and this is why i’ll never write porn

One of the more difficult things I’ve had to do this week is create sexual tension between two monsters.  Not real monsters, mind you, although that comes with it’s own set of problems.  These are monsters in the story I am writing.

The issue isn’t with the monsters themselves.  Yes, they have gray skin, dull black eyes, ice-pick teeth and sharp claws.  The male monster, Cid, is a sarcastic sonofabitch with a short fuse.  He desperately wants to “blow off some steam” with the female monster, Nel, but she isn’t having any of it. However, she still flirts with him, bats her dark lashes and leads him on, right before she slams the door in his face. She’s kind of a cruel bitch, but that’s why I like her. Cid deserves it, anyway.

Even if Cid and Nel were human, that scene still would have been hard for me to write. Why? Because to do it well takes subtlety. Finesse.  I want to convey intent with a look, tension with a slide of a hand along a door frame, desire with a tilt of a chin. I am all about the “show don’t tell” aspect of writing.  To come right out and say what’s on Cid’s mind would plunge the narrative into the arena of ”heaving bosom” pulp romance.  That is definitely not the style I’m going for.

Ask me to kill a character and I can gleefully spew out a few hundred words of blood-soaked prose describing every detail of the poor schmuck’s demise and, if I’m lucky, I can even make you giggle a little while reading it. Call me sick, but I like writing that kind of stuff.  It comes easy.  (“Easy” is a subjective term, by the way. All writing for me is a mind-grinding, gut-wrenching experience that often involves tears and rending of clothing.)

But ask me to write about two people flirting with one another and I draw a blank. Flatline. Dammit, Jim, I’m a writer not a sexologist! (that’s a thing, right?) I’ll fumble about in my brain, groping around in the dark, fingers pawing the air hoping to eventually caress the words I know are cowering in there somewhere.  It’s like the worst, most awkward round of “Seven Minutes In Heaven” ever.

Why this happens should be obvious. I am terrible at flirting.

I am not a subtle person. I’m big and loud and when I talk I use flailing hand gestures that quite often send glassware flying.  Without thinking, I’ll blurt out terribly offensive things in mixed company.  My laugh can be heard from three rooms away.  And, the thing is, if anyone of the opposite gender happened to find this behavior in the least bit charming, I would be the last one to notice.  Because as bad as I am at flirting, I am even worse at detecting if I’m being flirted with.

I didn’t really think about all this too much, until I read the following quote by author, Neil Gaiman:

In my experience, writers tend to be really good at the inside of their own heads and imaginary people, and a lot less good at the stuff going on outside, which means that quite often if you flirt with us we will completely fail to notice, leaving everybody involved slightly uncomfortable and more than slightly unlaid.

So I would suggest that any attempted seduction of a writer would probably go a great deal easier for all parties if you sent them a cheerful note saying “YOU ARE INVITED TO A SEDUCTION: Please come to dinner on Friday Night. Wear the kind of clothes you would like to be seduced in.”

And alcohol may help, too. Or kissing. Many writers figure out that they’re being seduced or flirted with if someone is actually kissing them.

In my case, this is so unbelievably true.  If it weren’t for a blind date set up by my sister, I may never have gotten married.  But while this sheds light on my behavior, it does nothing to solve my creative block when it comes to writing sexy scenes.  If only I could just hand my characters a “seduction note” and have that be the end of it.

And, if anyone is actually reading this, bless you.  I have been a terrible blog-friend these past few weeks.  As you can see, I’ve had my hands full with some amorous monsters.  I promise I will soon try to carve out some time to read all the wonderful things I know you are posting on your own blogs.

37 thoughts on “and this is why i’ll never write porn

  1. That’s such a great quote by Neil Gaiman… really makes a lot of sense. What I would like best is for everyone (guys in particular) to have a name-tag on their back. “Hi, I am single and interested.”, “Hi, I am not single, that girl on the far side of the bar dancing with her friends is my super jealous girlfriend”, “Hi, the girl I’m walking with is related to me, and I’m single.” Would be SO much easier! That plus a hand-out type card that says, “I’m flirting with you right now” would seriously help me on the dating front.
    Good luck with your sexually tense monsters :)

  2. I’m reading Neil Gaiman’s American Gods. I found out about him from an ex who read the Sandman comics. I love this quote!

    As for you, lady, you can write anything. This blog alone tells me you have the talent and ability to write some of the best stuff in the world. I’m sure writing scenes about sexy time will be difficult and a challenge, but you have accepted it and now it’s Mission: Impossible time, minus the Tom Cruise because he’s overrated anyway.

    Good luck!

  3. You could simply write around the problem. You could have the monsters be married to each other. That way, there wouldn’t be any flirting, but they could talk about whether it’s trash day and who’s going to pick up the dry cleaning.

  4. People in general are awful at picking up on being flirted with. We can see it happening to others, but not ourselves. I agree though, it’s probably worse for wordpeople.

    I have no idea how you’re going to do this for monsters. I thought about it, I have block on your behalf.

  5. I don’t think I can do flirting, let along porn, without the giggling coming through loud and clear in my writing. At least with monsters you can make up your own signs of attraction “Her gray skin turned sickly green – a sure sign of arousal.”

  6. Your post made me think AND smile, Great piece.
    Until you quoted Neil Gaiman (he IS the bomb, and he’s married to Amanda Palmer of Dresden Dolls too -Double Excellent!) I too going to ask if your monsters drank hahahahaha. It DOES solve the flirting for me, but on the downside I have woken up with a monster in bed. Along with the inability to remember the cunning lines of flirtation I (or above mentioned monster) may have spoken.
    Have to say that there were no shortage of non-monsters and monsters when I was sober. I believe it’s just a random look, some subject that both people find in common and are passionate about, or can better yet, laugh about.
    Good luck, I think the subject you are tackling is a good one -and there’s no reason it won’t involve your normal teeth gnashing, clothes rending mind burning creative process -grin-.
    Once again, a wonderful post and it’s good to see you!

    • When I start drinking, people think I’m flirting with them when I’m not. Alcohol makes me over-nice and kinda handsy. Bad, bad news.
      I think writing about monsters is easier because I don’t have to make them conform to human standards of acceptable behavior. And, since the whole situation is a bit ridiculous, I can add a lot more humor.
      Thanks, Rachael!

  7. I’m having a particularly hard time with flirting awareness. On a related note, I know an amorous monster you could consult for pointers. On the other, I don’t think you want him knowing your phone number or anything.

  8. Oh, I’d go for the gorey monster-sex details here. The aroused green shade is a good one, but you could have scale-curling, fire-breathing scorchy love scenes all over the place. Certain monster-specific erogenous zones would come into sexplay, and they can squirt all sorts of colorful fluids and release series of scents with fartific sound effects… What a challenge.

    Hm…flirting, though… it should involve multiple embarrassments and premature capitulations, I’m certain.

  9. Another great post with several laugh out loud lines. I especially enjoyed “my laugh can be heard from three rooms away” and really that entire paragraph. If you need any help with the sex scene, you know I’m always here (hehehehe). I think it would be a riot to have a turned on hordt change colors–then the flirting would be obvious. And remember, as our good friend Misty says…the difference between porn and romance is lighting!

    • Between you and Adrienne, I got plenty of help with sex scenes! I was wondering if with their coloring, if Hordts could blush or not. There is still so much about their species I don’t know. And I love that quote from Misty!

  10. Are monsters anything like birds, with mating rituals and flashing their tail, snapping at each other, wallowing in the sand, etc. I kinda like the thought that they have human like qualities that make flirting difficult and confusing. Less like monsters, more like Saturday night club scene. Definitely I think they should drink.

    • That’s the ten million dollar question, Lenore. I hope you’ll be able to read it one day, while sitting on a beach, the pages fluttering in the ocean breeze.

  11. You crack me up! I am going through the same thing and wrote a “Sexercise for My Book.” I included sexual attraction in my last fiction Friday too. One thing I learned is that there are levels of intimacy, a look, a touch, holding hands, etc. One of the best tips I read was to read above your erotic level. That was actually pretty fun and my husband loved it! Hahaha!
    Glad to meet you. I have been seeing your avatar~

  12. I know exactly what you mean. I don’t think I could ever write a seduction scene. “And then they did it” is about as romantic and descriptive as I could get.

    • That pretty much says it all, doesn’t it?
      “Stephan lowered Isabel’s quivering body to the satin-covered bed. And then they did it.”
      Perfect!

  13. I did laugh a bit through this post but not in mockery and not even just in amusement (although I thoroughly enjoy a good Amy post!) I can totally relate to that. If someone does not come right out and tell me I AM FLIRTING WITH YOOOOOOOOUUUUU!! I don’t get it.

    “more than slightly unlaid.” hahaha-lol-lmao…that was awesome.

    Thank you for sharing! I hope I get to read some of your stories soon.

    • I love when people laugh WITH or AT me, so it’s all good! When I first read this quote I cracked up and then face-palmed because it is soooo me.
      I’m working on a novel right now, but I may post an excerpt here for folks to read.
      Thanks, Dionne!

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