GothMistress
Virgin
- Joined
- Feb 18, 2007
- Posts
- 1
Looking for talented male writer who loves to write voluminous posts - lots of intricate description and detail. Love affair roleplay - you should love to build a romantic, innovative storyline. You should love to write lengthy narratives and dialogue filled with sexual buildup and tension, as well as romantic and erotic sexual scenes, sexual tension and conflict, lots of detailed character development. I know no one is immune to typos, but looking for someone with great attention to detail and a skilled, attentive writer. Sorry for the lengthy initial description, but have a really good RP in mind and want to see if any males are up to the challenge.
Hopefully my post will give you somewhat of an idea of my writing style.
The main characters:
Thirty-four year old widow named Catherine, has school-aged kids, well-educated with a successful career. Loses her husband of eight years in car accident. She's devastated but she's tough and determined to raise her kids as best she can alone. She's smart, savvy and sexy but at the same time, she presents a sympathetic figure not just due to her widowhood, but because she's fair and ethical-minded almost to her own detriment. She's plagued with uncertainty about the future and struggles with indecision about whether she should allow herself to get involved with a man again because she has children to raise. But she's so strongly drawn to a colleague it seriously hampers her resolve.
She's a beautiful woman and looks nowhere near what a thirty-four year old mother might look like. She looks like a twenty-one year old college student with her long, blonde hair, blue eyes, flawless, very fair skin, college-girl slender figure and slightly zany personality.
In her department at work is an unmarried man in his late forties named Andrew. They've worked together on and off over a couple of years - they met after she was widowed.
He's very personable, intelligent, handsome in a non-traditional way, friendly, well-liked and respected. He's quite successful in his own career and is very well-educated. He also appears younger than his true age but is wise and sharp beyond his forty-eight years. He has a wonderful sense of humor and is universally loved, respected and trusted.
He's also very work-oriented but is secretly desperately lonely. He fills any time not consumed by work with a couple of hobbies and occasional visits to his family on the other side of the country, but finds he can't concentrate on them because of the deep loneliness and angst filling his heart. He's essentially resigned himself to permanent loneliness. His last long-term relationship was almost three years earlier, no one since then.
Then he meets Catherine when she comes to work there, and over the course of a year the attraction, tension and internal conflict mounts painfully. He wants her but can't bring himself to do something about it. Working with her each day amounts to torture because he can't touch her, hold her or kiss her as he so desperately wants; he can't expose even the slightest hint of the deep longing for her.
He knows workplace relationships, especially where one outranks the other (he outranks her), can be treacherous. However, he still falls very deeply in love with her. Over the course of the second year, after he's admitted he is very deeply in love with her, he has to find a way to tell her. He knows she feels it too, but how can he break through the myriad problems that a pre-existing workplace relationship presents?
Andrew has many friends, but two very close friends who have made up their inseparable trio since their first year of college together. His two friends are both married with children and though they no longer have the time to get up to all the antics of their college days, their three-way friendship runs deep and strong.
His two friends, Steve and Alan, try to discourage him privately from further involvement with Cathy because she has children. They have nothing against her personally, they assure him. In fact, she's terrific and we love her. But she's got kids and that changes everything. Trust us on this, they tell Andrew. They try to make him see that he should break it off because she'll want to get married someday and he'll end up being a stepfather with a "ready-made" family not consisting of any of his own kids.
But he loves her deeply and reverently, bordering on obsession and near-craziness with the intensity and depth of his feelings for her. But can he handle becoming part of a "ready-made" family? What will happen? Finding her changed him fundamentally, making him do things he never thought he'd do in his wildest dreams. She's unique, willing to experiment, adventurous and independent. At heart he's fairly conservative and traditional, and she opens up new horizons to him.
His family, all the way across the country, finds out about his relationship and his parents, brother and sister strongly discourage him from being with her because she already has children. They still envision Andrew getting married and having children of his own someday. They pressure him very strongly and Cathy accidentally finds out about it.
After some painful conversations Cathy realizes that the net effect of their relationship would be a negative for him because his family so strongly disapproves. She understands the deep importance of family and cannot bring herself to make him choose between having a love affair with her and a happy, peaceful relationship with his family.
She knows he will protest and will stand up to his family on her behalf. But she knows he will regret it - she did the very same thing when she married her late husband and both of her parents died without ever having the opportunity to mend things with her. She knows he will regret it for the rest of his life if he is forced to choose between his family and the woman he so deeply loves, so she makes the choice for him and though she knows it will pain her for the rest of her life, she tells him they have to end it. What will happen to them?
PM me if you'd like to role-play. Might also need two other males to play Steve and Allan, and one other female to play Cathy's closest friend, a married, thirty-eight year old woman named Carla with one teenage son.
Perhaps we can PM to get the finer details down, maybe exchange initial posts to see how we'd make this play out. If we exchange posts and it just isn't floating either of our boats, no offense will be taken if you lose interest and want to move on to something more to your liking.
(I will be out and about most of the weekend with already-planned events. I expect to get to my PMs Monday evening - bear with me. I'll reply.
)
The main characters:
Thirty-four year old widow named Catherine, has school-aged kids, well-educated with a successful career. Loses her husband of eight years in car accident. She's devastated but she's tough and determined to raise her kids as best she can alone. She's smart, savvy and sexy but at the same time, she presents a sympathetic figure not just due to her widowhood, but because she's fair and ethical-minded almost to her own detriment. She's plagued with uncertainty about the future and struggles with indecision about whether she should allow herself to get involved with a man again because she has children to raise. But she's so strongly drawn to a colleague it seriously hampers her resolve.
She's a beautiful woman and looks nowhere near what a thirty-four year old mother might look like. She looks like a twenty-one year old college student with her long, blonde hair, blue eyes, flawless, very fair skin, college-girl slender figure and slightly zany personality.
In her department at work is an unmarried man in his late forties named Andrew. They've worked together on and off over a couple of years - they met after she was widowed.
He's very personable, intelligent, handsome in a non-traditional way, friendly, well-liked and respected. He's quite successful in his own career and is very well-educated. He also appears younger than his true age but is wise and sharp beyond his forty-eight years. He has a wonderful sense of humor and is universally loved, respected and trusted.
He's also very work-oriented but is secretly desperately lonely. He fills any time not consumed by work with a couple of hobbies and occasional visits to his family on the other side of the country, but finds he can't concentrate on them because of the deep loneliness and angst filling his heart. He's essentially resigned himself to permanent loneliness. His last long-term relationship was almost three years earlier, no one since then.
Then he meets Catherine when she comes to work there, and over the course of a year the attraction, tension and internal conflict mounts painfully. He wants her but can't bring himself to do something about it. Working with her each day amounts to torture because he can't touch her, hold her or kiss her as he so desperately wants; he can't expose even the slightest hint of the deep longing for her.
He knows workplace relationships, especially where one outranks the other (he outranks her), can be treacherous. However, he still falls very deeply in love with her. Over the course of the second year, after he's admitted he is very deeply in love with her, he has to find a way to tell her. He knows she feels it too, but how can he break through the myriad problems that a pre-existing workplace relationship presents?
Andrew has many friends, but two very close friends who have made up their inseparable trio since their first year of college together. His two friends are both married with children and though they no longer have the time to get up to all the antics of their college days, their three-way friendship runs deep and strong.
His two friends, Steve and Alan, try to discourage him privately from further involvement with Cathy because she has children. They have nothing against her personally, they assure him. In fact, she's terrific and we love her. But she's got kids and that changes everything. Trust us on this, they tell Andrew. They try to make him see that he should break it off because she'll want to get married someday and he'll end up being a stepfather with a "ready-made" family not consisting of any of his own kids.
But he loves her deeply and reverently, bordering on obsession and near-craziness with the intensity and depth of his feelings for her. But can he handle becoming part of a "ready-made" family? What will happen? Finding her changed him fundamentally, making him do things he never thought he'd do in his wildest dreams. She's unique, willing to experiment, adventurous and independent. At heart he's fairly conservative and traditional, and she opens up new horizons to him.
His family, all the way across the country, finds out about his relationship and his parents, brother and sister strongly discourage him from being with her because she already has children. They still envision Andrew getting married and having children of his own someday. They pressure him very strongly and Cathy accidentally finds out about it.
After some painful conversations Cathy realizes that the net effect of their relationship would be a negative for him because his family so strongly disapproves. She understands the deep importance of family and cannot bring herself to make him choose between having a love affair with her and a happy, peaceful relationship with his family.
She knows he will protest and will stand up to his family on her behalf. But she knows he will regret it - she did the very same thing when she married her late husband and both of her parents died without ever having the opportunity to mend things with her. She knows he will regret it for the rest of his life if he is forced to choose between his family and the woman he so deeply loves, so she makes the choice for him and though she knows it will pain her for the rest of her life, she tells him they have to end it. What will happen to them?
PM me if you'd like to role-play. Might also need two other males to play Steve and Allan, and one other female to play Cathy's closest friend, a married, thirty-eight year old woman named Carla with one teenage son.
Perhaps we can PM to get the finer details down, maybe exchange initial posts to see how we'd make this play out. If we exchange posts and it just isn't floating either of our boats, no offense will be taken if you lose interest and want to move on to something more to your liking.
(I will be out and about most of the weekend with already-planned events. I expect to get to my PMs Monday evening - bear with me. I'll reply.