Authors: Erica Jong
Tags: #Health & Fitness, #Sexuality, #Literary Collections, #Essays
We saw each other a few more times after that. Perhaps fittingly, the last time I saw him was at my mother’s memorial service.
We all know, in some abstract way, how our parents’ sexuality inflects ours; but we often talk about it obliquely, laughingly invoking Freud and taboos, or keeping such thoughts for a therapist’s office. My parents’ story was a romance in the classical sense, but it was also, from another perspective, a romance novel, steamy, lewd in intervals. If it had had a different ending, it would have seemed more troubling, but because it had the right kind of ending—they lived happily ever after, sort of—it became a romance. As it got told, collectively, in its fragments over the years, the story is bittersweet. They are found out and forbidden to see each other. My father loses his job at the Catholic school; my mother is sent to the public school. She applies to college as a junior and is accepted to Barnard. She elopes with my father—yes, elopes—joining him in New York in an apartment against the wishes of her parents. My mother is sixteen or seventeen, I am not sure. They are always evasive on this point. Never mind that the marriage might be said to have erased the crime. One day—“it was a beautiful day, the most beautiful day you could imagine,” my mother told me two months before she died—my mother’s father was driving to work when he had a heart attack. A few minutes later, he was dead.
My mother told her mother she didn’t have to get married. Her mother said: No. You are going to get married—here in our backyard. The wedding pictures are square black-and-white photos with crimped edges. My father is—for once—in a suit, his hair at an awkward length, curling strangely around his ears. My mother is beautiful in a white lace dress and Spanish veil.
It seems to me that all these intersections, of romance, of love, get at something larger than just my family’s story. They get at a kernel of a truth about how quickly the role of love and sex shifted in young women’s lives. At seventeen, I was frightened of love because I found it potentially limiting. At seventeen, my mother was excited by love, because she found it expansive, eye-opening. It brought her out of suburban New Jersey and into Brooklyn and Barnard in the 1970s, at a time when young writers and artists were first congregating in the borough. She had children and became an educator. I feared that love would hold me back. Like many liberal-minded women of my generation, I thought it was my birthright to be sexually free in my twenties. The frames we came to sex and romance with led us to make radically different choices. Who knows if either was better; the point is just that we make choices, and then we live them out. That is life. Volition is really only a small part of the whole.
It was harrowing to see M. in those weeks near my mother’s death. Perhaps that’s why I wanted to. To remember what it was to be sixteen trying to become adult, to see sex as the gateway to an adulthood just out of reach—and to remember the grace of falling in love, of finding a person who took me “somewhere I have never travelled, gladly,” much as with my father my mother went somewhere she had never traveled, gladly—to Brooklyn, to a world of Szechuan food, drafty brownstones, painters and writers and teachers, conversation and children.
It is of course discomfiting to write this account. These words still feel too frontal to me, too unironic, too cerebral to capture the dark spaces and silences, the night hours that shape our ideas of need. Putting into words any theory about my mother and myself is to turn the complexity of our experiences into a single narrative, rather than the loom of fine threads it is. As I finish, it occurs to me that perhaps that’s why Cummings writes “somewhere I
never
travelled.” Desire, love, these are places we cannot map and fail to return from, so that they live within us below the surface: our Neverlands.
A Dramatic Triologue
Eve Ensler
(To be performed by Three Women)
WOMAN
1: Sometimes it’s so can’t stop
Take off shirt
Undo belt
Clumsy
You do it
No, I’ll do it
Undo bra
One more hook
Strip down
WOMAN
2: Sometimes it’s all about
Skin just skin
Just the way skin
WOMAN
3: Oh God, sometimes it’s like mouth on mouth
Teeth
Tongue
Have to
WOMAN
1: Sometimes
It’s accidental
You thought you were friends
And this current
Turns into one week
In a small hotel room in East Berlin.
WOMAN
2: Oh, nice. Who was that?
WOMAN
3: Sometimes it’s
About watching
WOMAN
2: Or being watched
Undressing in front of him
In front of the big window
WOMAN
1: Sometimes it’s you putting a hand
On yourself
And him watching
And Rome watching him
Watching
WOMAN
2: Sometimes
It’s a crowded boat filled
With cheering tourists
On the Adriatic
As you’re both caught there
Naked humping in the sand
And you don’t stop
WOMAN
1: You didn’t stop?
WOMAN
3: Sometimes it’s scuff marks on the off-yellow carpet
In the posh South Kensington apartment
WOMAN
2: Sometimes it’s a dare
Forty-five floors up
Mouth on him
In a building that once existed
And he comes by the time
WOMAN
1: Oh God, I always dreamed of doing that
WOMAN
3: Sometimes it’s driving on the mad
Italian speedway at a thousand miles
Your face buried in his jeans
WOMAN
1: Sometimes it’s a melting hot
Summer day and you’re passed out
In the afternoon
And you wake up with his rugged face
Between your legs
WOMAN
2: Sometimes it’s a work night
And you get home early
And you take a bath
And undress
And play with yourself
Lying there casual and stark naked
On the bed
And you’re on your knees before she remembers
It’s been a hard day
WOMAN
3: I didn’t know you were with women . . . when was that?
WOMAN
1: Sometimes it’s the twenty-nine-year-old thin boy
From the village
With the curly black hair
Who comes to your summer house
On the edge of the sea
And kisses you and you know it’s August
And you’re suddenly not fifty-four
WOMAN
3: Sometimes it’s a song
WOMAN
2: Or a joint
WOMEN
123: Or too much chocolate
WOMAN
1: Sometimes it’s only chocolate
WOMAN
2: Or birthday cake at midnight
Because one of you is married
WOMAN
3: No, you didn’t
WOMAN
2: I didn’t. I wanted to, but I didn’t
WOMAN
3: Sometimes he just says do you mind
If I kiss you and it occurs to you that you don’t
And you end up with your mouth on his for eight hours and
The sun comes up
WOMAN
1: Sometimes you wake up and he’s inside
You and your body is more aroused ’cause it’s
So early and you’re so
Sleepy and nothing has ever felt like that
WOMAN
3: Sometimes it’s that window
Wide open in Montauk
And it’s so bright you’re
Only wearing sunglasses
Looking out
As he takes you from behind
Sweating and screaming out
WOMAN
2: And sometimes
It just happens in Portugal
For the first time in seven years
You find each other
And you’re not afraid
WOMAN
1: Sometimes it’s the hysteria that comes
After he has been that deep inside you
And the crying is a way of coming
WOMAN
2: And sometimes
It’s riding him like a bronco
WOMAN
3: Or humping her like you’re about to get there
WOMAN
1: And sometimes it’s the three of you in a hot tub
And you end up entangled not knowing
Whose hair whose mouth whose hand
WOMAN
2: And sometimes you dress up
And they take it off you
WOMAN
3: Sometimes it’s hardness
WOMAN
2: It’s softness
WOMAN
1: It’s grabbing
WOMAN
2: It’s refusing
WOMAN
3: It’s dangerous