SimonDoom
Kink Lord
- Joined
- Apr 9, 2015
- Posts
- 19,110
I had to think about how to respond to this one, because I get what the OP is saying, but I have my own way of approaching this so I don't quite feel the same way.
I've said this before, so I know I'm repeating myself, but I think it's responsive to the thread. I don't strive for reality. I strive for verisimilitude: I want the story to seem just realistic enough. I don't worry too much about plausibility, or whether what the characters are doing is REALLY realistic. I don't care too much whether it's too boring or too over-the-top. I try to put just enough things in my story that make it plausible enough to keep the reader moving along, to make the reader buy into what I'm trying to convey. It works for many readers, but it doesn't work for some. It works for me, most of the time, and that's enough. It's what I call the "Zen Garden" approach to story writing. I'm not trying to duplicate reality, just to artfully suggest it in my own way. Reality is a huge palette with many dabs of paint, and I can choose which ones to apply to the canvas.
Reality IS banal, but banality can be part of what makes a story so erotically satisfying, to me, at least. It's sexier to write about a seemingly ordinary mom getting into an outrageously hot, sexy situation than writing about a sex-crazed, Double D porn-star type doing the same.
Stick to whatever reality/fantasy balance works for you personally. That's probably what will result in the best story.
I've said this before, so I know I'm repeating myself, but I think it's responsive to the thread. I don't strive for reality. I strive for verisimilitude: I want the story to seem just realistic enough. I don't worry too much about plausibility, or whether what the characters are doing is REALLY realistic. I don't care too much whether it's too boring or too over-the-top. I try to put just enough things in my story that make it plausible enough to keep the reader moving along, to make the reader buy into what I'm trying to convey. It works for many readers, but it doesn't work for some. It works for me, most of the time, and that's enough. It's what I call the "Zen Garden" approach to story writing. I'm not trying to duplicate reality, just to artfully suggest it in my own way. Reality is a huge palette with many dabs of paint, and I can choose which ones to apply to the canvas.
Reality IS banal, but banality can be part of what makes a story so erotically satisfying, to me, at least. It's sexier to write about a seemingly ordinary mom getting into an outrageously hot, sexy situation than writing about a sex-crazed, Double D porn-star type doing the same.
Stick to whatever reality/fantasy balance works for you personally. That's probably what will result in the best story.