Schoolgirl Vibrator

Schoolgirl Vibrator




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Schoolgirl Vibrator
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Tags:
vibrators
, sex
, first vibrator
, sexuality
, adolescence

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“Do you want me to buy you a vibrator?” Mom asks, holding up the Good Vibrations catalogue. The year is 1999. I am twelve. I know what a vibrator is from watching Slums of Beverly Hills —my favorite scene involves Marisa Tomei and Natasha Lyonne tossing the buzzing sex toy back and forth while gyrating to Parliament’s Give Up the Funk . “Sure!” I exclaim. We sit at the kitchen table and peruse the catalogue together, pens ready to mark which toys look most promising. Mom suggests one that’s thick and short, clear and curved and designed to “stimulate the G-spot.” I don’t know what the G-spot is nor how this device is meant to stimulate it, but Mom thinks it’s a solid, simple choice for my first vibrator, and she knows more about this stuff than I do. I’m not sure why Mom thinks I need a vibrator at age twelve, but I don’t question it. At the time, I don’t appreciate the progressiveness of the fact that she is buying her pre-teen daughter a sex toy. I take for granted how she is making my first lesson about sex about my own pleasure, prioritizing my needs over anyone else’s. I also don’t understand how the act of buying her young daughter a vibrator is intrinsically linked to my mother’s feminism. Feminism isn’t really on my radar.
As a teenager, the concept of feminism begins to embarrass me. It’s the early aughts, and "the F word" isn’t trending yet. To be called a feminist is tantamount to being called a bitch—roughly translated, it means you are an ugly female without a sense of humor, who hates men. Although my mother clearly identifies as a feminist, and though she definitely has a sense of humor and loves my dad, something intense and angry happens to her face whenever she speaks of feminist things. I decide this is uncool, and not something I want to emulate. Whenever some mean kid insultingly calls me a feminist, I feel my face flush as if I’ve been caught wetting the bed (something else I did for years beyond what was socially acceptable). Looking back, it seems I knew all along I really was a feminist, and hid behind this “cool girl” identity for fear of being found out. It wasn’t until post-college, when feminism started coming back into the public conversation, that I could finally embrace the angry feminist I’d always been in my heart. My mother’s daughter. Middle school graduation with Mom Two years before Mom buys me a vibrator, I’m ten and on vacation with my parents in Hawaii, staying at this amazing hotel with a bar in the swimming pool. One hot and beautiful day, I’m hanging out on the edge of the pool, getting ready to order my third Shirley Temple with extra cherries, unintentionally positioned with a jet shooting between my legs, when I’m suddenly overcome with the most incredible sensation my body has ever known. I have no idea what this means, but I can’t wait to tell Mom all about it. I scramble out of the pool. “Mom! I just found the most amazing thing!” She smiles knowingly. “The jets?” “Yes! How did you--?” “I know.” She looks nonplussed. I want to shout, why didn’t anyone tell me?! How have I lived my entire life up to this point completely ignorant of the magic of swimming pool jets? It’s not until years later that I realize this is probably not the kind of thing most girls would immediately run to tell their mothers. But this was, and always has been, our relationship. I tell her everything and she, in turn, tells me everything.
Enjoying the jets Mom tells me about when she recklessly slutted around New York City in the '70s, before AIDS came along and scared the crap out of everyone. She tells me how one Valentine’s Day, she shaved her pubic hair into a heart shape and bleached one half platinum and dyed the other half black, a gift for her current boyfriend. She tells me about the time she met a strange man in a bar and went back to his apartment where they played chess and then he told her to take off all her clothes and tried to rape her, so she ran outside stark naked to get the police. At age six, when I ask what this rounded piece of flesh-colored latex is doing on the edge of the bathtub, Mom tells me it’s her diaphragm and it’s to keep her from getting pregnant when she and Dad have sex. As a teenager, I ask Mom why a man would go down on a woman. Her face lights up as though she’s about to impart some deep feminine wisdom. “Because women are delicious,” she says plainly. I don’t realize how, by openly acknowledging her own sexuality, Mom is implicitly teaching me another lesson, this time about shamelessness. Never once do I hear the words, “That’s not appropriate to talk about.” My childhood curiosity is encouraged. Nothing is off limits. When my vibrator arrives in the mail, I just stare at it. It’s short and fat and I’m thinking, there’s no way that thing is fitting inside my twelve-year-old vagina . I haven’t even successfully put in a tampon at this point. The day it arrives, I can’t wait to get to school. At recess, I sit on the bleachers with a bunch of my peers and hold forth about my new sex toy. In a more conservative setting, I may have been teased, even shamed; in this hippie NorCal beach town, the kids are jealous and awe-struck and I can feel them looking at me with a newfound sense of admiration.
That night, I lie down and stare up at the No Doubt poster hanging over my twin bed. I move the vibrating head down towards my general area, not really aiming. Who even knows where anything is at this point? I don’t try to put it actually inside my vagina—the thing is literally huge—I just sort of hold it between my legs. It doesn’t blow my mind, but it’s pretty good. Maybe not the fireworks display I was expecting, but it feels reminiscent of the swimming pool jets. I mean, the jets gave me my first moment of clitoral awareness, so naturally made quite an impression. I can’t actually make myself come with my vibrator, but it’s not for want of trying. In a time before infinitely available Internet porn, finding sexy stuff to masturbate to is a more creative endeavor. My porn is: the scene in Boogie Nights when they’re shooting a sex scene and Julianne Moore tells Mark Wahlberg, “Come inside me, I’m fixed”; the scene in Fear when Wahlberg fingers Reese Witherspoon on the rollercoaster with Wild Horses playing in the background; the scene in Cruel Intentions when Sarah Michelle Gellar sits on Ryan Phillippe’s lap and gives him a hand job. Then there’s the weirder stuff: the scene in John Waters’ Pink Flamingos when Divine, the 300 pound drag queen, blows her son while they’re burgling a house; the scene in John Waters’ Female Trouble when Divine is raped by a trucker on a bare mattress on the side of the road.
These scenes I keep cued up on VHS tapes that I record at my grandparents’ house when I visit them in New Jersey for three months every summer. I load up the tapes with as much erotica as possible, my jerk-off material for the remaining nine months of the year—my parents don’t have cable television. These particular scenes are well worn. I furiously rewind them over and over again as I lie on my twin bed with the vibrating head balanced against my crotch. I don’t realize at the time that Mom buying me a vibrator will become a foundational story of my childhood, something I tell people when I really want them to understand who I am. Perhaps it’s because I was encouraged to overshare as a child, but I’m proud of the fact that Mom bought me a vibrator when I was twelve. Especially now that I’m out of the hippie liberal bubble of the town where I grew up, I see that the way my mother raised me was in powerful denial of the sex-negative, Puritan-founded culture we still live in.
Angry feminist/My mother's daughter I had that vibrator for twelve years. It finally died in 2011—by that time, the clear plastic was discolored and the technology seriously outdated. My boyfriend bought me a pearl rabbit, by all accounts a far superior piece of equipment. But I do have fond memories of my first vibrator, because it was old school and Mom picked it out for me, and it taught me at a very young age to have no shame about my sexuality; that it’s normal to be horny as fuck when you’re twelve. Published June 2, 2016
Ava Bogle is a feminist sex blogger at Diary of a Slutty Feminist . Follow her on Twitter @slutty_feminist .
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Growing up as an only child, you don’t have any siblings to give you the nitty-gritty details about sex. Sure, my mom kindly presented me with an illustrated edition of Where Did I Come From? when I was in elementary school, but even then the booked struck me as wholesome and G-rated. To get the real dirt, I had two options: A) Alyssa, the delinquent with flaming red hair who lived across the street; or B) HBO’s Sex and the City.
Of course, as a nine-year-old, I wasn’t allowed to watch the show when it first aired. But whenever my mom left me alone, I’d pop in a Blockbuster VHS and eagerly watch Carrie, Charlotte, or Samantha’s latest sexcapade. (Miranda? No, thanks). I inhaled one episode after another the way Carrie feasted on cupcakes from the Magnolia Bakery in Greenwich Village.
One episode from Season 1 particularly stuck with me: “The Turtle and the Hare.” It’s the one in which Charlotte, initially averse to the idea of sex toys, gets hooked on the vibrating “Rabbit.” I didn’t really know what the Rabbit was, just that it was the source of Charlotte’s newfound state of perpetual bliss. Something so cute and pink and magical could only be fictional, right?
As I got older, about 13 or 14, my mom and I began to watch the later seasons together. Without flinching, we watched Samantha blow the FedEx guy, Miranda get jizzed on at an orgasm seminar, and Charlotte use a roll of stamps to test the functionality of her husband’s penis. Carrie had become a heroine to me: smart, free, and totally imperfect. But when it came to real-life sex, my mom and I never spoke about it, unless you count the “be safe and choose wisely” talks that routinely occur between a mom and her teenage daughter.
As far as I was concerned, my mom was asexual. She’d ask me after one of my dates if the boy I went out with was a good kisser, and I’d just shrug. Sometimes she missed a reference to an explicit act in a movie and asked me what it was. Again, I’d shrug. I was determined not to acknowledge that my mom was sexual in any way.
Then, one day, all that changed. While searching the floor of my mom’s bedroom for my missing Thera band, something under her bed caught my eye: a Ziploc bag strangely hidden in the shadows. Curious, I reached for it and pulled the plastic bag toward me. When I saw what was inside, my stomach dropped. There it was, in all its pink glory, the holy grail of Sex and the City —the Rabbit.
All I could think was, “Why a Ziploc!? You pack my sandwiches in those!” The glass had been shattered. My mom was undeniably a sexual being. Not only that, she was an owner of THE RABBIT.
As years went by and I began to have my own sexcapades, the dialogue between my mom and me gradually opened, and I’d like to think it was partly because of my little (five-inch) discovery. I no longer freeze when she asks me about a certain guy or when she asks those awkward questions while we’re watching a movie. (“He wants her to sit on his what?” )
In fact, a couple of years ago, I slipped into her bedroom and, lowering myself to the floor, peeked once again under her bed. At first, I was relieved to see the Rabbit was either gone or more properly stashed away. But then—I don’t know—I felt kind of sad. Anything that makes a woman as happy as the Rabbit made Charlotte, I hoped my mom still had in her possession.
I guess I’ll find out once she reads this.
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