Whats it all about?

  • Losing our virginity…it happens to almost all of us, no matter who we are or where we come from. How did it happen for you? Ever wondered what other people think and feel about this never-to-be-repeated experience? And how much more do we learn as we grow up? I am on a mission to find out. Follow my journey as I collect stories from as wide a selection of British people as possible. From men and women, old and young, gay, straight, Christian, Muslim and Catholic, from the funny and the sad, to the happy and occasionally, the unbelievable. How do I find people to interview? Why do they talk to me? I am in search of the truth. Come and join my adventure.

Contribute your story?

  • Have you got a story you would like to post? Or an opinion you would like to share? Email me: katemonroe@yahoo.com Remember to tell me when you were born and what country you come from. All names will be changed to protect identity.

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Experience Project

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October 2007

October 31, 2007

The mirror crack'ed

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You really can’t ask for more than to Google the words, ‘Halloween’ and ‘virginity’ on 31st of October and come up with a story of Grade A solid-gold creepiness. Click here, if you dare, and witness the horror, the sheer unabashed terror that is David Farrant. If I could put that name into great big spooky capitals, I would. Instead, take look at the picture and imagine a man who has apparently ‘bedded’ 2000 women.

And then Google some more words. ‘In’, ‘your’ and ‘dreams’ should do the trick.

But it’s not all about petrifying ghouls on the one night in the year when the veil between the spirit world and ourselves becomes blurred. It is also a time to plant new seeds and to generally take stock of whatever you might have harvested recently. To this end, The Virginity Project is taking a very brief hiatus whilst it harvests a rather large seed of its own. We have a couple of ‘T’s to cross and a few I’s to dot here at the project…so be assured that normal service will resume ASAP.

In the meantime, perhaps abstinence is an option? If so, here’s some advice - just in case you fall off the wagon.

October 27, 2007

How does your garden grow?

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People often want to know what inspired this crazy journey. What the monkey nuts got me up off my backside and out into the wide world to ask a whole bunch of people, strangers mostly, about one of the most profound personal moments of our lives...the loss of virginity. It's hardly your common or garden pastime. In fact an allotment would have been a lot easier. Heck, I like to garden as much as the next person, but I just don't think it would have been quite as, lets say, absorbing...

The truth is that I was bored and uninspired. Bored of working for people, and uninspired by earning money and spending it on new shoes and dinner. That kind of lays the groundwork, but there's a little bit more to it than that. Lulled into a sense of torpor I may have been, but I was also something else. I was itchy like an itchy thing for a challenge. I was crouched beneath an invisible starting pistol that I didn't even know existed. I was, basically, gagging for a change.

It's a funny old thing, but when you really have the intention to do something different with your life, even if that hot fire of frustration is subconscious, when you've got the steering wheel of destiny gripped between both hands, the universe does have a strange habit of sticking a cosmic sign post in your path and waiting to see if you read it or not. And so it was, that I found myself lounging on El Matador beach one fine September afternoon and breaking the bread with a very special friend. We soon got down to the afternoon's entertainment - the in's and, ahem, outs, of our early sexual endeavours.

J and I had very different stories. His was a boy's for a start, but that wasn't what got my attention. It was more to do with the precision with which he could tell me the dates, times, names and exact details of every single conquest almost but not quite achieved in the lead up towards the literal climax of his story that got me going.

It was the frustration, the lust and the desire, this boy was horny! Alongside the descriptions of parents who had the complete and utter temerity to move to the countryside just as he came of age, thereby drastically reducing his cherry popping chances that made me laugh. It was the pain and the sheer hormonally driven passion to scratch that sensational itch that seems to afflict so many teenage boys just at the point when puberty strikes that captured my imagination. Most of all, I loved the fact that it was all so box-fresh in his mind, so oven-ready to recall, even now, a straight twenty-five years after the event.

'Everyone's got a story like this', he said. 'You should collect them'

Right then and there, and completely out of the blue, my fate was sealed. I knew without a single shadow of a doubt that I was going to do exactly that. I hadn't missed the signpost. What's more, it made perfect sense. Most people on this planet will lose their virginity. But no two will have the same story.

That last point becomes all the clearer to me now, as I consider the fact that there is often more than one reason why we do any given thing. I could leave you with the story above, or I could tell you more. Not just about my own reasons, but indeed the universal impetus to talk to a complete and utter stranger about our inner worlds.

Many months later, my challenge now well underway, I decided to imitate the interview process. How could I expect to understand how my interviewees felt about telling their virginity loss stories if I wasn't prepared to try it out myself? A friend offered to ask the questions. I was quite astonished at what came out.

Number one. My story was completely and utterly devoid of hormonally driven sexual desire. Number two. It kind of bugged me. There was no itch to scratch here, at least none of the sexy kind. Good lord! There was something hideously wrong with me. Without ever really acknowledging it to myself, my story had bugged the hell out of me for this simple reason - it wasn't sexy. Sound stupid? It is. But the thoughts that we formulate in our teenage minds have a funny habit of remaining just that. Teenage.

Which explains my willingness - and that of my interviewees, to lay ourselves upon the lines of truth, albeit many years later, and re-live some of the biggest moments of our lives. The best way to move forwards, it seems, is often to take a step back.

In my case, to a time when I was quite possessed by the idea of being a grown up. So much so, that I was happy to hand my virginity in a gift-wrapped box to the sexiest French boy that I could find. That was the deal. I forfeited desire, the real deep down and dirty delicious kind, but in return, I got what my heart desired more than anything - to be an adult. The sexy bit came much later, once I'd found myself a boyfriend who could actually speak the same language as me.

And that as they say, is that. Two completely different stories and one great big fat reason why I have never found it difficult to get anyone to talk to me. Face to face that is. The Internet is different. Here I understand the reluctance to part with intimate sexual information - the Internet is not a person. But out here, in the sentient world, people are moving towards the experiences, whatever they may be, that subconsciously they need in order to push forward. We are all doing it. You are probably doing it right now. Because you really never know what is around the corner, or in my case, the beach.

October 24, 2007

Teenage kicks....

Being a teenager isn’t easy.

Can you imagine also being one that lacks the physical ability to take oneself out of the house, talk to the opposite sex, and together, scratch the itch that can really only be satisfied with the aid of another human being?

Once again, I find myself returning to the topic of disability and society’s outmoded idea that a lack of co-operative body parts equals a concomitant lack of sexual desire.

I am pretty sure that tonight’s episode of ONE Life on BBC 1 at 10.40pm, will do something to alleviate this problem. This is ‘not to be missed’ TV…

'Last year, 25 year-old Asta Philpot lost his virginity in a Spanish brothel. Now he's planning a return trip, but this time he wants to take a group of disabled virgins along for the ride. Asta was born with a condition called 'Arthrogryposis'. It left him unable to move most of his body, but he can feel everything. Having sex for the first time changed his life and now he wants other disabled people to have the same experience.

Asta is joined by two men who were keen to climb on board his 'Love Bus'. Lee is 35 - blind since birth, he is still a virgin. Shah, 22, had a devastating motorbike accident when he was 16 leaving him partially paralysed from the waist down. Asta's parents and full-time carers are also on board to help out at the brothel. Asta can't wait to have his second sexual experience and is confident Lee and Shah will have life-changing encounters. But will they be able to go through with it? ONE life follows the three men on their journey of sexual discovery.'

October 21, 2007

‘That’s a cracker…’

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Someone used to say that. Someone on telly - a proper old school Irish comedian, in fact, it sounds so much better in your head if you say it in an Irish accent. I have absolutely no idea who he is, but that’s the phrase I hear when I think about this story, because it is a cracker.

I have been around and around with this story. How should I present it to you? What should I say about it? There is almost so much to say, that I am inclined to say nothing at all. I toyed with a wise crack. ‘Now that’s what I call a coming of age story’…a cheap shot perhaps, considering it’s sixty year old owner only lost his virginity five years ago, but it made me laugh.

I played with the idea of telling you how much I have been backwards and forwards with its owner. The emails, oh my, the emails. We have written, we have bickered, we have made each other laugh – I hope. He with his assertion that there is definitely and absolutely no hope that he will ever have a ‘proper’ relationship. Me with my monotonous insistence that actually, he can do anything he bloody well likes, if he only ‘believed’ it himself.

I thought perhaps of taking a historical standpoint, and looking to Ted’s Greek roots. Ancient Greek to be exact. The idea that ‘chastity’ was more than just an avoidance of sexual contact, but a ‘way of life’, an attitude even. ‘As a skilful painter gives a face beauty, just so chastity gives charm to a life of high aims’. So wrote fifth century Greek poet, Bacchylides . But Ted doesn’t live in the fifth century, he lives in the twenty first century, and one in which sex is just about everywhere you damm well look. It sighs from billboards, it drips from advertising and people, who don’t, for whatever reason, have sex, are not the norm.

I return to the wise crack. I don’t care what anyone says, this is a coming of age story. A little late in the day, perhaps, but I stick to my guns, Ted. This could be the start of something beautiful. It’s a long time coming - literally. But it is never too late to start.


Ted. Born 1947. Lost virginity aged 54

‘I really should have lost my virginity, one magical weekend, at the age of nineteen. I was at university and I had met and fallen in love with a girl who was so beautiful and gentle, I almost burst into tears whenever I looked at her. We had met at a Christian Youth event and I had plucked up the courage to invite her up from London. It would have been a mutual ‘popping’, but all that did pop were my ears. Why didn’t we? Well, shyness, inhibitions – you name it. There was certainly no shortage of ‘heat’ in either part, but it was still the most wonderful weekend of my life.

My next close encounter was two years later, on a hearthrug at home, with my mother tapping down in panic from the bedroom above. She was very intelligent, very ‘head screwed on’ and SO keen that I almost burnt my face on hers. Again, no virginity was lost, but through her, I did make the astonishingly erotic discovery that female breasts have lives of their own and can ‘talk back’ to the attentive and sensitive fingertip. The ‘overhead tap’ rang in my ears for about five years after that fireside rug had cooled down ... and dried out.

The next time my virginity almost went, was in a near ‘three in the bed’ event with two lovely French assistants during my teacher training. Somehow, I was at the College after most of the students had left on vacation. The two girls and myself went out for a meal then ended up in an accommodation block - empty now, save for them. I don't drink, but the girls had a bottle of Ricard, which they saw off together. One of the girls soon began to look unwell, so I helped her down to her room. Once in, she launched herself heavily at me, but I valiantly, and reluctantly, disengaged her, suggesting that she would be best advised to lie down quietly on her bed for the night. I returned upstairs, to find her friend and trembling with nerves I embraced her, and we were off ... kinda.

‘I am afraid there will be nussing for you, tonight,’ she said, when I came up for air after the first clinch. Being the sensitive sort, I twigged that there was a calendar problem, but was somewhat hurt that she assumed that I regarded her as a mere ‘provider of oats!’ On reflection, I don't think she did think that of me - it was just a choice of words she picked at the time. Still, she extended the repertoire of activities beyond the advertised running, swimming and playing of tennis and I was just astounded by the beauty - and power - in her body. She had marvellous form in her shoulders and arms, (immediately becoming some of my favourite parts of a woman). I also discovered that another female feature of great interest had a life of its own! She was certainly one of the most feminine women it has ever been my privilege to have met - that is, able to make me go simultaneously weak at the knees, and stiff in the trousers.

You may have guessed by this point that my attitude to virginity owes a lot to the thinking of the Ancient Greeks. I am no great scholar of this period, but the basic drift of this is that the loss of virginity ‘steams the windscreen’, or allows the mind to be detracted from the ‘Higher Calling’. It basically contaminates the state of purity.

Not only that, but I also had three simultaneous ‘mothers’. My genuine mother, and two mothering aunts, both childless. If homosexuality were solely due to mother-dominance, then I should have had no option but to have been triply homosexual! In fact, I am probably as non-homosexual as it is possible to be. But my mother, in particular, had very strong Methodist leanings, and I was, effectively, made to lean in the same direction. Somehow, I was always intensely aware of the ‘wrongness’ of my natural sexual desires. I realised I had to ‘fight the Good Fight’. This was a spiritual battle I had to win!

It was a real conflict between hormones and ideals. If I had sex with a girl, she would become instantly pregnant. If I had sex with a non-virgin, I would develop instant syphilis. If I had sex with any woman, I would be a disgrace to my folks. I once actually touched a girl’s breasts through her clothes and I was sure the thundering in my ears was the sound of the hooves of the Four Horsemen of The Apocalypse coming to get me. The excitement, the ejaculation in my Y-Fronts, the feeling of utter wretchedness and shame. And the wish to try it again - only this time, to get under her bra.

So, zipping along ...

I had discovered that I could talk very easily to women, but at the age of twenty-eight, I became the only surviving male member of the family and had to take the responsibility for running the surviving households, the family ‘thinking’ being mainly patriarchal. The next twenty-seven years of my life were taken out by family concerns. All the folks became variously ill, degenerated and died and I, almost literally, and never sexually, touched a woman in all that time.

Skipping ahead quite a bit more ...

In my mid fifties and after years of teaching, I decided to go back to university myself – a personal challenge you might say. Somehow, I took up with a medical student in her mid-thirties. Sarah was single, extremely intelligent, but with a long-standing depressive disorder. Within a few days of meeting, we wound up back at my, (very untidy) house and were soon in a very tight clinch. The first woman I had clunched in decades.

‘Let’s go to bed’, she said.

‘But I haven’t any ‘thingies’ I replied, sensing that this was soon to be ‘the moment’.

She said there would be no problem, as she would go to a clinic and get some ‘morning after’ pills and after a suitable few minutes, I found myself being eagerly pulled down into my own bed by this very beautiful, but troubled woman, both of us completely starkers. Feeling her welcoming arms about my neck was probably the most supremely pleasurable moment of my life.

I will take a while to describe the situation between my ears. Very rapid signal processing was taking place, and an independent supervisory ‘being’ became manifest inside my skull. There was an immense feeling of, ‘This is what you always wanted, but way beyond your wildest dreams ... this cannot be happening!’ I became instantly aware of the literally, unimaginably strong primal force of attraction of her body on me as we touched down our length and my arms closed around her. I noted that, had this sort of thing ever happened to me when away at university, then all my scruples would have been instantly annihilated, along with my virginity and that I could well, by now, have been a grandfather.

I was very distressed by something else primal: I could sense her body pleading with me to get her pregnant. Having talked with her at some length in the days before we went to my house, it became clear to me that one of the things her life lacked probably the most, was a child – something dear she could love and exchange affection with. A baby would have done her a power of good - but a baby is not a ‘thing’. A baby is a living individual. A precious, helpless, life-changing commitment. A baby would also be mine, as much as hers. I could sense a strong, maternal instinct in Sarah, but I am also aware that I am too far down life’s track to have enough time left to properly look after a growing child.

So there it was, a very cruel tension within me. ‘Go on, man! You’ll never get a chance like this again in your life! She’s croaking for it, and so are you’. Versus, ‘Do not be a fool. You are on the brink of a catastrophic mistake, here. Just imagine what your folks would think of you if they could see this. You are just taking advantage of this very lonely and damaged woman who is young enough to be your daughter’…..

Back to the scene in my bed. The soft warmth and tenderness of her body simply stung mine with its primal powers. Had this event happened my twenties, I would have experienced a rocket erection, and ejaculated immediately. But here, my humble instrument went into reverse. The frosty morning wither! Extreme fright mode! Something, (moral self-condemnation) had gone into emergency override control of my machinery. (There again, imagine a sensitive child who has been given a very special gift for a birthday. Overcome with emotional intensity, instead of immediately accepting and enjoying the gift, the child bursts into tears, and runs away to hide behind a sofa!)

That was the situation between my legs. The rest of me, particularly my hands and brain were giddy with pleasure and sensory overload. An unexpected, though much longed for jackpot had arrived. There was so much to explore, discover, and bring to responsive life in her. And respond, her body certainly did! Of course, I couldn’t really resist and eventually ‘tried it’. I was amazed, (and thrilled) that she parted her legs willingly, and I discovered how readily my contracted and bashful portion found its way into the allocated Place - cheered on by some internal, incessant pep talk. Right from down in my toenails, I felt myself beginning to come. I INTENDED to get out in time ...!

It was done. It was not a moment of triumph or exquisite pleasure, however. It hurt! It felt like a scald! I was utterly ashamed of myself at the act, and, more than this, felt I had humiliated and ‘used’ her. Although when I told her this at the time, she got quite upset and angry with me, telling me that I had, ‘In no way’ taken any advantage of her.

We tried several other times - after I bought some condoms, which she despised. As I said previously, I could sense the yearning in her to become pregnant, and this was a strong mental dis-incentive on me to perform. I am not in a position to blame anyone, and certainly would not dare condemn her for wanting to use me to get her pregnant. In fact, it really was a compliment to have her choose me as a suitable father.

That is all I had better say. Sarah did also pay me one enormous compliment: she enjoyed my touch, and said I should have been a doctor, and that if I had been, my surgery would have been packed out with women every morning!

What the lovely Sarah referred to as my, ‘very sensual hands’, are now devoted to coaxing tonal nuances from my guitar, rather than purrs of pleasure from a relaxed female form. No substitute, alas!’

October 17, 2007

Good vibrations...

It's now an oldie, but by god, its a goodie.

Here is the second of two, now legendary, 'abstinence education' virals made by technicalvirgin.com

Priceless.

October 14, 2007

The agony and the ecstasy…

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Can I compare thee to a……little league match? Today, Joseph Marchelewski, he of website, bustedhalo.com, chooses to highlight the parallels between swinging your bat and knocking seven bells out of a baseball - and reaching third base on the night of his wedding. One is clearly a lot easier than the other: for the love of god will you have a look at this description of a baseball game and tell me that virginity loss isn’t a lot more straightforward and certainly less ‘wordy’?

By the by, today’s guest writer is twenty-eight, lives in New York and wants us to know that he loves David Beckham.

Random Thoughts on No Longer Being a Virgin. Or, How I Spent $10,000 to Get Laid.

By Joseph Marchelewski

'Some people, pardon me, most people lose it, but I was able to give it away. It's not forgotten in the backseat of a car or in the limo that took me to prom; and it isn't covered in alcohol in someone's bedroom. No, my virginity belongs to my wife. Take that – skanky girl I met in college! (more on that later).

When I was a kid, I played baseball. I had one year where I was so bad I didn't get a single hit until the final game of the season. Hell, I couldn't even hit the ball when I swung the bat, so I just got up with my bat on my shoulder and wouldn’t do a thing. I'd either walk or strike out, but I never swung. Finally my dad got so frustrated that he taught me to swing properly. My last ‘at-bat’ of the season, I swung at the first pitch…and fouled it off. (UK readers note – this is a good thing). I was almost in tears because I'd forgotten how great it felt to hit a ball with a bat. The next pitch came in and I hit the ball hard. I ran as fast as I could to first base, and when I got there, I stood and took the deepest breath I had ever taken in my life, up to that point of course.

Losing my virginity was sort of like that.

I always feared I'd lose it to some girl I didn’t really like or know. My freshman year in college a girl straight up asked me, ‘Want to sleep with me?’ You mean you're just going to come out and say it? Without even buying me dinner? I literally got out of there as quick as I could, even though I was probably the only guy to ever run from a girl throwing her 18-year-old self at him. Over the next few years there wouldn't be that many situations that jeopardized my virgin status, but there was always a huge fear. So when I met the girl of my dreams and she actually wanted to marry me, I saw the finish line. And the finish line was HOT!

We would spend mostly our own money on putting a wedding together. Thousands of dollars on some flowers, a cake, a buffet and a tuxedo. I can't really remember much of the ceremony or the reception, except that my grandmother gave a great speech and people should have eaten more food. As we drove away from the site in a nice limo, I was covered in cards and flowers and the overflow of my wife's dress. I realized after about two minutes where the limo was taking us, it was taking us to end my virginity; so I beckoned him to drive faster. On my wedding night, after my wife and I consummated our marriage, she looked at me and asked, ‘How was it? I took a deep breath and answered, ‘Just like little league.’ After twenty minutes of convincing her that was a good thing and that my little league coach hadn't molested me, we snuggled.

Like a marathon runner, I'd made it, and that's exactly how I felt, like I'd run a long marathon littered with pretty girls and their tight shirts. It was all it was built up to be, and it continues to be that way. My wife is the coolest girl I know and every time we hang out she makes me feel like I know what I'm doing. Even when what I'm doing is walking in circles around Manhattan because I get lost easy. She's amazing, my amazing angel, and being intimate with her is awesome, maybe even better than little league'.

October 11, 2007

Herrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrre's Jonny...

News


A scary 41% of young people between the ages of 16 – 24 believe themselves to be at ‘no risk’ of catching HIV, a disease that can shorten one’s lifespan considerably – or permanently.

Metro ran this story in yesterday’s edition about ‘GI Jonny’.

‘GI Jonny’ is part of a new campaign launched by the BBC to promote HIV awareness. Running until World Aids Day on December 1st, certain quarters have branded it ‘disgusting’, which, as most of know, usually means that its worth a peek.

Take a look....

What do you think?

October 08, 2007

Dis-ability?

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I get asked the following question a lot:

‘What’s your favourite story of all time?’

I always reply with the same answer:

‘My favourite story of all time is the one about the guy with no arms who got to lose his virginity to the sexiest bitch, (his words), in the whole school'.

And why, you ask, why do you love this story so?

I love it because it challenges what I think I know about people. It challenges the subconscious assumptions that we make about people the very first time that we meet them.

’I bet his first time was difficult’. That’s what was going through my mind, consciously or not, the first time that I met Charlie. I based my shortsighted assumption on the fact that Charlie has very little in the way of arms.

Born in the early 1960’s, he was the unlucky recipient, via his mother, of a drug called Thalidomide. Thalidomide had various uses, but it’s most tragic was as a treatment for expectant mothers with morning sickness. With no trials performed on pregnant animals, the results, for over 10, 000 children and parents were devastating. Thalidomide caused serious birth defects, mainly in the shape of abnormally short limbs.

Short limbs were no barrier for Charlie Thomas. Ok, he couldn’t do any press ups, but what he lacked in physical prowess, he more than made up for in other departments. Handsome and charismatic, Charlie was inducted into the language of love by the school hottie, Stella. Stella had 'huge bosom’s, reeked of ‘teenage’, and sashayed down the corridor in a way that stopped everybody in their tracks’. She also rid Charlie of his virginity and when she had finished, she asked him this:

‘Do you mind having sex with my best friend? She’s going to college in a couple of weeks and she doesn’t want to be a virgin when she gets there.’

Errrrr, let me think about that for a moment. Let me just mull that one over. Let me just wonder to myself, shall I, having already had sex with the sexiest bitch in the school, also have sex with her best friend, the girl that I actually fancied more in the first place anyway?

I don’t think I need to tell you how that story ends but I do need to say the following:

‘I bet his first time was difficult’, is a mild judgement in comparison to some.

Yesterday’s Observer ran a fascinating story about Treloar’s College in Hampshire. Treloar’s is a college for physically disabled teenagers over the age of 16, and today they go public with a ground breaking ‘sexuality policy’ – one whose roots lay in a very sad conversation. At 17, and confined to a wheelchair with Cerebral Palsy, a female student asked a teacher, ‘Do you think it is alright for me, as a very disabled person, to fancy someone’? She went on, ‘will society think it’s disgusting?’

The answer to that is possibly yes. Some people will think that.

I listened to Alison Lapper talk on Radio 4 recently, as part of the ‘Sex lives of us’ season on Radio 4. A poll was run to find the most significant landmark work of art on the subject of sexuality in the last fifty years. High on the list – other entries included ‘Don’t Look Now’ and Channel 4’s ‘Queer as folk’ - was Marc Quinn’s sculpture of naked, pregnant and limbless artist Alison Lapper. ‘People don’t want to believe that disabled people even have sexual feelings, let alone actually have sex’, said Lapper. ‘It is still one of the greatest taboos in today’s society’.

‘The Goldfish’ sums up Radio 4’s list of entrants thus:

‘The shortlist is inevitably going to be controversial, but it is both pleasing and interesting to see the statue on the list. It's not that it is an erotic work, but the mere image of a naked pregnant disabled woman challenges so many preconceptions about disability and sexuality; the idea that we can't have sex and have babies, the idea that our imperfect bodies should be hidden in case we frighten the pigeons. It is great to have these messages considered significant alongside other works which explored sexuality and our attitudes towards it’.

The Goldfish will probably be pleased to hear that Treloar College plans to implement a policy that will ‘fundamentally change the ethos of the college’. Somewhere along the line, I think this policy will change a lot more than that. ‘Students’, the document states, ‘not only have the right to pursue sexual relationships, but they will be assisted physically and emotionally by specially trained staff’.

We’re all searching for the perfect relationship. Some of us have checklists; clipboards full even, of criteria to be fulfilled by a potential amour. Are you tall enough, fit enough, polite enough, smart enough? How much baggage are you bringing to the table? A suitcase? Five? An airport runway’s worth? Do you drink? Smoke? Snore? Leave your dirty socks outside the front door? It’s hard work in this day and age to find the right person to have sex with.

Imagine that, having filled all the above criteria; you then have to surmount the following problem - you are so physically disabled that to even hold hands, cuddle or kiss is impossible without assistance from a third party.

‘Before, if any student was caught in a sexually compromising position, they would be expelled’, said Jan Symes in The Observer, but physical relationships, argues Symes, are a basic human right for every individual, able-bodied or not. At least now at Treloar’s there is someone to talk to if a student wants to say, ‘I know I am going to die in a couple of years and I would like a relationship before that’, ‘I fancy someone of the same sex’, or, ‘I have erections because I am a 17 year old boy but I have no hand control’.

Amen to that.

In trying to round the strings of this story up, I hear only the words of 19-year-old Stuart Wickison in my head. Stuart suffers from Duchenne muscular dystrophy.

‘We all have this desire to lose our virginity. We feel we need to experience this ultimate pleasure to balance out the pain we have – not just physical pain; it’s psychological as well. It is as if we feel the only way to make worth of ourselves is to have sex. It sounds so crude, but I feel that to experience that is to live life to the full, to know the whole of life. We don’t have much time left. We have to live our 77 years in 20’.

Kind of puts things into perspective doesn’t it?

October 05, 2007

Don't take the cherry off my cupcake...

Being British, one does feel the need to spout off about the weather from time to time. Therefore, I am sure you will be pleased to know that it is THE most stupidly gorgeous day here in London. The sky is blue, the sun is shining and the birds really are singing in St James Square.

The cupcake of my day has just been iced with a bacon sandwich and cup of earl grey tea. Could life get any better?

Maybe.

Here is technical virgin.com.

If you’re American, you will have seen this. If not, hold onto to your horses.

The star of this clip was fired from her job as a kid’s TV presenter when this went live.

October 02, 2007

It’s the way you tell ‘em…

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Der, der, der, derrrr!!

Remember the man - and his red book? Remember the theme tune? The one that would break out into a joyful climax of musical splendour, just as that week’s gimp, ‘ I had absolutely no idea that this was going to happen’, would step out from under the sweaty lights of a television studio only to be greeted with a roll call of life in the form of friends, neighbours, aunts, uncles, and pets? All freshly washed and brushed, and here for YOU! You wonderful person!

‘This is Your Life’ was the televisual highlight of our week when we were growing up, and yes, I do realise how bad that sounds – but its true – and it worked for one simple reason. There isn’t a person alive who didn’t watch that programme and wonder what their own life might look like under the spotlight. There isn’t a single one amongst us who didn’t sometimes think to themselves, I wonder which highly amusing anecdotes they might they pull to illustrate my own rather marvellous life? What frothy vignettes might they select to speak volumes about ME?

Because how we see ourselves, and what we actually are may well be two different things, but stories marry these ideas together. We create stories to explain ourselves, to illustrate ourselves. Sometimes we stick to them for years, and occasionally, over the passage of time, we allow them to change. As Benedict Carey, a journalist with the NY Times suggested in an article earlier this year, ‘every American may be working on a screenplay, but we are also continually updating a treatment of our own life – and the way in which we visualize each scene not only shapes how we think about ourselves, but how we behave,’

Carey goes onto confirm something that I have long held to be true – that people are wonderful storytellers, or, as he puts it, ‘the human brain has a natural affinity with narrative construction’. I concur. As you probably know, for the past eighteen months, I have been interviewing a cross section of people about virginity loss, about the circumstance which surround this event, what do people think when they look back at this time…and what changes along the way?

I am a lucky person with a brilliant brief because there can be few moments that will elicit such an array of emotion as the recollection of virginity loss. Music is frequently involved. Heightened senses remember the tiniest of details. I can’t tell you how many times I have been told precisely what piece of music was playing in the background as someone gently slipped their way into adulthood, ‘The Ace of Spades’, by Motorhead, being one such unforgettable instance.

The point is, that losing virginity in and of itself is frequently dull, unexciting, un-sexual even. What brings the story alive is the sheer dichotomous detail, the joy and the pain, the fear, excitement, anticipation, naivety, expectation and frequent plain stupidity that helps to push and pull this experience into a 360 degree reality that ends up becoming our story. Our passage into adulthood, our crazy, fucked up, beautiful, loving, rubbish, thrilling first time. Lets face it, its never going to be a dull story.

What makes it all the more special, at least in my case, is that there is very little room for artifice. A while back I did a podcast with my good friend, Charon QC. Charon is a man of the law. ‘Do you think that people tell you the truth when you interview them?’ he asked me. I was stumped. ‘Yes, of course I do’, I answered. ‘Because there is nothing to be gained by lying.’

Who’s going to know? Names are changed, even place names are swapped. There is nothing to connect anyone to themselves and their story. The real truth is that people gravitate towards the tape recorder because they have something to say, whether they know it or not – and they frequently surprise themselves with what comes out.

Last year, I encountered a young woman whom I shall call Jane. ‘I’ve found someone for you to interview’, my friend Nick said to me one day. ‘I work with her and she’s dying to tell you her story’. Apparently it was a ‘fairy tale’, the experience that she had always dreamt of. I was intrigued, who wouldn’t be. This was a first.

I went to her house one evening to commit the tale to tape. And yes, sometimes I do feel a bit like that creepy character out of ‘Perfume’. Stealing people’s inchoate sexual secrets, taking their tales and editing them down to the very essence of themselves..…a post for another day no doubt. I rung the doorbell and an attractive young woman answered the door. I knew straight off that this would not be a short story. Don’t ask me how you know, you just do.

And so it was that we sat on the sofa, I pushed the record button and off we went into fantasyland and the journey of a person with a perfect tale to tell. But here’s the thing. It wasn’t perfect. It wasn’t even close, but she didn’t realise that until I, a person with nothing vested in any particular outcome, marched into her life and asked her to tell me her story out loud, for the very first time. It was no nightmare either. It was simply the tale you would expect from a lovely teenager, desperately in love - desperate being the operative word, and ready to do anything to ensure that her perfect boyfriend had perfect sex with her in the perfect place whilst wearing the perfect outfit – before he dumped her. Recalling these details bought the facts to life and as she finished, I could see that there were tears in her eyes.

Storytelling can be a powerful experience and for the first time I felt uneasy. Who am I to expose people’s dreams for what they really are. But I hadn’t planned it to happen this way. I genuinely wanted to hear what a real fairy tale looked, sounded and felt like. It’s now a year since I met Jane and yesterday I phoned her because I wanted to know what had happened after that experience. Had the ‘treatment’ of her own life story changed as a result?’

‘It didn’t make me feel happy’, she started. ‘I felt exhausted and confused after you left, in fact I called my ex boyfriend straight away. But it felt like a release. I unravelled feelings that I was too scared to admit to at the time. Telling you the story doesn’t change anything, that’s the disappointing part, but I know that it took me to a different point of understanding.’

Story telling fulfils many functions. For some of us it’s a gentle way of explaining to our children how our world works. For many, it’s a crucial method of documentation, a way of preserving historical and cultural detail so that future generations can see what we see. Story telling is also a way of unpacking ourselves, of making sense of our inner world, and of taking a step backwards, in order that we continue forward. My work, at least for this day, is done.