Corylea
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- Jun 25, 2008
- Posts
- 885
I wrote a handful of stories on alt.sex.bondage in the early 90's, and for almost every story, there was a point in the story where I had to look away from my computer screen, so that my eyes wouldn't see what my fingers were typing. Once I was finished and looked at it, whatever it was didn't seem that extreme, but while I was putting it down, I couldn't look.
I felt like a real twit for having to do this, then I read an anthology by Pat Califia where she* said that she'd had to pretend to herself that she wasn't going to publish these stories in order to be able to write them. That made me feel better, because if PAT CALIFIA has to trick her internal censor, then I'm not a complete dork for having to do so, either.
I was wondering about you all. Are there ever times when something you're writing seems like it's somehow too much, and if so, what tricks do you play on yourself to be able to get the words down?
*Yes, I know Pat's a "he" now. He identified as a lesbian when he wrote this, and I don't know the protocol on trans stuff -- do we retroactively change Pat's gender to male for stuff he wrote while he identified a woman, or do we use the old pronoun for the old work and the new pronoun for new work? I chose to use whichever pronoun the person himself was using at the time the work was done. Anyway, not trying to be offensive, just not sure how to handle this issue.
I felt like a real twit for having to do this, then I read an anthology by Pat Califia where she* said that she'd had to pretend to herself that she wasn't going to publish these stories in order to be able to write them. That made me feel better, because if PAT CALIFIA has to trick her internal censor, then I'm not a complete dork for having to do so, either.
I was wondering about you all. Are there ever times when something you're writing seems like it's somehow too much, and if so, what tricks do you play on yourself to be able to get the words down?
*Yes, I know Pat's a "he" now. He identified as a lesbian when he wrote this, and I don't know the protocol on trans stuff -- do we retroactively change Pat's gender to male for stuff he wrote while he identified a woman, or do we use the old pronoun for the old work and the new pronoun for new work? I chose to use whichever pronoun the person himself was using at the time the work was done. Anyway, not trying to be offensive, just not sure how to handle this issue.