southdakota2005
Open Couple
- Joined
 - Oct 21, 2009
 
- Posts
 - 31
 
I like your wife's views. Honesty, the story describes a near impossibility. Yes, I'm in an open marriage but even I wouldn't do such a thing if I was out with my husband on a romantic date. I might dance with a famous celebrity, but no matter how handsome and persuasive he might be, I'd have to decline. In my open marriage we have very specific rules to live by, and suddenly going off with a man like Linda did in the story wouldn't happen at the spur of the moment. Now sure, if the celebrity wants to become our friend and we later have a connection, and with my husband's permission, I could be persuaded to bed him. But not in the circumstances outlined in the story.When I handed my wife the original George Anderson version of “FS,” her reaction wasn’t subtle. “Did Linda fall out of the stupid tree and land in a dumpster fire?” she asked, genuinely baffled by the character’s decisions. Keep in mind, my wife is Irish, from New York City, and raised on a steady diet of sarcasm and Dateline reruns — so when she says something, she means it. She didn’t waste time imagining what she’d do in Jim’s shoes either. According to her, Linda wouldn’t get a redemption arc; she’d get a cautionary tale, complete with Keith Morrison ominously narrating, “She thought she could outsmart everyone… but someone else had already drawn the line.” Safe to say, Linda better be thankful other writers showed mercy. Because in my wife’s version? Linda's story ends with a garden spade, a tarp, and a chilling voiceover about “what really happened... that cold night in February.” Yeah, sleep with one eye open, fictional Linda.
Honestly, I’m just glad I’m the one doing the writing; it’s the only reason Linda’s still breathing by the end.