Tag Archives: sexuality

To Hurt and to Hold

This post originally appeared on the previous Tequila and Ink Blogspot page on July 26, 2011

“Bobby, your boner is poking me,” he mumbles. He says it in a way that implies the appendage is no more offensive than a leg or an arm. He came from a part of my life when people called me Bobby.

“Sorry,” I say, shifting my body away from him.

He’s a nurse from an old group of friends, a group that used touch as a form of communication. Boys and girls, resting our heads on each others’ laps and casually draping our legs over shoulders. We could fit seven of us on a couch and still be comfortable. We embraced the warmth and care of each other without the pheromones and motivations that came with sexual exploits.

I guess that’s what he and I are doing, considering we’ve been sleeping with each other for months but haven’t so much as exchanged a kiss. When we sleep together we abide by the definition of the word, keeping our genitals and body fluids to ourselves but reveling in the connection of entering the twisted reality of dream with another person.

Besides, he smokes and I don’t appreciate the taste of ash the way I used to.

I run my hand through his hair. His Chinese ancestry gifted him with sleek, wispy hair and high cheekbones, a strong but balanced brow and a wide jawline that seems to have a Western influence

A few minutes later he rises from bed, the bruise I planted on him last night blossoming on his side. The muscles of his stomach are always more defined in the morning, dehydrated and craving nourishment. His shoulders are wide from the push ups he frequently partakes in, like the ones he’s currently doing on his bedroom floor.

He’s been teaching me to spar in his living room, sometimes the back patio if the weather is comfortable. We exchange fists and feet in a flurry of violence then collapse into a heap of tangled limbs and affection on the couch, sometimes discussing our new love interests and other times soaking in the silence of our souls. I used to attempt to avoid that silence, fill it with music and books and movies, conversations with strangers and bottles of beer, but I’ve become more comfortable with it over time.

Usually we’ll only spar for an hour or two a night, but sometimes when we’re feeling frisky we’ll go for hours, sweat spraying into each others eyes and knuckles sliding across shoulders. But we always remain to nurse bruised bones and bleeding elbows.

Someone to hold, someone to hurt, isn’t that what everybody really wants?

We sneak in and out of each others’ apartments, discover new ways to cover cuts and bruises, avoid intertwining our fingers around friends. The parallels to an abusive relationship aren’t lost on us.

Eventually we mentioned our situation to friends. Some were hostile, others curious and full of questions we weren’t quite sure we knew the answers to. We were met with some rolling eyes and we answered with shrugged shoulders, often responding with “I don’t know.” Some don’t believe us and others ask “what’s the point?”

Our friendship is defined in a way that crosses the boundaries of traditional camaraderie but doesn’t quite roam into the realm of romance. We walk the borders in between, nomads declaring ourselves citizens of neither and left to fend for ourselves between the opposing sides.

It’s about finding what’s comfortable.

And sometimes running your fingers through the hair of a close friend while he rests his head on your lap, splitting a six-pack of Shiner Bock, and watching an episode of Misfits together is what’s comfortable.

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Butterfly

This post originally appeared on the previous Tequila and Ink Blogspot page on September 7, 2011

She woke me up with a light slap on the face. I groaned and took a moment to dig the crust out of my eyes and acquainted myself with my surroundings: her bed, her bedroom, her.

She’s my lesbian ex-girlfriend. Everyone should have one.

We did it again. It seems to inevitably happen at the most unexpected times.

“Did we really do this again?” I asked, “I mean, is there like a punch-card or something? The fifth lay turns us straight?”

“Cured,” she sang slowly, a reference to a joke made during similar mornings in the past.

I asked her if she could get me a Capri-Sun and play some Dragonette, one of our favorite musicians.

ALL OF THE DRAGONETTE,” she hummed, speaking in bizarre Internet-meme language. She slipped a t-shirt over her head as she stood up. Her bedroom was similar to mine, a mismanaged mess of boxes and furniture, signs of an upcoming move. She loaded a song on her laptop and left. When she returned she was sipping on a Capri-Sun with another in her hand.

“You know sometimes I worry that you’re just using me to relive your rape,” I said.

In her attempt at suppressing her laughter the clear liquid from the Capri-Sun pouch sprayed from her nose and rolled down her lips.

“Is it okay for me to laugh at that?” she asked. Her hair was buzzed, but growing back. The extreme haircut was an attempt at regaining control and she instantly regretted it, embarrassed like someone caught naked. Fortunately her face is narrow and lined with sharp angles, chin and nose and cheekbones in all the right places and littered with a star-scape of gleaming piercings on her eyebrow and nose and lip. The hair is an irrelevant sidenote, an unnecessary frame.

Small strips of white medical-tape were wrapped around several of her fingers, cuts from playing with her newest toy, a butterfly knife. I’ve watched her use it in the past, the blades gracefully dancing between her fingers and the clack-clack-clack of metal striking metal. Watching her do it made me nervous, left butterflies energetically batting around in my stomach and cutting up my insides.  It’s a hobby she picked up from a few of our other friends. She was only doing what myself and so many others have done, attempting to find peace through violence.

“You really need to stop with the butterfly knife thing,” I said, eying the bandages, “This will make you the fourth person I’ve dated that has one.”

“That says something fucked up about you, not us,” she said, taking her butterfly knife in hand and twirling it among the flesh of her fingers.

Clack-clack-clack.

“I swear if I wake up castrated… well… I guess I won’t do anything, considering the number of suspects.”

Clack-clack-clack.

I rose from bed and dressed myself, said something about how I had to get going because of work and moving and everything that needed done. She walked me to the door and we stood in the doorway avoiding the word “goodbye.”

Through her short hair I noticed a small, round, barely noticeable birthmark about an inch deep into her hairline. It was a speck, minuscule, a dot from an ink pen. She’s shorter than me, and I took her head in my hand and pulled it towards me.

I left a kiss on that dot, because it was a part of her I’ve never kissed before.

We finally found our voices and exchanged goodbyes.

Our fingertips separated but the fluttering in my stomach lingered. As days passed the fluttering died down.

But the clack-clack-clack of one lone butterfly remains.

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