Blackout_ Remembering the Things I Drank to Forget - Sarah Hepola

I’m in Paris on a magazine assignment, which is exactly as great as it sounds. I eat dinner at a restaurant so fancy I have to keep resisting the urge to drop my fork just to see how fast someone will pick it up. I’m drinking cognac—the booze of kings and rap stars—and I love how the snifter sinks between the crooks of my fingers, amber liquid sloshing up the sides as I move it in a figure eight. Like swirling the ocean in the palm of my hand. I’m in Paris on a magazine assignment, which is exactly as great as it sounds. I eat dinner at a
restaurant so fancy I have to keep resisting the urge to drop my fork just to see how fast someone will
pick it up. I’m drinking cognac—the booze of kings and rap stars—and I love how the snifter sinks
between the crooks of my fingers, amber liquid sloshing up the sides as I move it in a figure eight.
Like swirling the ocean in the palm of my hand.

02.06.2016 Views

of six beers, “I bet you won’t kiss me right now.” He was leaning against the wall. His forehead rippled as he looked up, all squint and slouch. He looked at the parking lot, at the dozens of people around us. He looked everywhere but at me. Then he said, “I don’t think you’re going to win that bet.” The idea of coming on to men was new. In high school, this would never have occurred to me. I had waited for Miles to kiss me, for months that felt like years. My coquettish signaling: sit next to him in class, play with my hair, cross my legs so they looked thinner. I read the tea leaves of his every gesture. He called me last night. What does it meeaaaan? This was how I understood seduction. Keep inviting the guy closer, but sit still until he pounces. College flipped that script. The new imperative: If you want a guy, go after him. What’s stopping you? We didn’t use words like “feminism”—a fussy term for earlier generations, like “consciousness-raising” or the ERA—but it was understood that we ran with the boys. Argue with them. Challenge their ideas about sex and Ernest Hemingway, because they’d been holding the megaphone for too long, and we needed to wrest it from their grip. I even wore cologne. Calvin Klein’s Obsession for Men. And slathering my neck in that rich, oaky musk gave me a kinky thrill, like I’d been rubbing up against some low-rent Johnny Depp. But my lessons in women and power did not extend to the classroom. I was not a hand raiser of any kind. I took a C in my Literature After the Holocaust seminar, because I couldn’t force myself to open my mouth, despite participation being 25 percent of the grade. I ran into the professor on campus one day. She had dreads and a wry smile. I didn’t even know they made professors this cool. We chatted for a bit, and she said, “I don’t get it. Why didn’t you ever talk in class?” And I blushed and said, “I’m shy,” and she said, “Well, you shouldn’t be.” No, I shouldn’t be. I wasn’t meant to be. And on the balcony of my apartment, I was not. Under cover of night and Keystone tall boys, I was full of righteous fire and brimstone. How I loved the taste of conviction in my mouth. That is bullshit. You’re wrong. Prove it. I was done sucking up to men. Fluffing their egos. Folding their tightie whities. I was going to smash my bottles against the wall, and someone could clean up after me, goddammit. I stopped leaning over makeup mirrors and blow-drying my hair. I wore clothes that stank of hamper and Marlboro Lights, and it seemed to me that men got off on this new uncorseted persona. That’s what they said: We like strong women. That’s what they said: Be yourself. So, death to the girl of the nervous fidgets, behold the woman with a beer in her hand and one endless cigarette. No more hearts doodled in spiral notebooks. No more falling in love with every boy who looks your way in biology class. But falling into bed—now, this was another topic entirely. That’s what Mateo and I did that night. We slinked off into my bedroom while the party rambled on, and we ripped off each other’s clothes in a blind, snarling rage. For so long, I wondered how it would feel to sleep with someone other than Miles. To run the tip of my nose along the powdery skin of his stomach, soft as a puppy’s belly, and into the feral thicket of short, wiry hair leading down below. But I couldn’t tell you what sex with Mateo was like, because all I had the next day was a flash of a memory, five seconds of a frame: me, on top of him, my hands digging into his chest and my hair swishing around madly. I am told that I screamed. The kind of excitement that travels through flimsy apartment walls. “I guess I don’t need to ask if you enjoyed yourself,” my roommate Tara said the next day over

coffee. But that seemed like a very good question. Honestly, I had no idea. I LIKED THE idea of being “experienced.” I was 16 when Miles and I had sex. I saw no explosion of glitter, no doves released into the air. Actually, it felt more like a bowling ball being shoved up my vagina (but a very sweet and loving bowling ball). I adored Miles. But our sex drives were set at different volumes. Mine was the medium hum of a transistor radio. His went to 11. This is how teenage boys are, right? They’ll hump anything. Hump the furniture. Hump the floorboards. Their dicks are like divining rods forever finding gold inside someone else’s pants. And me? I was a cuddle bunny. I liked soft stroking and delicate kisses, and those nights could be a little heavy on the saliva and the grabbing for me. I wasn’t a prude or anything. That was a slur in high school. Don’t be a prude. Guys would joke about girls so frigid their knees were sewn together and their tongues sat in their mouths like lazy slugs when you kissed them. I wasn’t going to be that way. My tongue had a graceful twirl. My knees opened without a creak. My bra fell to the floor with a swoosh. I would pull a man in close, let him glide all over me, and my body parts went electric in his mouth. But then. Then what? I’m not going to say I faked orgasms. That sounds intentional. As if I knew what an orgasm felt like, and I purposefully pretended to be having one. It was more like: Orgasms happen when you’re with men. You’re with a man now. Are you having an orgasm? Probably so! I leaned in to those swells of pleasure with loud gasps and moans as if, by moving my arms and legs frantically enough, I might somehow learn to surf. “Did you come?” Miles would ask, looking at me with those eager blue eyes. And I would smile. “Yes.” It was wish fulfillment, performance anxiety, and sexual ignorance wrapped up into one. I wanted to be good in bed. Who doesn’t want this? Are there women out there, hoping to be bad in bed? And I understood from NC-17 movies starring Mickey Rourke that being good in bed was a matter of arched backs and open mouths and frantic, animal fucking that ended in a double-orgasm thunderclap. It wasn’t the hardest posture to imitate. Suck in your stomach, find the proper lighting, go nuts. Being actually good in bed requires an openness, a comfort in your own body I simply did not have. The girl who once shaved off her pubic hair before sleepovers was not going to surrender to a man’s touch so easily. I was wrapped up in “Do Not Cross” tape. I had moles on my back I never wanted Miles to see. I had bumpy skin on my upper arms (the name for this condition is folliculitis, an erotic term if ever there was one), and I would brush away Miles’s hands while we were making out. The problem—one of the many problems—is that I had very little knowledge of my own body and what might be pleasing to me, which made it impossible to give instructions to anyone else. It’s like my vagina was someone else’s playground. I’d never masturbated, and I don’t know if that’s because I was afraid, or ashamed, or simply uninterested. I guess I thought masturbation was for sad old divorcees who couldn’t find anyone to finger-bang them. I was 25 when I finally bought a vibrator. The first time I came, the sensation was unmistakable. Like a long, ecstatic sneeze. And afterward, I felt so stupid. Wait a minute, this is an orgasm? Jesus Christ, no wonder everyone makes such a fuss

coffee.<br />

But that seemed like a very good question. Honestly, I had no idea.<br />

I LIKED THE idea of being “experienced.” I was 16 when Miles and I had sex. I saw no explosion of<br />

glitter, no doves released in<strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> air. Actually, it felt more like a bowling ball being shoved up my<br />

vagina (but a very sweet and loving bowling ball). I adored Miles. But our sex drives were set at<br />

different volumes. Mine was <strong>the</strong> medium hum of a transis<strong>to</strong>r radio. His went <strong>to</strong> 11.<br />

This is how teenage boys are, right? They’ll hump anything. Hump <strong>the</strong> furniture. Hump <strong>the</strong><br />

floorboards. Their dicks are like divining rods forever finding gold inside someone else’s pants. And<br />

me? I was a cuddle bunny. I liked soft stroking and delicate kisses, and those nights could be a little<br />

heavy on <strong>the</strong> saliva and <strong>the</strong> grabbing for me.<br />

I wasn’t a prude or anything. That was a slur in high school. Don’t be a prude. Guys would joke<br />

about girls so frigid <strong>the</strong>ir knees were sewn <strong>to</strong>ge<strong>the</strong>r and <strong>the</strong>ir <strong>to</strong>ngues sat in <strong>the</strong>ir mouths like lazy<br />

slugs when you kissed <strong>the</strong>m. I wasn’t going <strong>to</strong> be that way. My <strong>to</strong>ngue had a graceful twirl. My knees<br />

opened without a creak. My bra fell <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> floor with a swoosh. I would pull a man in close, let him<br />

glide all over me, and my body parts went electric in his mouth. But <strong>the</strong>n.<br />

Then what?<br />

I’m not going <strong>to</strong> say I faked orgasms. That sounds intentional. As if I knew what an orgasm felt<br />

like, and I purposefully pretended <strong>to</strong> be having one. It was more like: Orgasms happen when you’re<br />

with men. You’re with a man now. Are you having an orgasm? Probably so! I leaned in <strong>to</strong> those<br />

swells of pleasure with loud gasps and moans as if, by moving my arms and legs frantically enough, I<br />

might somehow learn <strong>to</strong> surf.<br />

“Did you come?” Miles would ask, looking at me with those eager blue eyes.<br />

And I would smile. “Yes.” It was wish fulfillment, performance anxiety, and sexual ignorance<br />

wrapped up in<strong>to</strong> one.<br />

I wanted <strong>to</strong> be good in bed. Who doesn’t want this? Are <strong>the</strong>re women out <strong>the</strong>re, hoping <strong>to</strong> be bad<br />

in bed? And I unders<strong>to</strong>od from NC-17 movies starring Mickey Rourke that being good in bed was a<br />

matter of arched backs and open mouths and frantic, animal fucking that ended in a double-orgasm<br />

thunderclap. It wasn’t <strong>the</strong> hardest posture <strong>to</strong> imitate. Suck in your s<strong>to</strong>mach, find <strong>the</strong> proper lighting, go<br />

nuts.<br />

Being actually good in bed requires an openness, a comfort in your own body I simply did not<br />

have. The girl who once shaved off her pubic hair before sleepovers was not going <strong>to</strong> surrender <strong>to</strong> a<br />

man’s <strong>to</strong>uch so easily. I was wrapped up in “Do Not Cross” tape. I had moles on my back I never<br />

wanted Miles <strong>to</strong> see. I had bumpy skin on my upper arms (<strong>the</strong> name for this condition is folliculitis, an<br />

erotic term if ever <strong>the</strong>re was one), and I would brush away Miles’s hands while we were making out.<br />

The problem—one of <strong>the</strong> many problems—is that I had very little knowledge of my own body and<br />

what might be pleasing <strong>to</strong> me, which made it impossible <strong>to</strong> give instructions <strong>to</strong> anyone else. It’s like<br />

my vagina was someone else’s playground. I’d never masturbated, and I don’t know if that’s because<br />

I was afraid, or ashamed, or simply uninterested. I guess I thought masturbation was for sad old<br />

divorcees who couldn’t find anyone <strong>to</strong> finger-bang <strong>the</strong>m. I was 25 when I finally bought a vibra<strong>to</strong>r.<br />

The first time I came, <strong>the</strong> sensation was unmistakable. Like a long, ecstatic sneeze. And afterward, I<br />

felt so stupid. Wait a minute, this is an orgasm? Jesus Christ, no wonder everyone makes such a fuss

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