reviews_and_ramblings (
reviews_and_ramblings) wrote2007-12-26 11:11 am
Gossip!
I have a photo I like very much. Till yesterday I didn't know the name of the model, but a friend of a friend on my LJ unvealed the segret:
His name is Eric Balfour and I have discovered that he mainly work for tv fiction, like 24. But I have also read a very saucy gossip... apparently he lives with Ian Somerhalder
Ian and Eric and a third person at a party
Do you imagine what my naughty mind is thinking just now?
Elisa
no subject
This is my answer: "Sincerity, clearness. Men are rough and strong, but they are also direct. They don't waltz around the matter, they step into it fully, like a splash in a pool."
And this is his reply: "Yes, we don't waltz around, because we can't. We get bored with process to built a relationship while women enjoy it. We jump into the pool and later have quarrel. "Look! I got soaking wet! You pushed me!" "No! You first dived into it!" Women always think well about what they'll become before jump into the pool. Sorry, it's not at all romantic, but truth. That is why we need sometimes romance story"
Another good friend of mine is William Maltese. He has answered to a question if he can write with female perspective. Here is his answer: "Men, I truly do believe, are definitely more out for sex for the sake of sex. They see a woman, “any” woman, and their inclination is to mate. Women, sex important, too (child-bearing always in mind, though), I think, have a tendency to sit back, before getting down to the nitty-gritty with any guy, to try and figure out all of the favorable and negative qualities in a man which might be passed on by the genes to any offspring that may (or may not) result from a sexual encounter. Women prefer their sex with at least a little bit of emotional involvement, even if it doesn’t always require an attending proposal for marriage and/or an engagement ring on the finger. You see it all of the time in nature, wherein the female of the species doesn’t consent to sex with just every Tom, Dick, and Harry to appear on the scene. She usually waits for the guy who’ll provide her with the most of what she wants in a man. Well, okay, in most of nature, it’s the weaklings that get beaten off by the butcher studs, but with “civilized” human beings that kind of natural selection doesn’t always happen, making it particularly important that a woman decide who’s out there “for her” and whether he can provide her with what she wants, emotionally and physically. Therefore, for women, sex is a more cerebral thing — at least in my opinion. Women think a lot; men just jump on in (and or “on”) and think about it later (if they think about it at all)."
So, now I believe that men think that women are too cerebral... maybe we have to try to be less cerebral and more instinctual...
Elisa
no subject
Women think a lot; men just jump on in (and or “on”) and think about it later (if they think about it at all)
I get that impression too, from talking to female friends - probably for the very reasons stated in your comment. I almost get the impression that for women, intimacy is required BEFORE sex can take place, and for men, intimacy is created DURING sex. That's why we're often bound to fall in love with someone we're attracted to and have sex with repeatedly.
no subject
p.s. thanks for friending me :D
no subject
Thanks back and you're welcome - new friends are always great. :))
no subject
no subject
I don't agree with that either. Most of my friends are women and we talk about this kind of thing a lot, especially on LJ. I think men do tend to see sex as something separate often, something to be consumed quickly and anonymously. But I also think men and women are very similar in a lot of ways, even if our repressive society still has to get used to the idea.
no subject
This is why maybe I like romance. In it sex is a always a big part of the "why" of the book (even if it's not graphic in detail) and maybe I like M/M romance, cause in it I find men who "think" and give to sex the right importance. In a classical romance I read only the female perspective and men are always supporting characters... I know the female perspective, it's my perspective, so I want to read about male point of view.
I read both M/M romance written by women and by men. I can say when it's a man or a woman... but I like both.
Elisa
no subject
no subject
Elisa
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
One time I discuss with Max on a book by Bobby Michaels. I like the book, but I have some problems to believe on all it's written in the story. I point to Max some scenes, and he has replied to me, "what do you find strange in it? It's normal...". In that moment I have understood that I'm a woman and Max and Bobby for sure are men.
Elisa
no subject
no subject
Why you have to change it? Instead could I change my mind, and with me all female reader? Better why I can't have my mind and try to understand your way?
no subject
I don't see it as betraying my mind or gender, more as clarifying it, showing what motivates and action or what the root of a certain mentality is. I think people can only understand something if it's described in a way they can relate to on some level. It's the same way when I elaborate on BDSM, and what really goes on in the mind of a sub or Dom, slave or Master, what motivates them and how they think and feel. It's always the greatest thing for me when I get feedback telling me I'm showing readers a whole new world and that they're beginning to understand it for the first time in their lives. I hope that doesn't sound like boasting, but I relate to people best through writing, and I think describing things in a way others can understand or relate to brings us closer together on some level. Because when it comes right down to it, it turns out we really aren't that different at all.
no subject
if more people could think in that way, life will be a lot simplier and nicer.