Good Night and Good Luck

I want to talk about me. Indulge me for just a little while.

I have been thinking about where I want this blog to go. But first, I’d like to talk about where it started.

Bloody Laughter didn’t start here. It started, in point of fact, with an open diary I had back with my first kinky boyfriend, where I wrote him love notes and jumped whenever I realized someone else was reading. That blog, before I deleted it, was called Your Sadism Is Showing. When I started dating Maymay I decided I needed somewhere to store ideas my family couldn’t read, and I started a LiveJournal, titled Sweet Steel. (It was that LiveJournal, incidentally, that eventually allowed my family member to connect this blog to me and subsequently confront me over my chosen topics.)

Just as I like to think that in his time with me May’s understanding and appreciation of art, literature and fashion have matured, I know that in my time with him my technical capabilities and opinions have matured. Hence, Livejournal moved to Blogger and eventually to my own site with Wordpress, newly titled A Place To Draw Blood Laughing. I have in the past year hesitated over my choice of name, blunt and potentially disturbing as it is, but I kept it because I think it is poetic, and accurate.

At first blush, this was just a space I’d made where I could talk about how I have sex, and be sure (wrongfully sure, admittedly) that my nearest and dearest were not reading, or reading only with invitation and sympathy. It’s a theme here that I over analyze, that I am extremely body-conscious, that I am sensually driven and sex-positive and in some ways deeply strange. So it made sense to write about my strangeness, and to make a place for the dark parts of me to breathe.

And then there was a merry rush in the form of a golden summer of kink, of working on Floating World and digging out my strong opinions in words for the first time. Then there was the death-defying tailspin of being attacked over what I’ve said in this space, and my somewhat pathetic attempts to crawl my way out of the wreckage.

I limped along, for a while. I moved to Australia. I widened my scope.

I said when I started this blog that I would never apologize to myself if I didn’t want to update it. That was my little way of being clever, keeping myself free of the thing. In the end, though, that’s a stupid plan for a blog. Blogs should update. It is unfair of me to not update and still call this thing a blog, and want to make it thrive.

Maybe you have seen where this is going. Maybe you knew months ago, as I knew. As I’ve said before, I make decisions quickly and then come around to them slowly. The truth is I knew in the middle of last year that I would lay this blog to rest.

This is the end. A Place To Draw Blood Laughing is now closed.

I’ll give you two of my reasons. The first is creative.

At the height of this blog I was writing two posts a day and chronicling my sex life with lust and eager glee. I was also not writing anything but blog posts. My stories stagnated, my fiction trailed off and was eventually nothing. It seems I do not have the focus and energy to write here and also maintain my other creative pursuits.

As I’ve mentioned, I’m writing a manuscript, a long and meaty thing. In doing so, I have become jealous of my own words. I don’t want them here. I want them there, in the pages that are growing.

I pour letters out in the shape of sex, of Maymay’s hips and the wispy curls on his soft neck, of hot mornings alone in my bed with my hand between my thighs, of a blond Australian man who moves my hand to his throat when he comes and smiles in his own aftermath.

I pour them out and want to keep them for the book, this thing I’m trying to write that keeps growing into my creative spaces when I’ve looked the other way, so all of my drawings turn up pornography and all on my blog posts are sucked clean-dry.

The reality is I can’t figure out how to write about sex and blog about sex at the same time. I want to write this book more than I want to blog my current adventures; I want it to be finished so badly, the thought makes my chest ache.

The second reason I’m ending my time here is because I’d like to learn to speak for myself, openly, with my real name and my real voice.

I wrote once:

I honestly believe that being able to write what I want about my life and my sexuality is more important to me than the possibility that I may never teach children. I may never become powerful within a large company. I will definitely never run for public office…

A part of it is the belief, the naive, wide-eyed, furious, childish insistence that my life is my own, my body is my own, and I should always be able to speak my mind.

I can only be hurt by the words I write if those words represent a secret that is for some reason damaging. In many ways, being out protects me. Being unashamed, vocal and revealing can only limit the weapons available against me.

I have become increasingly skeptical of anonymity, or pseudo-anonymity, in my case. I’m certainly not saying we all need step from the shadows and reveal ourselves. I think our identities within our community are always our own, to do with as we like. But for me, keeping up the anonymous show seems increasingly pointless.

Most of the reasons I had to keep this journal separated from my real name vanished the day I sat down with my family member over Thanksgiving weekend and found my life suddenly ripped in tiny shreds. I clung stubbornly to the other reasons for a little while; the future jobs, the rest of the family, the possible consequences, the blinding, sneaky fear.

I find it very unfortunate and a little shameful that I feel the want to censor myself more fully now than I did when this blog began. Perhaps you could say that I’ve learned, or grown. You could say I’ve become more frightened, which is also true.

But in a wider sense, the real take-away is that my goals have changed. I am not content to speak from a pseudonym any longer. I have, in fact, soured radically upon the concept of not claiming my own ideas. But I recognize that speaking from my real name and voice will require a different perspective, and will have a different audience.

I’m sick of being afraid. I don’t want it any more. When it comes to emotional turmoil, I only really know how to bury things or confront them head on. I’m not sure which I’m doing right now.

The reality is that this is not an anonymous blog. Anyone with half a brain can find out who I am from here; Twitter was the last step that fell in place and clinched it. Any pretense we all may have made to my anonymity has been out of mutual respect and politeness. The sex community builds itself upon these fragile understandings, thin as sugar sticks. You support me, I support you. You trust me. I trust you.

I am out, but not unified. I’ve decided I’d like to feel unified, for once. I’d like to have a space on the web that can contain all of myself. Right now I have two sites and neither of them do what I what them to do. Both are limited, this site by its very narrow scope and my professional & personal site by its attempt to be clean. I would like a site that can be a little naughty, be professional, host my writing and my job hunt alongside my queer politics and community work. I don’t work well when I’m not fully integrated.

I’ve decided that I’d like to speak as myself, and that I can no longer accept the fragile, imagined protection of using other names and putting on a great pretending show. I am not a conjurer in that way. I am forthright, and know no other way to be.

My name is Sara.

I’d like to thank you for reading me as Eileen these past two years. I don’t mind if you keep calling me that; I answer to it now anyway.

I’ve found amazing support, dear friends and ever-expanding opportunities through this blog and the queer and kink scenes. I’m not leaving. I’m going to stay open, stay active, and keep writing. I’m going to make new spaces, run new events, spread new ideas. Perhaps I will return in a few years to this same ground, swept clean.

For those of you interested in the nitty gritty: the archives will remain active. I will continue to accept and respond to password requests. I may try to find a mental space that allows me to open those posts again; I’m not sure yet. The site may be slightly rearranged, but the content will not change dramatically, or be erased. The BloodyLaughter Twitter account will be suspended, as I’ve switched to SaraEileen.

In the meantime, you are invited to visit my personal site, where in the tradition of most blogs I am writing my way through being young, confused, and complicated. SaraEileen.com is a somewhat different website; it connects to my resume. It has my real name. It is not just about this part of my life, but also about writing, job-hunting, creativity and business. It will be a different blog, and I will not be offended if it doesn’t strike your fancy. Of course, I would love to see you there. As I said, I trust you.

It seems silly to just say thank you, but I will anyway.

Thank you for helping me take the big issues seriously and the little ones lightly.

Thank you for keeping me truthful, growing and proud in return for my words and affection.

It’s been raucous and wild. These things will continue. I’ll be seeing you, good people. I’m always around.

With love,
Sara

19 Comments

  1. Essin' Em wrote:

    Beautiful, well-written, and I completely validate your thoughts. The last two or three months, I’ve slowly been trying to bring together my online identity (Essin’ Em), with my “real life” identity…the person who teaches workshops, has a master’s degree in sex, who writes a sex column, and who is trying to edit an anthology (Shanna Katz). Bringing the two together is quite a struggle.

    I wish you the best of luck, and I hope we stay in very much touch!

    -Shanna

    Tuesday, January 27, 2009 at 8:17 pm | Permalink
  2. maymay wrote:

    I’ll share a rephrasing of what I shared with you about this post earlier: It’s about time, really. I find it interesting that the Eileen moniker began when I used it on the second post of my blog when you were in Australia and I was not, and it is being laid to rest as we are both here, planning to return to America. That, and many other things in this post, make me feel a great swell of pride for the obvious influences I’ve provided during this time in your life.

    You’ve done really well. And, of course, I think you’ll continue to do so. Much love.

    Tuesday, January 27, 2009 at 8:20 pm | Permalink
  3. Tom Allen wrote:

    I’ve been reading this blog with a mix of horror and fascination, and not without some degree of envy at your ability to – bit by bit – tear down the firewalls that separate the various portions of your life. I also have a lot of respect for your ability to work so ambitiously toward your dreams; moving from a small town to the big city, and then moving halfway ’round the globe took planning, resourcefulness, and (I’m sure) a bit of courage.

    It’s been an inspiration to get to know you.

    Wednesday, January 28, 2009 at 12:07 am | Permalink
  4. Tyler wrote:

    I had this mix of grief and dreadful panic when I read your tweets about this post. Then I started reading the post and realized how this makes so much sense, especially considering the things I know you have gone through over the past year and a half. I’m glad you’re finding a way to pull your identities into one unified one. I’m also immensely proud of seeing the things you’ve learned through this blog and what you’re doing with them. I’ve learned so much because of you and May and your blogs. I’ll be sad to see this go, as a reader, but far happier that you’ve made this tough decision for yourself, which I agree is for the best. You deserve not to feel you have to be anonymous.

    Wednesday, January 28, 2009 at 12:52 am | Permalink
  5. Tidla wrote:

    Here, here! Right on.

    Wednesday, January 28, 2009 at 1:09 am | Permalink
  6. Emily wrote:

    I want to applaud the courage that comes through in this post, and the weight that hangs in your desire to be all parts of yourself. That seems incredible, and yet exactly what one should be. So, of course, I’ll be reading you on your other blog. What a beautifully-written post to end this one on.

    Wednesday, January 28, 2009 at 1:42 am | Permalink
  7. Thank you, Sara; reading your blog has always been incredibly helpful to me, inspirational even, and this final post is no exception. If you have to shut the blog down, I’m glad that you’re doing it for the reasons you’re doing it. Best of luck in your future writing. (And in your travels, and, y’know, everything else…)

    Wednesday, January 28, 2009 at 3:37 am | Permalink
  8. Thumper wrote:

    I’m crushed that the bloody laughter will stop, but thrilled for you. Thanks for writing (sporadically ;) one of my favorite blogs. I look forward to reading what you create in the future here, on Twitter, or wherever.

    Wednesday, January 28, 2009 at 5:22 am | Permalink
  9. Sue wrote:

    There is bravery in sharing the parts of yourself, even anonymously, that you’ve shared. Even if you weren’t integrating the two, even if you weren’t forced-to-come-out, even if you’d remained “Eileen” and anonymous forever and ever… it took bravery. And it meant something.

    Bringing yourself out the rest of the way and integrating the various aspects of your life requires a new word besides ‘bravery.’ Most people would fold in on themselves. There is a reason we are private, after all, and when that privacy is violated and threatened… most retreat and consider the pain involved to be a lesson (the stove was hot, never ever touch the stove again).

    I just wanted to validate your bravery and your beyond-bravery and strength of character. Not everyone has those qualities.

    I wish you the best on your writing and, well, your life. I feel like I know you more than I do because of your (did I mention brave?) writings. And I’ll miss you in this incarnation.

    xoxo

    Wednesday, January 28, 2009 at 6:20 am | Permalink
  10. roo-roo wrote:

    *big squishy hug*

    Wednesday, January 28, 2009 at 7:32 am | Permalink
  11. Eileen wrote:

    Shanna, I feel for you. I’ve been noticing how you’ve been trying to integrate your life, and I really hope you find a way to do it that works for you. I’m certain that you will. And of course we’ll be in touch! Maybe May and I will even drive through your city on our way West…

    Wednesday, January 28, 2009 at 10:23 am | Permalink
  12. Eileen wrote:

    Tom-

    Horror and fascination? Is that…um, how is that? It’s been lovely getting to know you too. Let’s keep at that, please.

    Tyler-
    I realise my tweets on writing this are a lot darker than the content of the post itself. I did have a bit of a mourning period when I posted this. I do, after all, still have a lot of pride and emotional investment in this site. I compared it to ending a relationship that has no future potential; I always know beforehand that things will end, but there’s still shock and pain when the time really comes.

    I can’t wait to see you and hug you again.

    Tilda-
    Hey thanks :).

    Wednesday, January 28, 2009 at 10:29 am | Permalink
  13. Eileen wrote:

    Emily,
    Thank you very, very much. I’m glad you’re reading there. You’re good company.

    Subversive Sub-
    It’s gratifying to hear that I’ve helped you in some way, especially considering how fascinating your blog is and how much your musings have provoked my own. Best of luck to you as well!

    Thumper-
    Your blog is shaping up to be a really interesting new voice. I’ll be reading you too, definitely. Looking forward to it.

    Wednesday, January 28, 2009 at 10:36 am | Permalink
  14. Eileen wrote:

    Sue, your comments are always so inspirational. They make me want to jump on trampolines and try to fly. I really appreciate that, so thank you.

    And finally, woot! Big squishy roo-roo hugs!

    Wednesday, January 28, 2009 at 10:39 am | Permalink
  15. Patty wrote:

    Thank you so much for all of your posts. You have given me such confidence in expressing my own desires and truly helped our marriage become stronger. We wish you the best of luck with all of your future endeavors. And I can’t wait for you to be published!

    Thursday, January 29, 2009 at 1:30 pm | Permalink
  16. sara wrote:

    anonymity is chafing.

    I tried to blog about sex/gender/relationships, but stopped when I realized that my refusal to be anonymous compromised other people, whose wishes mattered too. it mattered to me to own my words about gender and sexuality, to link to them from very public places – but it also mattered to me that the people I was writing about not feel exposed.

    either way – thank you for writing beautifully. I look forward to seeing where you go.

    Thursday, January 29, 2009 at 5:27 pm | Permalink
  17. Dav wrote:

    Beautiful, brave, well written sentiments, i cant help admire you and your beliefs, beliefs that i hope i share. Thank you so much for illuminating the darkness around us with your insights, thank god (or Sara) that i’m not alone.

    Thanks.

    Sunday, February 1, 2009 at 10:13 am | Permalink
  18. Alexis wrote:

    I really have nothing to say. Get yourself straightened out.

    Monday, February 2, 2009 at 3:49 pm | Permalink
  19. sera wrote:

    Sara,

    I don’t know how I missed this, except that I also assumed you would stop blogging or had stopped.

    I am so impressed. What a beautifully written post. It also makes me think, intensely. I know that I’ll want to return to read it. I feel like you are the vanguard of . . . something. I’m glad to know which way the wind is blowing.

    ~ sera

    Wednesday, February 11, 2009 at 11:59 pm | Permalink

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