It reads like a “Modern Love” reject. Or perhaps like a “Modern
Love” parody.
Last Saturday the New York Times regaled us with Joyce Wadler’s meditation on mortality. It was incited when Wadler heard that a former beau was
undergoing open heart surgery.
She wrote:
This is
how it is at a certain age; when you hear about an old boyfriend it’s not
because he got married or got a great job, it is because they’re threading
tubes into his chest and doing an ablation on his heart.
Picture this man, anesthetized under the lights, prostrate
on an operating table, with pairs of hands cutting and slicing and splicing him
up, hooked up to machines. If you had been involved with this man, what would
you be thinking?
I will leave you to your own musings. Wadler does not
reminisce about romantic dinners, walks
in the park, splendor in the grass or beach side vacations.
No, siree. Sentimental soul that she is, she begins to
meditate about a charming gift the man once gave her: a sex toy.
She describes it thusly:
This
toy, which was silver and shaped like a stylized banana, was so complicated I
never used it. Also you had to charge it for a few hours. It wasn’t one of
those things that charged with a discreet little light either; it blasted
O-shaped strobe signals across a darkened room that could have been used to
direct incoming flights at a small airport, ideally one catering to businessmen
whose wives had lost interest in sex years ago. Well, that’s what they all say,
isn’t it?
Think of all the unactualized potential in an unused sex
toy.
But, why would heart surgery elicit thoughts of an unused
sex toy. Perhaps Wadler was telling herself that she bore no responsibility for
the man’s heart condition.
Since Wadler and her former beau are both “of a certain age”
we cannot blame the amusing gift on youthful exuberance or a flight of
millennial fancy. And yet, since they were both “of a certain age” perhaps the
toy was a compensatory gift, offered by a man who did not, because of his heart
condition, qualify for Viagra.
When she says that she never used the toy Wadler is allowing
a measure of discretion to enter her meditation. Later she overcomes her
modesty and sounds like someone who has an extensive familiarity with the
genre.
She remarks:
As I
have a personal code that says you do not use a sex toy given to you by one man
with another (yes, I do have a Puritan streak) and, disliking it anyway, I had
stashed this thing in a big closet which is like deep space, things go there
and disappear forever. The other day I heard Sandra Bullock in there,
hollering.
It’s good to know that she has her standards. It’s also good
to know that her beaux all seem inspired to supplement their personal efforts
with some sex toying. One is beginning to wonder how well Wadler chooses her
beaux, but it is best not to go there. After all, our minds still recall the ex-beau who is undergoing open heart surgery.
But then, wistfully, Wadler muses that, in place of the
highly considerate gift of a sex toy, she might have preferred a diamond.
Have sex toys now replaced diamonds as a girl’s best friend?
That would make for a very cheap relationship. As a cultural
phenomenon it would surely be worth noting, but I doubt that a gift of a shiny new sex toy contributes
to a girl’s sense of self-worth.
Her ex-beau’s heart surgery has not managed to produce any
fond memory of Wadler's time with him, but it has awakened intimations of mortality. She begins to imagine what will happen to her collection of sex toys
once she has “shuffled off this mortal coil.” She does not worry about who else
might make use of them, but she starts thinking about how it will look, what it
will do to her reputation if, one day, those near and dear to her discover, in
the back of the closet, hidden under a mound of scarves, a box full of Rabbits.
Wadler makes a feeble and unsuccessful attempt at humor by saying that the sense
of embarrassment lingers around for two weeks after death, but he is
preoccupied by the dire necessity of getting rid of her sex toys before the
world finds out about them.
In truth, she no longer has to worry. Having announced her
little secret in the pages of the New York Times she has only to worry about
what it will do to her beau’s reputations when the world discovers that they brought
more than their God-given equipment to her boudoir.
In any case, it turns out that getting rid of all your magic
wands is not as simple as it seems. Because Wadler cannot bring herself just to
toss them in the trash.
She is worried about her reputation. She worries that the
neighbors might notice. She is even more anguished at the challenge of finding an environmentally correct way to destroy all of those metal and plastic
vibrating thingamajigs. As much as she cares for her reputation, she
cares more for the environment.
To grasp the difficulties in disposing of such things one
needs to read Wadler’s own words:
It was
not one of those unused household items you can donate to Housing Works; they
don’t even take sheets. I’m an environmentally conscious person, but I couldn’t
see taking it to old electronics day at Union Square. I could put it into the
appropriate recycling bin on my floor, but then the neighbors might figure it
out: It’s her. All day, all night, I hear buzzing coming out of that apartment.
No wonder she’s always smiling. I might try to dispose of it with the kitchen
garbage, hiding it with coffee grounds and dead things from the back of the
refrigerator, as I do old tax reports, but then I’d be in violation of the
recycling law.
For some reason, the New York Times believes that this is
all fit to print, and that this is information that the average Times reader
will find amusing, entertaining and ultimately useful.
13 comments:
A supposed boyfriend may be in the process and all she can think of is herself. And one wonders why a significant number of us have no use for feminists. Lots of selfishness and little respect for another human being.
An operating people, Stuart?
Thanks, Sam... correction made.
The NYT has what seem to me to be really odd ideas about what's fit to print. Wondering what to do with old sex toys is one of them. Perhaps Ms. Wadler could form a co-op for reselling, or repurposing, or just exchanging or giving them away to needy (YES, I have NEEDS) people. Helping the poor and indigent; who doesn't need a sex toy?.
I found an old commercial for the NYT website I'd seen before on television:
http://www.ispot.tv/ad/7VJw/new-york-times-99-cents
At 0:07 they tout "the future of intimacy." This had made me laugh, as I expect intimacy is similar over the centuries, so it must be A) flat-sounding euphemism for tawdry content; or B) substituted from the original ad text, "the future of sexual & interpersonal dysfunction," which had to be edited for time
Thanks for your wonderful post. I really like the information which you have shared.
I don't see anything wrong people using sex toys, in fact sex toys enhance our sex life. And still, for me, still diamonds are girls best friend. No one can replace that.
Hi
I like the way you start and then conclude your thoughts. Thanks for this nice information regarding regarding I really appreciate your work, keep it up.
Man or woman? Virgin or experienced? Single, dating, or married? It doesn’t matter. There is a benefit to bringing a variety of naughty pleasures into the bedroom. Sex toys are fun for all.@Betty.
absolutely you need one
Thanks for your wonderful post.
Post a Comment