Wand Vibrator in a Brooklyn Apartment, January

Six weeks since the divorce papers came through, and I'm lying in the January light of my Brooklyn apartment, the wand vibrator still in its box until this morning — my body remembering itself the way a language comes back after years of silence, strange and then suddenly fluent.

Mild

What January Gives Back

521 words · 3 min read

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The box is still on the nightstand where I put it this morning. White cardboard, the tape I cut curling back from itself, one flap open, the other folded in. I'd ordered it six weeks ago the same week the papers came through and it had sat on the floor of the closet since then, still sealed, waiting for me to be ready. This morning I moved it to the nightstand. That felt like enough for a while. The light coming through the window is the particular white of January in Brooklyn not warm, not cold exactly, just thin, the kind that makes everything look like it's waiting for something. The radiator ticks. Outside, someone is walking fast on the sidewalk below, and then they're not. I'm lying on my back with my knees together, the oversized t-shirt I slept in pooled soft around my hips. I used to sleep in things. Coordinated things, with him. I don't know when I stopped being a person who slept in whatever she wanted, but I had, and now I am again, and the cotton against my bare thighs is a small, real thing I keep noticing. I'm aware of my own warmth before I'm aware of wanting anything. It's already there, beneath the fabric, the heat of my own body held in the thin cotton, and the noticing of it is its own kind of beginning. Six weeks of not thinking about this. Six years, if I'm honest. A body can go quiet. I had gone quiet. I hadn't understood how completely until this morning, when I moved the box from the floor to here, and something in my chest did a specific thing not excitement exactly, or not only that. Recognition. Like the first word of a language I'd stopped using coming back to me whole. My right hand is resting on my stomach. I can feel my own breath move under it. The other hand is at my side, fingers loose against the sheet, which is cool where I haven't been lying. I look at the box. The flap is open. The wand is inside, wrapped in tissue, still. I haven't touched it yet. I moved the box, I cut the tape, I folded back the flap, and then I lay down and looked at the ceiling for a few minutes, and now I'm here, and my right hand is on my stomach, and I'm breathing in the thin January light, and my knees are together, and the cotton is warm across both thighs, and I am aware very aware of the specific weight of everything I am not yet doing. The wanting is there. It has been there since I opened the flap. It is patient and it is mine and I have not felt it belong to me in longer than I can say. I exhale. It comes out longer than I meant to give it. My hand moves down from my stomach, slowly, until it rests against the hem of the shirt. The box is still open. The wand is still inside.

Hot

The Body Remembers

491 words · 3 min read

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The wand is in my hand before I finish deciding to reach for it.

The tissue paper is thin, cold from the nightstand air. I peel it back. The wand is heavier than I expected solid, a dull matte head that catches the January light without giving anything back. I hold it against my palm for a moment. Just that. Its weight, learning mine.

Mid-scene teaser

More because I had stopped knowing I could want something this specifically. I press slightly harder. A sound comes through my nose, low, not shaped.

Spicy

The Wand, First Morning

522 words · 3 min read

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I turn it to the highest setting without deciding to. My thumb just keeps going.

The sound changes lower, fuller, something that gets into the mattress beneath me and I press the head of it directly against myself and my jaw drops open and stays there.

Mid-scene teaser

The breath returns in pieces. Ragged. Audible.

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