Pleasure Finds Friday: Jimmyjane Little Platinum Eternity

Posted in pretty things on February 6th, 2009 by emmajames

Valentine’s Day is just one week away and, I’ve got to admit, I’m bored by flowers and chocolate and candle-lit dinners. Give me those things when they’re an actual surprise. I don’t think I’m alone in this sentiment, either. Ladies? Just think how much more pleasurable it would be to receive this precious little wand of vibrating decadence – a platinum vibrator, ringed in .66 carats worth of VS1 diamonds, and controlled by one AA battery.

Made by Jimmyjane

Made by Jimmyjane

Let’s pause a moment to reflect on that description. Nope, you did not misread. It’s PLATINUM, the same shit marketers say every girl wants around her finger to hold up a – you guessed it – DIAMOND. And some upstart, California-based company, founded in 2003, has the balls to design a joy stick for the va-jay-jay – and wherever else your inventiveness and proclivities may take it – made out of those two precious design elements?

Bling

Bling

Well, Hell’s Bells, people! Any man who cares enough about my pleasure to grant me this kind of extravagant joy is worth brushing my teeth for. But maybe I’m alone in this. What do you think, my rapacious readers? What do you think of Jimmyjane’s Little Platinum Eternity Vibe? Is this Pleasure Find something you could get excited about, or is it just another example of our debauched society and moral decline?

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10 Irrational Fears

Posted in life on February 4th, 2009 by emmajames

My friend Sarah just wrote a post about the ten things she irrationally fears. I thought that was a brilliant idea, so I’m doing the same thing. I warn you, much of this list constitutes a gigantic over-share, but I believe it is truly liberating to look FEAR in the face, define it, reveal it, and then ANNIHILATE it. So here we go…

  1. Ants. I was about five, decked out in age-appropriate short-shorts and a Snuffleupagus t-shirt, and on a family road trip through East Texas. My grandmother sat me in the bough of a tree so she could take my picture – a bough covered in FIRE ANTS. For those lucky enough to have never heard of these diabolical critters, let me just say they come by their name honestly. As the little buggers went smorgasbord on my ass, literally, I began to scream. My grandmother thought I simply didn’t want my picture taken. How little she knew me. Needless to say, the entire experience scarred me (though, thankfully, only emotionally) for life. And of course I forgave my grandmother – about 15 years after she died.
    Alice and Mrs. Snuffleupagus

    Alice and Mrs. Snuffleupagus

  2. Breast Cancer. I come from a line of well-endowed women. I watched Terms of Endearment as a kid. And pink ribbons get my attention. I’m super paranoid that I’m going to miss that telltale lump and I’ll DIE. After all, there’s a lot of real estate to examine. I’m a huge proponent of self-exams; please check your ta-tas regularly, ladies! And guys, this affords you a great excuse to pay rapt attention to your lover’s lamps as your fingers do their meandering.
  3. Heart Break. So, I have commitment issues. And I like drama – I used to be an actress, for gods sake. I adore the giddiness of falling in love. But the chest-cracking, gut-wrenching pain of falling out of that love? Whoa, Nelly. I’d rather ignore you, cut you, betray you, deny you or kill you than feel any of that. It’s something I’m working on. And, no, I do not have a police record. Yet.

    By Valery Milovic

    By Valery Milovic

  4. Getting Fired. I am an excellent employee. In fact, I am an over-achiever. That being said, I hate work. I would much rather be gallivanting about Bhutan or lounging on the beach in Santorini or simply sipping iced tea on the patio of my favorite café. My fear is that this truth, and the amount of time I spend on TweetDeck, is somehow telegraphed to my boss like pheromones. I have never received a pink slip, but there’s a first time for everything.
  5. Playing the Wrong Music at a Party. I have very eclectic taste in music, but I am not educated about it. I can’t tell you why I do or do not like a song. I can tune it out with ease. I often play the same CD for weeks on end. As a result, I don’t feel particularly prepared to defend my choice of a specific lyric, melody, or artist. So what happens when, in the middle of an otherwise successful party, someone shoots me a horrified look and asks, “What the hell are you playing this for?” or, worse yet, “You call that music?” and the now-shuddering crowd runs for the hills, leaving me alone with trays of uneaten Trader Joe’s finger food and a bottle of Charles Shaw?
  6. Going Blind. I had Lasik a few years ago. It was a resounding success. Yet every time my eyes get blurry from exhausting, I start to think my corneas are about to fall out of my head, and that will be that. I think this irrational fear is partly due to my brain’s unwillingness to accept that I can now actually see the alarm clock and recognize people from further than 3 feet away. But, I must admit, I also fear karmic retribution for wishing I had Mary Ingall’s blue eyes when I was little. And I was just ordered by my ophthalmologist to purchase some glasses for night driving – I wanted night-vision goggles, but went with hot-professor frames instead.

    Little House on the Prairie (NBC)

    Little House on the Prairie (NBC)

  7. Peeing While Having Sex. I did warn you about the over-share… I have that blessed damned G-Spot to blame. Don’t get me wrong, I’m thrilled when a lover, or a smartly designed toy, hits it. But the sensation hitting that spot initially creates – for those ladies not fortunate enough to have experienced it yet – feels very similar to that caused by being stuck in the toilet line at half-time after drinking far too many beers. Bad analogy, I know, but you get the point. Of course, the resulting release is far better than any bladder emptying I’ve ever had and, depending on your physiology, it can be almost as… copious. My fear has always been that I would get the two confused in the heat of the moment. I have testimony from others that I’ve yet to make such a mistake, thank god, but the fear is still there.
  8. Being Thin. This is counter-intuitive, I know, but let me explain. As I mentioned above, I come from a line of well-endowed women. When I am thin, that endowment seems to be the ONLY thing men notice and, believe me, their notice is often very vocal as well as noticeably physical. Since I’ve decided against pursuing a career as a porn star, this kind of notice can be decidedly uncomfortable. Granted, my penchant for attracting men who think Miss Manners is an underwear line is epic. But still, having a few extra pounds on the frame provides padding of the emotional as well as the physical kind. This way of thinking is neither healthy nor productive, which is why the fear of being thin is an irrational one.
  9. Changing Diapers. I like little children. I do not, however, like poo – mine, yours, or the Gerber baby’s. If you have a child with a dirty diaper, please do not ask me to hold that child, much less expect me to clean its butt. After all, the child might not be done dumping, or the color I discover when ripping off the Pampers might create hysterical blindness – and you already know how I feel about going blind, or I may get caught up in the diaper sticky-tabs to such a degree that my self-esteem plummets. But, hey, if you have a properly washed, powdery-smelling, fully-dressed infant… May I please hold him/her/it?
  10. Ripping a Loud Stinky Fart in the Middle of a Meeting. I already mentioned that I do not like poo. Farts remind me of poo. And of my father. He is a very skilled farter. And he really has no compunction about where he does it. Super embarrassing when you are a kid. Who cares that it’s partly due to a bad digestive system with which he made peace at a young age. My mother has a wonky tract as well. While Acidophilus and I are close friends, my genetic inheritance and childhood memories still leave me in fear, and hyper-aware of floor plans.

By David Snow

By David Snow

I am no longer a child, to be embarrassed or scarred. I have overcome many of my irrational fears. The above list highlights some of those still lurking. I’m working on completely discarding every last one of them. After all, irrational fears serve no purpose but to hold us back from embracing all the pleasures life has to offer.

So what are your irrational fears, and are you ready to let them go?

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7 Secrets

Posted in life on January 18th, 2009 by emmajames

I am still very new to blogging. The technology involved frequently makes my eyes roll back in my head. The scope of the social media world in which I now find myself has left me naively gaping in shock. I am having far more fun following stat counters than is healthy. But, I have not revealed much of myself as yet. Thanks to a kindly slap upside the head in the form of an emphatic tweet from my friend, Jamie, that is all about to change. Thus, I embark on revealing 7 things about me which you don’t know, seven secrets, if you like…

1) I work in a dildo factory. Well, actually, I work right next to one. The windows of my office overlook the wet-pour line. Now, before the one conservative who reads this blog starts freaking out, let me clarify that I do not do porn. I work for a toy company that just happens to make toys for adults. I help them out part-time with press releases and white papers and branding strategy. Yes, sometimes I even have to come up with names for new sex toys. It’s an entertaining challenging job. And somebody’s got to do it. One of these days I’ll do a photo essay, but first I’ll have to figure out how to use my digital camera.

2) I am a thief. Or, more accurately, I was one. When I was 10. Let me explain…I used to take a public bus to school, and walk 8 blocks home, by myself, past the neighborhood grocery store. Now, my mother was/is a diabetic. She had a stash of candy in the cupboard for whenever she had insulin reactions. However, I was not allowed to have any of that candy. So I decided to get my own. And I knew just where to go to get it. The neighborhood grocery store.

In the back of the store, shelf upon shelf was stacked with bags of candy. I would nonchalantly walk back there, passing the candy bars and point-of-purchase York Peppermint Patties. I would stealthily tear open a bag of CANDY CORNS – the best candy ever because it takes three bites to eat one, if you consume it by color, carefully aligning teeth-to-borderline on each delectable pyramid. I would steal ONE candy corn. And I would pop it in my mouth, overcome by the adrenaline rush, which would quickly be replaced by a sugar rush.I got caught, of course, but that’s another story.

3) I broke my collarbone when I tried to be a Jew. I was 13 at the time. It was the beginning of summer. I had suffered through a few years of Catholic school. My parents were both vainly searching for answers to the eternal questions that lead some people to religion, others to science, and the rest to drugs. It was decided, by a family member who shall remain nameless – primarily because I have no idea whose idea it was, that I should get in touch with my Jewish heritage – on my father’s side – by going to a sleep-away camp the local Jewish Community Center sponsored. The camp had horses. I liked horses. And I jumped at the opportunity to get out of the house learn some Hebrew.

On the 2nd day of 7, a group of us kids was playing capture the flag. And that’s when it happened. I reached out my arm in a half-assed attempt to grab the ball. Someone brushed against me. POP! My clavicle simply snapped. And the worse part? No one at the camp thought it was broken! Try getting a horse to stop galloping when you have a broken collarbone. Not fun! Needless to say, the next summer I got into Ouija boards.

4) I once had lunch in a Turkish harem. That may be overstating it a wee bit, but I’ll let you decide…I had just graduated from college, and coerced a friend to join me in Mersin, Turkey. A family friend had generously offered to let us stay in an empty apartment he owned in one of the working class neighborhoods of this large port city. He even escorted us there, with plans to stay and help us find jobs teaching English. Little did we know that his plan translated into him spending most of the day at the local tea house, to which we were not invited because of our gender.

It was 120 degrees. My friend and I made the best of the situation by playing pinocle on the shaded balcony which, since it was six stories above ground, got a gust of breeze every few hours. Until the local women’s council put a stop to it, that is. Playing cards, you see, was considered a shameful activity for women in that neighborhood. Our neighbors were concerned that the entire building would be tainted by our behavior if someone walking by on the street caught sight of our activities. Did I mention that we were SIX STORIES ABOVE GROUND?  To take out the sting of their rebuke, the council invited us to a luncheon. We had nothing better to do and, besides, we were there to embrace the culture.

Upon arriving at the apartment of the council’s self-appointed Queen Bee, we were instructed to take our shoes off and sit on the floor in front of the most amazing spread of savory and sweet I have ever encountered, laid out on newspaper, in communal bowls. Twenty women watched as we dipped our hands into the food and tasted our first bites. We smiled, nodded – delicious. Then, all hell broke loose.

The window shades were abruptly drawn. The liquor came out. The other women plunged their plump hands into the bowls of meats and spices. And they started comparing breasts and genitalia, asking to see ours, laughing uproariously, and emitting rapid bursts of Turkish. I don’t remember what happened next.

5) I love brussels sprouts. Actually, there are very few vegetables I do not like. But brussels sprouts are particularly cute. I think it’s because of their diminutive size. I’ve always been a sucker for the runts of a litter, and I like to think of the brussels sprout as the runt of the cabbage family. They also have such a Dr. Seuss-inspired look to them on the stalk – very fanciful. Unfortunately, I do not eat them often because I am not much of a cook, at least not at the moment.

6) I prefer table games to video games. I grew up watching my great-grandad play dominos and spit tobacco into a coffee can on the screened porch of his farm. My parents taught my brother and me our vocabulary via competitive Scrabble games. We didn’t get Nintendo in the house until I was old enough to be into boys, so I never did catch the video-game bug. Sometimes I wish I had. It would have saved me a great deal of youthful heartbreak.

7) I only return phone calls while driving. It’s not that I’m a compulsive multi-tasker, but rather that I feel guilty just lounging on my bed, gabbing like a teenager. When I am in my house, I need to concentrate on the dishes, or fashion decisions, or the latest episode of Mad Men. I am too distracted to carry on a coherent conversation. When I am driving, however, my attention can be split between the road and, well,  anyone with a Verizon plan. I live in Los Angeles, after all. Seventy percent of my time is spent in my car. The traffic rarely moves. What else am I supposed to do? Text? I do that too. But shhhh – it’s now against the law.

Okay. That’s it. 7 Things About Me. Seven Secrets to give you a little insight into my special brand of crazy. Hope you have enjoyed the experience.

I will now tag seven lucky Tweeters, as that is how this damn thing spidered its way into my life. They are: @naturallygeeky, @girlfrisky, @livitluvit, @michellefabio, @califmom, @hollyjahangiri, and @kat_taf. They are entrusted with continuing the saga. Check them out to see how well they do. If you are not one of them, please feel free to tell me 7 things about yourself in the comment section, or at least one!

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In Pursuit of Pleasure

Posted in life on November 22nd, 2008 by emmajames

Welcome to my little adventure!  I am a writer, based in Los Angeles.  Like many who have come to Hollywood, I am on a quest.  I make no promises, however, about the sanctity of this venture.  I am in pursuit of pleasure, you see…

I present this blog as a platform from which I will be ruminating about anything and everything that stirs my senses or stokes my emotions.  I will freely discuss the latest LA art event one day and the newest sex toy the next, expound upon politics and culture, and share my latest nature-based and man-made discoveries.  I am not an expert, but I am most definitely opinionated.

If you are not old enough to vote or fight in a war, you probably shouldn’t be reading this.  It is not my intention to embarrass, offend, or alienate anyone, but I most likely will do all the above.  C’est la vie.

I sincerely hope that you continue with me along my journey to discover all that makes me go mmmmm…

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