Going All The Way from the book: SUGAR IN MY BOWL
Introduction:
From my personal favourites I bring you a story from a ggreat book of real women sex stories.
By Liz Smith
In 1939, my birthplace in Texas wasnât the metropolis complex that it is todayâa huge hub for international travel with museums, art galleries, fashion, insurance, oil, and the cattle âbidnessâ at the center of it.
Back in the 1930s, Fort Worth was still a small town, complete with streetcars and a uniformed cop on every other corner. The country had begun emerging inch by inch from the Great Depression that had crushed America after the stock market crashed in 1929.
Even insular Texans were beginning to be aware that this was a dangerous world and a bunch of thugs called the Nazis were about to march into Poland and throw the world into chaos. I even recall some months later, my high school class experienced our French teacher, weeping that the Germans had paraded down the Champs-ElysĂ©es in Paris. We cried with her, for Paris was a city of our dreams where American talents such as F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ernest Hemingway, and Gertrude Stein abounded and impressionist art reigned supreme. We knew about Parisâit was where women danced bare-breasted in the Follies BergĂšre.
On the other hand, life in Fort Worth was provincial and insular, full of misplaced western pride and obsessions with football. Racism and southern paternalism still beset the great state of Texas (Lyndon Johnsonâs civil rights advances lay far in the future) . . . A demagogue Catholic priest, Father Coughlin, was forever on the radio preaching hatred. (There was no such thing as being politically correct.) We didnât listen; we preferred Walter Winchell, Jack Benny, and âThe First Nighterâ hurrying to his seat in the little radio theater off Times Square. . . . Women had not joined the workforce as they would when World War II became a terrible fact of life. In fact, women were still second-class citizens, having only won the vote nineteen years earlier.
It was a world where my narrow-minded grandmother believed in a hard-shell kind of Baptist religion that frowned upon men and women in bathing suits swimming together and disapproved of ballroom dancing. This was too rigid even for my devout mother. My grandma used to make dresses for her neighbors for two dollars apiece but once turned down a chance where the dress pattern was sleeveless. âNo decent woman would wear a sleeveless dress,â she opined. (Shades of wardrobe malfunction!) My father was broad-minded, liking jokes, gambling, and dancing. But even he was shocked to see a woman smoking on the streets. And he felt pregnant women should stay at home and not be seen. My mother once said, âSex is the ugliest word in the English language.â
We kids thought âsexâ was a delicious if forbidden idea. We could read and did read the classics. We had even heard that in France, a woman named Coco Chanel had created a sensation wearing trousers at the beach. Women in pants, in Texas! Never, unless she was contributing to a cattle roundup.
So now you have the idea of my youth in Fort Worth, Texas. Letâs now introduce sex and bring us into the present tense.
Iâm sixteen. Iâm dating for the first timeâreally. The locale is Fort Worth, Texas, pre-World War II. We drive around in cars, we eat in cars, we neck in cars. We never go âall the way.â We girls are more concerned with getting to the famous Fort Worth Casino on Lake Worth, dancing to Tommy Dorseyâs visiting orchestraâor somebody else famous on tour. Thereâs a skinny kid fronting for Dorsey; name of Frank Sinatra. Heâs good and itâs all very romantic.
Iâm trying to break away from the Southern Baptist environment that has dominated my life. My secret passion for show biz glamour and my familyâs embedded church life are warring with one another.
On many nights I am double-dating with my favorite cousin, a charming guy who is a little older than I am. Iâll call him X in order not to smear the family names. X is cute and funny and snappy, full of jokes and one-liners, a marvelous dancer and storyteller. He always drives the car with one hand and makes the gearshift go into place, manipulating it with his knees. He starts any evening we go out as a foursome by wisecracking, âWell, what do you want to doâfirst?â I know what he means but I just giggle.
I was always mad about him, but he has really cute adorable girlfriends and he is so appealing. I am invariably more interested in what heâs doing in the front seat of the car than I am in whomever Iâm with in the backseat. I feel I amount to a big disappointment and I know my dates never measure up, as Iâm forever equating them with X.
Comes a soft Texas night when weâre not going out. Weâve had a family picnic in the Smith backyard where our mutual grandparents live. But everyone elseâadults and children have segued off to a Wednesday night party at the local church. X and I are just sitting in sling chairs, looking at the starry Texas skies. Weâre listening to Glenn Miller coming over the radio from the kitchen.
We have ended up side by side, not saying anything. The rest of our cousins, siblings, and adults have gone. âWhat you say, kiddo?â asks X, lighting a cigarette. (Heâs too young to smoke but he would live into his eighties anyway, so what did we know back then about the dangers of smoking?)
âI donât know, Bub,â I answer. He leans over and kisses me softly on the cheek. This is a far cry from his usually jokey manner. âYa know, kid, I really love you. We always kid around and weâre with other people, but itâs you Iâve got my eye on. They donât know where we are tonight, so letâs stay here under the stars and make out.â
I am so shocked I canât speak. Itâs as if he has been reading my tiny mind. âOkay,â I say slowly. He gets up, he goes off and comes back with an old quilt and a couple of pillows and spreads them on the ground. He pulls me down on top of him, and I feel him hard against me. I think I might faint. Iâve been around boys and my brothers all my life, but Iâve never paid any attention to their fooling around. I guess I didnât want to know too much.
Now I know. X and I start kissing and he really knows howâslow, sweet, and tender. Fabulous. So thatâs what this is all about? Hmmm, it makes practicing kissing with my girlfriends seem absolutely idiotic.
I keep caressing him back and itâs all instinctive. I havenât any idea what the end result will be, but I didnât seem to need a lot of instruction. âLook at me,â he whispers. âLook at me. I love you. I want to be inside of you.â
And soâit happened. Most virgins report poor results for a âfirstâ time. Not me. I know we didnât use any birth control; didnât think about it. (What fools we sexually uneducated mortals were!) I donât remember if I had an orgasm; I was so ecstatically having âsomethingâ special happen that I didnât know if I was missing something else.
When all this passion and friction and mind-blowing was going on, time passed, unnoted. Finally, gasping like fish out of water, we lay back and looked at the stars. Then he said, âThat was stupid of me. Next time, we use a rubber.â
Next time? Light began to dawn. He was my cousin. My first cousin. There was to be no ânext time.â And, it never happened again though he tried and tried and I began to do that thing females do. They say no when they mean yes. I just knew that down the road we would create such a mess between our families, it wasnât worth imagining.
Fortunately he soon went off with my older brother to join the air force because the Selective Service Act would happen anyway and theyâd be drafted as buck privates. Temptation was removed in the form of patriotism, and the war lasted a long time. But I stayed half in love with him for years and years. He wrote me wonderful letters, and in time, after 1945, he returned to Fort Worth and we became âjust cousinsâ again, seeing each other seldom and off and on in othersâ company. We met socially at family reunions. Marriages ensued, children, years passedâI grew up. I read Masters and Johnson, Playboy, Helen Gurley Brown, and I experienced the Swinging 1960s and every other kind of sexual freedom they had to offer. I developed my personal tastes.
But nothing ever thrilled me like that one night under the stars. He was my âcollege education.â When X was retiring, not too long ago, he wrote me a letter. We had always corresponded without mentioning âit!â âI have never stopped thinking about you and about our night. My marriage is over. I am old now but I am still thinking about you. You need to stop working. Retire and come live with me in Arizona. The best is yet to be!â
He died alone shortly after this. But he has dominated my sexual reveries through all these years. That little experience was so surprising and so wonderful, Iâd have to give it an A plus.
I wonder what would have happened if I had retired with him to Arizona.
Going All the Way
Liz Smith
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