monk decided that he was getting nowhere, and he decided to quit. He would announce his decision to the head of the monastery in the morning, and then leave. However, before he did so, the monk wanted to enjoy the same things his fellow monks had enjoyed, the pleasures of which he’d deprived himself all those years. So, after night fell, he snuck over the monastery wall and into the city. He went to a brothel, met an attractive girl, and went to bed with her. Long story short, at the very moment of his climax, the monk obtained enlightenment. He’d reached the ultimate degree of understanding. Frankly, I know how he felt. J.T. Benjamin
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'10 Book Reviews
Anthologies Apocalypse Sex Review by Ashley Lister Bare Souls Review by Ashley Lister Best Women's Erotica 2010 Review by Jean Roberta can’t help the way that i feel Review by Ashley Lister Coming Together...C. Sanchez-Garcia Review by Ashley Lister Coming Together...M Christian Review by Kathleen Bradean Coming Together...Remittance Girl Review by Kathleen Bradean Erotic Brits Review by Lisabet Sarai Fairy Tale Lust Review by Lisabet Sarai Like a God's Kiss Review by Kristina Wright Like a Sacred Desire Review by Lisabet Sarai Like a Veil Review by Lisabet Sarai Making the Hook-Up Review by Ashley Lister Orgasmic Review by Kristina Wright Peep Show Review by Kristina Wright Please, Ma'am Review by Ashley Lister Spark My Moment Review by Ashley Lister Three In One Blow Review by Shanna Germain Unleashed Review by Ashley Lister Erotic Novels Backstage Passes Review by Kathleen Bradean Dommemoir Review by Ashley Lister Fire in the Blood Review by Jean Roberta Freak Parade Review by Jean Roberta I Came Up Stairs Review by Jean Roberta Marianne! A Journey... Review by Lisabet Sarai The Marketplace Review by Lisabet Sarai The Memorial Garden Review by Lisabet Sarai On Demand Review by Ashley Lister Once Bitten Review by Shanna Germain Rock My Socks Off Review by Ashley Lister The Tower and the Tears Review by Lynne Connolly Sensual Romance Coin Operated Review by Lynne Connolly Control Review by Lynne Connolly I Spy a Wicked Sin Review by Harriet Klausner Libertine's Kiss Review by Lynne Connolly The Master & the Muses Review by Lynne Connolly Naked Review by Lynne Connolly Rampant Review by Lynne Connolly Sinful Review by Lynne Connolly Tangled Web (MM Romance) Review by Vincent Diamond Tucker's Sin Review by Lynne Connolly Victor Review by Harriet Klausner Gay Erotica Best Gay Erotica '10 Review by Vincent Diamond Best Gay Romance 2010 Review by Vincent Diamond Biker Boys Review by Jay Lygon Necessary Madness Review by Kathleen Bradean Personal Demons Review by Lisabet Sarai The Royal Treatment Review by Kathleen Bradean Silver Foxes Review by Vincent Diamond Sodomy! Review by Jay Lygon Special Forces Review by Vincent Diamond A Sticky End Review by Jean Roberta Wired Hard 4 Review by Lisabet Sarai Lesbian Erotica Best Lesbian Roamnce 2010 Review by Jean Roberta Fast Girls Review by Ashley Lister Girl Crush Review by Jean Roberta Sometimes She Lets Me Review by Jean Roberta Non-Fiction Best Sex Writing 2010 Review by Ashley Lister A Brief History of Nakedness Review by Rob Hardy Condom Nation Review by Rob Hardy Dictionary of Semenyms Review by Donna G Storey Doctor of Love Review by Rob Hardy Florida’s Purge of Gay & Lesbian... Review by Rob Hardy John Holmes Review by Rob Hardy How Sex Works Review by Rob Hardy The Orgasm Answer Guide Review by Rob Hardy Screening Sex Review by Rob Hardy Sex at Dawn Review by Rob Hardy Whip Smart Review by Rob Hardy |
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