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The Lesbian Sex Haiku Book (With Cats!)

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by Anna Pulley




  Begin Reading

  Table of Contents

  About the Author’s

  Copyright Page

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  To our parents. None of whom are lesbians (or cats) but are nevertheless delightful.

  INTRODUCTION

  In 2010, the girl I planned to marry dumped me. I had proposed to her nine months earlier, on the Isle of Lesbos, in Skala Eresou, where Sappho was born, in case we’re playing Who’s the Gayest. She decided she wasn’t into ladies as much as she originally had thought. (For the record, she’s a lovely person, and we are good friends now, because part of the lesbian hex—which affects even those who aren’t lifers—involves remaining friends with your exes forever.) At the time, though, I was shattered. My chest was a brick, and I could do little besides cry-hyperventilate. I fantasized about getting hit by cars—not fatally so, just some light maiming—so that my ex would have to come back and take care of me and then decide to grow old with me the way we originally had planned.

  Also, my dad had been recently diagnosed with lung cancer, and my stepdad had a stroke, and my mom ended up being hospitalized as well due to the stress of it all. I had just started a new job (“paid internship” is a more accurate description) making about six dollars an hour in the most expensive city in the United States, a city I most certainly could not afford to live in on my own. It was not the greatest time to be dumped by my fiancée, as far as those things go.

  And because of all these events, I couldn’t write. I couldn’t even journal. I peered at the stories of my life thus far and didn’t recognize myself in any of them—they were like those dreams in which you wake up and remember nothing but the feeling they inspired. When I tried, my words would devolve into self-loathing expletives, like a fifth grader’s reenactment of a Martin Scorsese movie. But I was also contractually obligated to write for work. And by “write,” I mean tweet. So I did that, not just so I wouldn’t get fired but also because it was strangely satisfying and required very little time commitment. Plus, it helped me avoid thinking about the emotional tsunami of suck that had become my life. A tweet, 140 characters. A haiku, seventeen syllables. A task that small and manageable I could do. Anyone can write seventeen syllables, I told myself. And so I did. I wrote one every day for a year, just like how Ryan Gosling’s character wrote one letter every day for a year in The Notebook, because he was copying me. One of the first ones was this:

  Being on Twitter

  all day for work makes it hard

  to finish any.

  And another:

  I face all my fears

  in yoga: flying, falling,

  farting in public.

  And another, and another. I wrote haiku until I no longer felt like I would die from ineptitude, or that my life was a huge cosmic mistake, particularly my hair and the errant incisor that made me appear to be always on the verge of toothing something. Not to get too Oprah one-thing-I-know-for-sure on you, but writing haiku was how I slowly re-raveled myself. I put my life back together three lines at a time.

  My healing process was aided by two things: (1) a handful of beautiful, unavailable women and (2) an unwavering belief that poetry would make those women want to have sex with me. Of course this strategy failed a lot of times. (How often? It’s not like I counted. Fourteen.) But it also worked a great many times too. It led to a four-year sexy-romance-heart-tumble-thing with a married woman who lived on the other side of the country. We wrote a lot of haiku to each other. Hundreds of them. It also led to a one-night stand with a straight girl I met on Twitter. It led to two fuck buddies developing feelings for each other and ceasing to fuck me (see Chapter 5, “How Lesbian Sex Works”). It led me to bars (see Chapter 2, “How to Pick Up a Lesbian”) and sex parties and sex dungeons and spectacular rejections and spectacular hangovers and some truly amazing friendships (see Chapter 8, “My Ex Is Your Ex”), and eventually it led to a fantastic girlfriend who did not balk at all when I suggested we do a book together whereby she would draw cats in various states of lesbian anxiety (see Chapter 4, “U-Hauling”).

  WHAT’S A HAIKU, ANYWAY?

  Our attention spans are getting shorter. Blame ADHD or the Internet if you must, but the truth of the matter is not much can hold our attention for long, even when it’s about topics dear to our hearts, such as love, Nutella, or cunnilingus. This is why haiku was invented—to give our short-form brains something else to do when we aren’t photographing dogs wearing leggings. The word “haiku” has been around since the nineteenth century, but it has appeared in other variations since as far back as the ninth century, when people had to actually memorize things in order to impress anyone.

  What is a haiku, you ask? It’s a form of poetry that the Japanese invented and that we Westerners graciously stole from them and changed ever so slightly to fit our language wonkiness. We mostly think of haiku as seventeen-syllable poems, in the 5-7-5 format, that look like this:

  I like poetry,

  flowers, and waterfalls. I’m

  a haiku genius!

  Japanese haiku isn’t based on syllables, however. It’s based on onji, which are units of sound that don’t correlate with English very well. The Haiku Society of America (which is a thing that exists!) explains, in a somewhat exasperated manner, that haiku isn’t a type of fixed form poetry (like a sonnet, for instance) and that people should just get over the rigid 5-7-5 format already, because they were probably tired, as I was, of getting into Twitter fights with people over syllables. That said, I tried to adhere to this format when I could in this book because it’s what most of us think of when we think of haiku, and because, like most lesbians, I am a pleaser.

  In the West, haiku was popularized in the 1960s by writers like Jack Kerouac and Gary Snyder, though the trend was soon superseded by enthusiasm for hipsters, zombies, and vampires, per our collective cultural boner for brainless dead things that sparkle and drink PBR.

  WHAT’S A LESBIAN, ANYWAY?

  Like haiku and poetry in general, lesbians (and bisexuals, trans folk, queers, genderqueers, tenderqueers, heteroflexibles, and all womyn-loving wimmin) are frequently misunderstood. Sure, you may have read about them once in a Women’s Studies class, glimpsed them on Grey’s Anatomy or in the plaster aisle at Home Depot, but it’s a rare thing indeed to experience queer women in the wild. Who are these mythical beings? What do they do? What do they wear now that hipsters have appropriated flannel? How do they meet? Is it true that lesbians move in together after the second date? Is there a “man” in such relationships? And if so, can it be me? What does Rachel Maddow have that I don’t? These are some of the questions you may have. This book aims to dispel myths, to enlighten, to demystify, to remystify, to gently chide, and to perplex your parents, all in the most straightforward medium available to humankind.

  But first, a caveat! I am not out to speak for every queer lady. The following haiku are by no means trying to capture the lesbian experience, be
cause there isn’t one—it differs for every queer lady. I realize also that not every queer-identified person subscribes to female pronouns or female sex parts. I totally support that, but for ease and clarity, I decided to keep it simple. In fact, if you don’t like a pronoun or genital reference, feel free to scratch it out and use whatever feels comfortable to you. I don’t mind.

  Careful observers might also notice that this is called The Lesbian Sex Haiku Book, but that it encompasses a lot more than that—breakups, makeups, friendship, courtship, etc. The reason that this is so is because sex is in a little bit of all we do. For a group that collectively eroticizes Teva sandals and Greenpeace, the sky is the limit, you know? It’s also because maybe I secretly want confused heterosexual men to pick up this book and think it’s porn and then be like, “Ahh, I just read lesbian poetry!” And join a coven in New Mexico. One can dream.

  LESBIANISM 101

  Have you always wondered if you might like girls that way, but weren’t sure because you don’t have several dietary restrictions and aren’t perpetually covered in pet hair? If you don’t know what a lesbian is but picked up this book because you are a cat who enjoys looking at pictures of other cats, then put it down, Mittens. This book is not string! If you are a human person who doesn’t know what a lesbian is, but also doesn’t know how to use the Internet or read a book or watch television or movies, then what do you do with yourself? I’ve always wondered.

  Here’s a haiku definition:

  Lesbianism:

  So much more than folk music

  and hemp shorteralls.

  Now that that’s cleared up, the following haiku present some indications that you might be, perhaps unbeknownst to you, sapphically inclined, bicurious, full-on lesbionic, or “in college.”

  YOU MIGHT BE A QUEER GIRL IF …

  You can’t even break

  up with your therapist in

  under a decade.

  When an ex-lover

  has thrown a Boca Burger

  at you drunkenly.

  When you live with your

  ex far longer than you should

  because “it’s cheaper.”

  Do you own bongos?

  A djembe? A didgeri-

  don’t-mind-if-you-do?

  When asking, “What are

  you thinking?” is your go-to

  icebreaker question.

  Does a “naked mud

  dance” sound like a great way to

  commune with nature?

  Do you find yourself

  wondering why songs don’t have

  more ukulele?

  You are accused of

  making uncomfortably

  lengthy eye contact.

  If you’ve gone out a

  dozen times and still don’t know

  if you’re dating her.

  You obsessively

  Google prospective dates in

  the guise of “research.”

  You play flag football

  but are, by every other

  measure, an adult.

  Do you own more than

  one vest that your mother did

  not purchase for you?

  You have developed

  unhealthy attachments to

  several baristas.

  The only “doctors”

  you are familiar with are

  Bronner and Martens.

  When you dance, does it

  look like you’re Hula-Hooping

  in a wild typhoon?

  You’re allergic to

  everything—except passive-

  aggressive memos.

  You have at least four

  jobs at any given time,

  and you volunteer.

  You’ve got 99

  problems and 98 of

  them are your “bitches.”

  A REPRESENTATIVE SAMPLE OF EVERY LESBIAN MOVIE EVER MADE

  Lesbian films serve many important functions—visibility, levity, fodder for processing, etc.—but their most important function is to make us feel better about staying alive so well because most lesbian and bisexual characters in contemporary queer films (and television) die horrible deaths. Ha-ha, weird, right? But seriously, congratulations on not dying. You are great at that. Hopefully.

  Girl has sexual

  awakening with teacher/

  roommate/friend. Then dies.

  Girl has horrible,

  traumatic past, present, and

  future. Then she dies.

  Girl has sexual

  awakening with druggie.

  The drug addict dies.

  Girl has sexual

  awakening. Kills her mom/

  lover for “funsies.”

  Girl has lesbian

  tryst during the Holocaust.

  Everybody dies.

  Girl has sexual

  awakening, decides she

  likes men. She still dies.

  Girl doesn’t have a

  sexual awakening,

  but she shaves her head!

  Cheerleader figures

  out she’s gay. NO ONE DIES! Film

  revered forever.

  Gina Gershon wears

  a tight tank top. Sorry, does

  something else happen?

  First hour: eating.

  Second hour: fucking. And

  third hour: crying.

  Straight-looking girl goes

  gay. Male director slowly

  jerks off for two hours.

  Girl spends half the film

  staring vacantly into

  bodies of water.

  Married lesbians

  suffer from bed death, but can

  still be great parents!

  Hetero subplot

  is added to make straights feel

  okay with “gay stuff.”

  HOW TO PICK UP A LESBIAN

  Picking up a lesbian is not as easy as it looks, even though many are around five feet tall. For starters, it’s difficult to tell simply from appearances what ladies walking among us might be receptive to seeing us naked. Unless your potential paramour is wearing a sign that says “My other ride is your face!” it’s not often obvious that you are in fact courting a lady-lovin’ lady. There are a few signifiers to look for, of course—short asymmetrical haircuts, Coexist T-shirts, a preponderance of jorts in her wardrobe—but nothing foolproof. Just ask the countless lesbians who have mistakenly ogled both the teenage boy and his heterosexual mother sporting a mullet and a college sweatshirt because they thought they were lesbians. Alas, until the day comes when we decide to help potential lovers decipher our sexual proclivities with, say, a large face tattoo, we can only surmise, ask questions, and take chances. That said, however, the following haiku provide a jumping-off point to picking up the gay gal of your dreams using well-worn approaches field-tested in places as diverse as bars, gender studies classes, and the modular cube aisle at the Container Store.

  MORE REALISTIC WAYS TO “FLAG” AS A WOMYN-LOVING WO’MOON

  Host a dinner where

  you promise to serve harm-free

  vegan macro bowls.

  Do not brush off the

  cat (or dog) hair you are most

  surely covered in.

  When girl remarks on

  pets’ hair, say names are Vita

  and Virginia.

  I was serious

  about that “My other ride

  is your face” button.

  Find an excuse to

  take out your wallet so she

  can see it’s empty.

  Stand in a corner

  and refuse to drink all but

  low-calorie beer.

  Stand in a corner

  and incessantly sweep your

  hair out of your eyes.

  “Hi. I would like to

  officially invite you

  to join my coven.”

  Introduce yourself

  using the words “witch,” “poet,”<
br />
  “grad school,” or “co-op.”

  FOOLPROOF LESBIAN PICKUP LINES

  Of course I read Cunt.

  Painting with menstrual blood

  was transformative!

  Girl, I would love to

  help you move that modular

  couch from IKEA.

  Cold? Take my micro-

  fleece vest. I only wear it

  ironically.

  Have you reconciled

  your identity with race

  and class privilege?

  Don’t label me—I’m

  a non-het-identified

  poly pagan witch.

  It has been MANY

  years, but I’m not done griping

  about The L Word.

  LESBIAN PICKUP STRATEGIES THAT RARELY WORK YET ARE REPLICATED INCESSANTLY

  Perfect the art of

  leaning on things. Once mastered,

  hook thumbs into jeans.

  Drink excessively

  the whole night. When she’s nearby,

  talk a lot louder.

  Buy Tipping the Velvet.

  Don’t give it to her! Hope

  she gets the “message.”

  Visit a witch store.

  Not for spells, just to support

  local queer business!

  Name obscure “shipping”

  reference. When she does not

  get it, run away.

  Knit your feelings for

  her using symbols culled from

  dream dictionaries.

  Say “Hi.” Before she

  can respond, run outside and

  hail a taxi home.

  Go to Trader Joe’s

  any day but Saturday.

  (That’s just good advice.)

  Write a haiku book

  (with cats). Fill with deep longings.

  Sign hers “TRANSFERENCE.”

  HOW TO PICK UP …

  The serious lesbian

  Intersectional

  cisgender hegemony

 

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