Thursday, November 15, 2007

Call for Submissions. Period.*

Brilliance is inspiring. Two days ago, I read a very funny/mortifying story by Jessica, who is hilarious, about how she learned how to use tampons. It occurred to me that many of us delightful women bloggers have shared these "my first period" stories with the wide world of the web at some point. I love reading them. Everyone has a different experience, and yet they are so easy to relate to and universal in their own horrifying ways. It's good stuff.

As I tried to leave a comment for Jessica about how much I enjoyed reliving her painful adolescence (fucking Blogger ate it), it dawned on me: we should put together a book of essays about getting our periods. Or about coping with getting our periods, as some of the better stories don't involve that first fateful day of doom. Maybe a book like this already exists since it's not exactly an original concept. (A quick search on Amazon for books about menstruation yielded only treacly guides for girls and anthropological and cultural studies and criticism, but not fun essay books. I jaunted over to Barnes & Noble and saw nothing on the topic, either.) Even if it does, we can spin the book as the first book of essays about getting our periods written by non-famous blogging women. (How can any publisher resist?)

If this idea interests you, speak up and I will investigate how to get this off the ground. Since I love reading all your blogs (and the writing of my non-blogging friends, several of whom I think would come up with really awesome essays), I know this will be great. If not as a book (for which you'd get paid for your contribution!), then maybe we can have one of those blogging carnival things that always happen but I don't understand at all. We'll call it Bloody Bloggers Day or something.

*Apologies for leaving out the two or so men who read CUSS. Maybe you can write a funny essay about your first nocturnal emission or something equally embarrassing. Actually, that would be an awesome book/blog day, too...

18 comments:

  1. Count me in.

    Maybe our delightful stories can help erase some of the stigma attached to talking about "it."

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  2. Yay! I am so excited about this. I found a very good potential publishing match, and I sent an email to my friend/literary agent about the idea. Hopefully, he can explain to me a little more about how the process of putting an anthology together works. I'll keep people posted. And if there's anyone you know who would make a good contributor, pass the word on. Let's try and round up a religiously, socio-economically, ethnically diverse batch of women!

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  3. Sure, count me in! I don't know what story I'll tell, but I'll think of something.

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  4. i'd like to contribute. not sure i've got anything witty to say, though i could probably think of something. my blogging mostly consists of chronicling my low points.

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  5. I'd probably contribute (more likely to a book format than to a blog carnival), and would almost certainly be an audience member.

    "We all know it happens. We only talk about it when it's just us girls. This book brings you stories to let you laugh about it, from your fellow ordinary women." That the kind of spin you're thinking of, Non-Famous Blogger Suzanne?

    —Even Less-Famous Blogger Lou

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  6. I don't know if mine warrants a whole story - it showed up during an intense game of dodgeball and boy was I pissed at the interruption. If I can squeeze more than a page out of it, you can have it.

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  7. I'm sure I can think of something.

    Just today I had the most spectacular pad blowout since my teens.

    Think: trapped in an airplane, noticing I am bleeding a lot. A trip to the restroom reveals blood pretty much everywhere but where it belongs. Soaked through jeans. And with 4 more hours flight time ahead of me. Good times.

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  8. Taking part in sports certainly yields a few funny stories that I would love to contribute.

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  9. suzanne you are brilliant! what a great idea!

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  10. I am thinking about the family mindset when I got my period in 1960. I may write about it, but then I would feel too guilty giving away family gems. Will ponder further.

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  11. Ooooooh ... I'm so in! My period is now behind me, but I've been telling the My First Period story for 40 years without any compensation, and I deserve some! It's a story layered with family dysfunction, mother issues and shame, all tied up with a ribbon of hilarity. You'll love it. When do you want it? :)

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  12. Don't mind me chiming in all LATE & shit, but...I'd love, love LOVE to contribute!

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