The
Episcopalian’s Guide to Sex
by
Bill Bonner
by Bill Bonner
"No
one knows what goes on behind closed doors."
~ Charlie
Rich
Throughout
all of Christendom, no group has more attractive churches – nor
more fetching women – than Episcopalians.
I say this
after attending a service at the American Cathedral of Paris – a
huge edifice tarted up in the ecclesiastical style of the 19th century.
Paris is full
of Episcopalians. Sure, there must be a few Baptists and evangelicals
drinking grape juice in some stifling basement in a bad neighborhood.
But, here on the swanky Avenue George V, hundreds of Episcopalians
(and a few Anglicans) gather each week – and put on a great show.
Episcopalians love Paris. It is the world's most beautiful city...and
Episcopalians appreciate it.
Baptists can
put up with ugly churches, bad food and teetotalism. After all,
life is just a short passage on their way to heaven, like a crowded
subway car you take to get to a good restaurant. You don't mind
standing up for a while, if it leads to a cushy seat in paradise.
But Episcopalians,
unsure of the promise of heaven and suspicious of the threat of
hell, don't like to take chances. Enjoy the trip...who knows where
it leads.
Elizabeth and
I had dinner at La Rotonde restaurant at La Muette on Friday night.
We sat outside, admiring the trees, the people, the fragrance of
the nearby park and the soft light of late evening.
"It's so beautiful
when spring comes," Elizabeth said, respiring heavily, "it's like
falling in love or eating too much chocolate." Last week, the city
threw off the gray overcoat of the long winter and bloomed...
On the sidewalk,
not far away, a young couple enjoyed a long kiss, of the sort that
would be described as a "French kiss" in America. The whole city
seems alive, aroused, pulsing with new life.
Indeed, Paris
is saturated with sex – drenched with it, as though after a warm
spring downpour. Hence, today's soggy article. I know no more about
sex than I do about the stock market. But I have spent more time
thinking about it.
Last week,
at the office, for example, sex was forced upon me. I opened an
e-mail which somehow took me to a porn site. Those clever porno
mongers had figured out not only how to get me there...but how to
keep me. Each click took me to another site – there was no way out.
Finally, after a very long time, I had to turn my computer off.
If information
is really the key to success...people looking at porn sites must
have the best sex lives of any creatures in history. My brief excursion
into web porno-land invited me to check out "Asian Hotties"... teenaged
something or others and "Yo Mammas." Neither race nor age was any
barrier. "Old Ladies" were just a click away at one point. And another
click offered "Animal Acts" (though, I admit, I saw no place to
click for "Vegetable Acts" nor "Mineral Acts" – suggesting a gap
in the market and an opportunity for someone.)
Even the respectable
press is in Full Disclosure mode. An article in Figaro Magazine
shows two middle-aged Paris intellectuals – a husband and wife team
– in bed. Each has written a bare-all book. His book features a
photo of his wife's derriere on the cover. Hers provides readers
with a blow-by-blow chronicle of her sex life.
Sex never seems
to go out of style. Still, fashions change in sex just as they do
in the stock market. When the bull market was at its throbbing climax,
Ted Turner described deal making as "better than sex." Now that
deals are more difficult to pull off, sex seems to be making a comeback.
How often should
you have sex?
"As often as
possible," comes the mob's reply. But Episcopalians realize that
quality is more important than quantity. Ask yourself, which would
you prefer: A single night with Bush foreign policy advisor, Condoleezza
Rice, in a wispy negligee...or a whole month with "Stormin' Norman"
Schwarzkopf in full battle gear?
In
most Episcopal churches, you would get an even show of hands for
either choice. More is not necessarily better. Like everything else
about sex, it depends on the context, the details, and the nuances.
After
all, the mechanics of sex are pretty simple – everything you need
to know can be picked up by an 18 year old in just a few minutes.
It's the romantic details that really matter. But, like fragile
spring wildflowers, these nuances d'amour are almost impossible
to grow commercially or in an open field. Instead, they need a little
shadow...and the dark of
night. Or they wither in the harsh
light of day.
Originally
published May 14, 2001.
May
2, 2006
Bill
Bonner [send
him mail] is the author, with Addison Wiggin, of Financial
Reckoning Day: Surviving the Soft Depression of The 21st
Century and
Empire of Debt: The Rise Of An Epic Financial Crisis.
Copyright
© 2006 Bill Bonner
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