On feeling sexy in an unsexy world


Image by videoplacebo, with book by Terry Richardson.

In this week’s Chron column I wanted to share my recent experiences with feeling sexy in a world that’s always trying to beat that feeling out of us — hence, Feeling Sexy In An Unsexy World: Violet Blue stumbles through sexy movement classes at Sedusa and emerges with a slinky new outlook. Unfortunately on the front page they’re promoting it as a pole dance article, but ::sigh:: whatever. It’s not. But people who are reading it are liking it, the response in my inbox is stunning, gracious and thankful, to say the least, which makes me feel great that I wrote it. here’s a snip:

None of us is ever going to be beautiful enough. And yes, the first few comments here will be from people who feel it even deeper than you or I can ever imagine, and they’ll be directed at me in the most hurtful way the ugly-inside person at the keyboard can imagine. And even other commenters get attacked; told they’re unsexy, not fit to even comment on a sex column. Let’s face it; we’re all too not-hot to set foot on the Internet, let alone the world. I’m sick of it; I want to mass-produce Jenna Jameson masks like it’s Guy Fawkes Day and find everyone who could never imagine themselves as a sizzling sexpot thanks to some anonymous douchebag, and make a bonfire out of trolls.

The world conspires to make us feel unsexy. Not just the Pam Andersons and the endless parade of 99-pound Hollywood starlets, or the ghouls that populate Internet comment minefields, or the Palins, or the baggage we carry around from growing up. I realized it when I was at A Food Affaire, ogling the contortionist babes and the hoop-twirling hotties and feeling like there was no way anyone could feel sexy when there was always something to chisel it off waiting around the next corner. I was in the sexiest environment I could imagine right out of last week’s column, and I was still feeling unsexy. The outside world was still in me.

And then I remembered something I was told in a class I’d just taken at local sexy-dance and movement studio Sedusa: “Imagine a ribbon tied in a little bow at the base of your spine, pulling up from the base of your neck. Now walk.” And suddenly in that room where I was feeling like the girl in glasses who writes and slouches all day and just wanted to hide in the corner and take pictures with my camera — I made my date watch me walk. And it worked. (…read more!)

Also, here’s the Qik video I shot at my first visit to the dance studio, where I asked the proprietrix a few questions and requested she show me a pole dance demo — it’s hard to hear everything she says, but what struck me the most was how eerie and unusual it is to see a woman pole dance without music — hearing only the sounds of her movements. It’s a really interesting experience.

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2 Comments - COMMENTARY is DESIRED

  1. Wow, Violet, it’s almost strange to hear you say that you don’t feel attractive most of the time. Since I started reading your blog/erotica/etc regularly I consider you so very sexy and beautiful. Certainly when my boyfriend met you about a year and a half ago at some party in San Fran (we live in Australia) the report back was that you were even more gorgeous in real life!

    Hold that head up high! You are fabulous!
    Thank you for doing what you do.
    Mia

  2. Awesome! Excellent column. Great points. I think that in this internet world, where everyone pays such lip service to being sex positive and embracing everyone’s odd kinks, it’s a shame how many people are out there who want to believe that only “conventionally” beautiful people should have sex or feel sexy. But, if there are people out there who think that women dressed as squid are sexy or men who are covered in mustard and shelled pecans are super hot, there is no reason why the human body — in every shape, size, colour, texture or hue — should ever be considered or made to feel anything less. _People_ are sexy. That’s how humans have survived. ;)

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