PennLady
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- Mar 26, 2009
- Posts
- 9,413
Good thing your wife didn't reject that trope.
hee hee hee
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Good thing your wife didn't reject that trope.
Good thing your wife didn't reject that trope.
I agree with PennLady: I should write the kind of "Romance" I want to read. I'm full of romantic ideals, and I see love everywhere.
I want to read/write a "Romance" about equals who are perceived to be equals as opposed to equals where one is more equal than the other until demonstrating some pointless heroics.
But thing is there are different types of "bad boys" in my case I never verbally, emotionally or physically abused a woman.
All my shit was between me and other trouble makers who could hit back and put up a fight. In fact I'm a known man hater so not your typical bad boy type.
That's an interesting way of looking at it. Surprising to me, just because it's quite different from the way I normally look at things. For me, even in a non-sexual, non-romantic context I love stories about people coming together as a team, accomplishing something great together that none of them could do alone; that's kind of fundamentally a story about utility, though not specifically utility to another person. Some of the stuff I write has a race of hermaphrodites, so there is no "male utility" vs. "female utility", but there's often a character who has a self-esteem issue related to either lacking an ability their culture values, being mistakenly assumed to lack an ability, or having others refuse to acknowledge their exceptional ability due to prejudice.I fundamentally don't like the whole subtext of "utility" determining fuckability. People have inherent majesty irrespective of their utility to others.
My problem with "Romance" is that I CAN'T imagine anyone lusting for the woman who must be "won". The woman who turns away the man she desires because of her pride or his lack of status deserves to be alone.
I can't understand her being the subject of lust. The woman who waits for her prince to come is a sad empty shell. Why would the prince want her even if his psychic visions somehow enabled him to find her?
I want to read/write a "Romance" about equals who are perceived to be equals as opposed to equals where one is more equal than the other until demonstrating some pointless heroics.
A man who continues to inject himself into a woman's life after she has angrily told him to stay away multiple times is called a STALKER. The male protagonist should be in jail. Instead, he wins her heart and they live happily ever after. If he had been uglier - then he'd be in jail.
I'll be honest, the "bad boy" trope no doubt gets tired, but many times he's almost a faux bad boy. He's the bad boy who isn't really, who's just had bad breaks and would go the straight (haha) path if someone gave him a chance. Then he finds the one woman who gives him a chance and he takes it. Then of course it's a few steps forward and back until the resolution, but like I said, I don't think the "bad boys" in so many romances are, in fact, bad people.
I just write the story I want to write. I let others decide what genre it fits in best. I don't care if there are "rules" for Romance or BDSM or anything else. I let others worry about that.
I don't recognize that any "crowd" determines what BDSM is and what it isn't. It's a whole range of intensity of activities. Fuck 'em (bound and whipped even). Let them write their own stories.
So in conclusion, I think utility is seen in different ways depending on the situation, and in fact two people don't have a relationship at all if they don't have at least social or emotional utility to each other, i.e. each is happier and mentally healthier spending time with the other person than being alone. Thus utility is an essential ingredient of romance, but should be equal between the two characters and not defined narrowly in an economic way.
A heroine who is attracted to a man but rejects him anyway clearly already sees part of his "utility" in some sense. I agree "at least social or emotional utility" are required for any relationship. Both of those traits work bidirectionally between people irrespective of power or status differences.
In contrast, expecting the hero to overcome obstacles in order to be worthy of accessing the vagina is narcissistic. What (other than existing) has the heroine done to be worthy of all that effort? Such stories are the chick-lit counterparts of "fuck the vapid slut" stories written for men who can only see walking vaginas and not whole people.
If she had met me at 23 she would have had nothing to do with me.
She met me at 33 when I'd settled down quite a bit. Still had the look and more than a bit of the attitude, but kept myself out of any actual trouble.
But thing is there are different types of "bad boys" in my case I never verbally, emotionally or physically abused a woman.
All my shit was between me and other trouble makers who could hit back and put up a fight. In fact I'm a known man hater so not your typical bad boy type.
My issue with the bad boy trope-and yes I know its fiction, but we all have are peeves-is let's face it the women who go with the bad boy?
Most of the time it ends in at the least a broken heart, ruined credit, alienated from friends and family etc...
Sometimes it ends in restraining orders and drama and pain, both emotional and the physical it took to get the restraining order. In the most pronounced cases it can end in death.
Again, I know the harlequin bad boy is always soft on the inside and can be redeemed. But the reality is its rare. I'm the first one to say I am not a "nice guy" but I'm good to my wife who is all that matters.
In fact my biggest issue with 50 shades and the material it blatantly copies Twilight is both glorify abusive stalkers. Twilight has teenage girls thinking abusive men are hot and Shades hits the older women with it.
No one can deny that fact its just how much it bothers one person to the next as a suspension of reality.
Gray and Ed or whatever the vampire goon is named is the type of bad boy this bad boy gained his reputation on.
This place _is_ an arbiter of taste.
Meanwhile, I remain in awe of the other authors here including those of you in this thread. I look at your pages full of red 'H' icons, and I long to be one of you.

I said pretty much the same thing over at AbsoluteWrite a few weeks ago. Response from the other forum posters mostly disagreed and was not sympathetic though. :/I'm sure that's my own insecurity speaking: If I write a story and nobody likes it, I reasonably feel like my story is undesirable. My story is a tiny sliver of my psyche - and nobody likes it![]()
Something to keep in mind, until the vacuum cleaner and laundry machine being a house wife was more or less the only job for a woman because it was FULL time.
I am not kidding, doing laundry was taking it to the river or filling a bucket with water and then hand washing every article of clothing, sheet and towel in the house. This took upwards of three hours to do. Plus there wasn't getting pre cut steaks, you got a hunk of meat and cut it yourself. Not to mention sweeping the house and dusting.
Stories set before laundry machine and vacuums meant a woman looked at a man and decided if he is cute enough, can provide money and continue to provide money. Not because she is a vain little bitch, or only wants a man who makes more than anyone else. This was important because the wife kept the house clean, made sure the kids lived as long as possible, and made the meals.
To a certain degree this is still the prevailing view of women. Not because they have house work to do all day every day, because their mom had the same view on what is important, along with grandma and great gram. I see in articles about relationships that women view having a good paying job as needed. Bullshit, men don't have to make more than a gal, it is better if they do because most of us want to be the stay at home mom, because mom was.
Some of us (at least me) try to please the audience. This place _is_ an arbiter of taste. I think categories do have rules even if I haven't figured them out yet. Well, "loving wives" is chaos.
I write stories I enjoy writing, but I share stories I hope others enjoy. When they don't enjoy my stories or even see some abstract merit, I have failed.
I'm sure that's my own insecurity speaking: If I write a story and nobody likes it, I reasonably feel like my story is undesirable. My story is a tiny sliver of my psyche - and nobody likes it[and/or my technical presentation skills suck]
I had high hopes for my return to Literotica. It hasn't been all bad, but my stories are the person standing alone against the wall at the school dance. My stories are the kid picked last for sports. I want my stories to be popular. When they aren't, well, dances and school sports suck...
Meanwhile, I remain in awe of the other authors here including those of you in this thread. I look at your pages full of red 'H' icons, and I long to be one of you.