I just read all fours, the new novel by Miranda July and it's a real tour of the first. It's actually touted as a manifesto for a generation. The generation often of women, 45 to 50, who are in the next biological clock crisis, which is the narrowing down of the pinnacle of their libido and who is wandering is this it. Am I going to live like that for another 20 years? What's now? I read the book and I thought wow this is a book, a fiction version of mating in captivity.
It explores the tension between the domestic and the erotic between our need for safety and our need for freedom and adventure between stability and aliveness and I thought I would love to
have a conversation with Miranda July. I am releasing a course on sexuality, it's a desire bundle, it's a dual course set for all the people who sit in my office, stay in the out talking about the dilemmas of desire, about the stalemates that they are in, about the sexual gridlocks they are experiencing about the spark that has gone and I thought how about if I read her book and I invite her to take the course and we have a conversation about desire in relationships,
particularly more so from the lens of the woman. I invited her here in Los Angeles so I thought since the book takes place in the room of her own, I love Virginia Woolf, I am going to invite her not in a studio and not in an office but I am going to invite her in a bedroom which is beautifully designed and where we can talk very fluidly between her and her characters and I invite you to listen. We're all trying to figure out how to talk to each other about race but it's hard when so much of
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Well, this is the first conversation I've had publicly since the book came out. So if you can imagine everyone else I've talked to in a public sense was before the entire experience with other people. When did it come out? May 14th. And then I actually kind of went through a period of intense exhaustion such that I've really laid low. I actually canceled everything. So I have the whole experience of it coming out has been alone in a way like has been through wonderful emails
and messages and stuff. But I think in a way, friends have reported back and also with my having had the experience with the world, which of course changes it a bit from when you're just talking about a book theoretical book that no one's read. And yeah. Are you surprised? Do you feel recognized not as the you the person, but also in terms of what you captured? It's what I hoped for. I felt like I was consciously risking, but knowing I wasn't alone.
And so the whole the whole bet was okay. The represents the lives of. Yeah, that I'm not just being risky to, you know, to risk or for. To place precarity in my life, but actually to be able to have this conversation for the rest of my life so that in fact it wouldn't be a big risk. It would actually be a form of creating security. In a way, the risky feeling that this was a secret or shameful or that something bad would happen if you spoke openly the way you might with your
best friend about marriage and desire and domesticity and and not just those things, right? We've talked about all those things, but a kind of a fear that the way you feel inside has no place in life, even in what seems to be a very good life that somewhere along the way or maybe from the very
start you were living according to other people's rhythms and that as you come into yourself, you know, start like waking up, growing up, you know, for me this was during pariametapos another big secret that that not fitting into your life feeling might become so great that it's a sort of secret agony that you just bear because what is it? It's nothing. It's just you complaining or you know what I mean? It's so easily that line that moment we have one of her crowd sources
that basically says just swallow it for the next five years. It'll come out on the other side. Yeah. I mean, be happy that you didn't blow up your life, which I mean, doesn't that sound sort of like not from you, but sort of sounds like sound advice, like because I think also, especially as women, like don't be erratic, don't be messy, don't be a basket case, right? There's so much shame around kind of intuition or actual change. I mean, we are rather...
It's actual change that is selfish. It's change that suits her. Yeah. I think it's that. It's not the change in and of itself. If they all move to repair, it's changing schools. Yeah. We've done that a lot of times. Yeah. It's the change where she puts herself at the center rather than her care and worry for the well-being of others. Yeah. Which is actually part of the definition of motherhood, which is why so many
women struggle to retrieve the woman behind the mother. Because motherhood has to come with a certain chastity, a certain sacrifice, a certain abdication of oneself for the well-being of all the others. So a mother that is selfish is a woman. Right. I mean, it's less categorically than that, but a woman comes with autonomy, comes with freedom, and the mother... Right. And in some ways, if you don't have children, one way you can show your good is by care
taking another ways. Yeah. Children can be elderly parents, can be the parents of your partner, can be the heretic brother. Yeah. Are you being accused of by the moral police of trying to influence women to... Yeah. I worried about that. I actually had right before it came out. I was having a real anxiety. It didn't make sense to me because I was like, well, I'm excited. I have the sense this is going to go well. What is the anxiety? And I was like, oh, I'm going against
like my dad, my... Just like a whole sort of patriarchal structure of good men. And there was the feeling like what happens when you do that? I literally thought, like, am I safe here? I mean, I guess it's still early days, but... So you didn't treat this book as a novel. When you speak like this, the auto-fiction part of the book seems to be... It's as if you
you took a responsibility for your characters. I mean, as far as I can speak to the relationship to my own self, if you know, it is something I thought about a lot because I didn't name the character and I... Her job, you know, you could map my career onto hers. And that was initially,
she was a writer. Her name was Marion. And I think after a while, I just was like, well, this... this is a book about the body partly and like rather than conjuring up this sort of fictional body, like it seems more useful to kind of generously loan some parts of myself to this narrator. And it doesn't take very much reality to make something come alive. It's like red food coloring
or something. You just need like a little drop and suddenly the whole thing is pink. And I thought I think that might be interesting and that's kind of where we're at with fiction and selves and social media. You know, everyone is already so busyly constructing themselves that it just seem like I think we're sophisticated enough to handle that this is fiction, but that I haven't
gone out of my way to prove that, you know. There was a woman yesterday who asked a question that she had divorced after whatever years and she wanted to know how she could start a new relationship in which or she was basically in a new relationship, but she was constantly worried that she would lose herself again. Which I think is a question that I don't
hear as often from male identified people. I hear it more from women. This notion that coming close to someone holding on to another often stands in a position with holding on to oneself. Right. Yeah. I'm thinking about the beginning of my, so me and my girlfriend both came out of long marriages. And I remember the beginning of our relationship is just this joyful, pleasure state. And then I'm for some reason that made me think of just this one day where maybe a couple
months into the relationship, you know, it's going so well, so new. And she said something in an offhand way. But for some reason, I had this like, wait, do I even know this person feeling? And then I did what I do, which is just kind of turned off. And in the turning off, I was like these bright lights that had been shining on us just went off. And I was like, oh, why did I think this was like this great new thing? This was just like a drug state. And now it's
worn off. And this is just nothing. And, and right, I'll go home and whatever, just live my life. And this is sort of awkward now. And it was such a dramatic drop. And I was so sad about it. And I had this nagging feeling of like, I felt this before. I've, you know, throughout my life, I've had this utter disappointment. And because we'd done pretty well at talking about things so far,
I was like, I'm going to force myself to just say this. And I did. And I was nervous because in the past, somebody who's been swimming out in the ocean and suddenly realized they've got, they've kept swimming in there very far. Well, I just didn't care about her suddenly anymore. I just turned off. So you disconnect. Yeah, I just, well, what my experience was just like, fuck, like I built this person up. And now, yeah, I just, I don't, I just don't feel that way anymore.
And I, in the past, if I'd said something along those lines, even if I said it would solve awareness, like this is kind of weird. This just happened. I'm not sure what to think. The person would have in the past been like, well, that makes me feel pretty bad. Like here I am. We're driving along. I thought we're having a great day. But there was somehow this new thing about her. And so I just said
it. I just said, I don't, you know, I don't know what to make of this, but I'm just going to be honest. This is what it is going on inside me. Why I've been quiet for the last few miles. And she said, yeah, it's really scary. Isn't it vulnerability? And I was like, what? Like it hadn't occurred. I was like vulnerability. That's why I shut off. Because I scared myself. Yeah. And then I turned her because she'd been so, she better needs to do about her. Right. And she'd been so into me. And
that's also part of why I turned off. And then I said to her, well, do you ever feel this way? Like you, you know, you don't. I know this is a thing about me. I can be cotton cold, whatever. And she's like, oh, yeah, when I dropped you off the other night, I thought, maybe I'll just burn this whole thing down. And I was like, I'm so gleeful. Like just like felt so in love. I was like, you're kidding me.
You were going to, she's like, yeah, it's like, maybe I'll just never call again. And I just loved her so much. And that was sort of the beginning in a way of realizing like, oh, there can be trust. Like I'm neither going to lose myself nor disconnect to a degree that I can't be found again. Like, but it's all still very new to me. You know, it's been like a little more than a year and a half.
It really joins what I began to answer the woman yesterday, you know, but I broadened it. And I said, there's often attention in the good sense of the word in a relationship between one person more afraid of losing the other and one person more afraid of losing themselves. We all feel both, but we often outsource one side of the fear to the other person. So one person more afraid of abandonment and one person more afraid of suffocation. Right. If you, yeah.
Yeah, no, and I've been more afraid of suffocation, but it can flip around. Yes. Yeah. I think flexibility in a relationship is when in fact, people can go back and forth. Yeah. What often happens is that people take on one side of the equation and they project on to the other person the part of the equation that is more challenging to them. Right. Yeah. Kind of outsourcing that. Yeah. But you outsource the part that makes you more vulnerable than the one
you keep. Right. And we do that all over the place. Right. So when she tells you, I do this too. Yeah. For one, your fear gets diffused. The extent of, oh, I can disconnect to such a level. It gets a little denoted because if you've got someone else who said, I thought I was going to drop you off and never call you back. Yeah. And so suddenly the part of you that doesn't want to lose her comes. Right. Right. I'm going to be in the end of this. Yeah. Exactly. So now you're in both
places. Right. I can be cold, but I'd also don't want you to leave me. Right. Now you're experiencing both parts of the of what I think is what we all have. Right. We all need security and we all need freedom. Right. But you can experience freedom better when the other person doesn't threaten you with their freedom. Right. Right. We'll wait. Break that down for me. Okay. I'll break it down in a, in a, in a, in a, like, I love your metaphor. So I'll try to give you a metaphor.
The little kids sit here on your lap. Yeah. Doesn't have to be your kid. A kid. And at some point, a child gets up and goes into the world. Right. To explore, to play, to discover. Right. And at some point they turn around. Install there. Yes. And when they see that you are there, what do they do? They can go a little farther. Exactly. Right. That's it. Your freedom doesn't exist on its own. It feels that it can go further into playful, unself conscious, carefree, risk-taking because there
is a solid base here. Yes. That you can come back to when you're done. If this base goes and does the same, that is often scary for people. We have to take a brief break. Stay with us. Support for this show comes from ABC's Hit Drama Grace Anatomy. The landmark 21st season promises the drama, suspense, and all the fields fans come to expect. New romances, new medical and personal emergencies, emotional twists and turns, and all your favorite characters, including Meredith Gray.
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Head over to bombass.com slash ester and use code ester for 20% of your first purchase. That's b-o-m-b-a-s.com slash ester. Code ester at checker. Do you use the word erotic and sexual interchange? No, I guess sexual to me means you're going to get into it more, whereas there can be a sort of turned on feeling that just lives. Maybe it's playful in some moments where they're partnered throughout the day, but maybe, yeah, but it's not something that's be acted on.
I'm curious what you think of that. I often think that modernity has reduced eroticism to sex. And that in the mystical sense of the world eroticism has been about aliveness. Yeah. And your character is in search of aliveness. It involves sexuality, but it is not the most central element. Eroticism is what gives sexuality meaning. You can do sex and feel very little. Right? Oh yes. I mean, we may have done that for centuries. So I make a point of saying
sexuality and eroticism, two different things. Sexuality is the pivot, it's the basic instinct, but eroticism is sexuality transformed by the human imagination. It's the poetic subsex, it's what gives it meaning. And then it means that it's about a quality of vibrancy, vitality, curiosity, playfulness. Yeah. That's what makes it erotic, makes it alive. And when I wrote the state of affairs and I went around the world talking to people who had affairs,
the one word that they all shared was I felt alive. They didn't talk about the sex. Some of them had had once, some of them had had a lot, some of them that really wasn't the center, but alive was the word. Yeah. A life and vibrant, vital, energetic, something reconnected with oneself. What did you think? Yeah. I like that so much in your course that it extends out of, it's not just this thing in bed or something. Like it's in all of life and you kind of
cultivate it. It's like something that can be in you all the time. I did, yeah, I wanted to get that across in the book and that that's why she has this kind of a fair, emotional affair. But the reason why it's so hard to go home is because once you've been alive, it's really hard to go back. And she's made one thing very alive. This is where I can be alive in this room,
or with this person. And then she's just, this home is not where I feel alive. And I think it's like since we're talking about such ephemeral things, there's no real reason why that's true. There's no, I mean, I do think there's real reasons kind of built into the structure of marriage or what people don't realize they're agreeing to. And you have to kind of re-agree to other things.
But I guess it's not putting it all back in the box when she goes home that creates the problems because that's tremendously painful to be faced with how little space you've given yourself moment to moment to feel alive. The fascinating thing for me is that you call it an emotional affair. Yeah, maybe it's not. I think I got that from other people. Yeah, but this is a real cultural conversation. Yeah, I mean, in the United States, there is a real desire to make a distinction
between a sexual affair and an emotional affair. Yeah, I don't actually myself. I realize like, I feel like I've had affairs with people I've, you know, only touched their hand, you know, and I've always sort of joked that I'm a bit Victorian, but I think it's also just that sex can be a lot of things. I mean, I've also like had repeated intercourse. It didn't really seem very, you know. Exactly. So I think of it sometimes as a periodanical hair splitted. Because there
was no penetration than its no longer a sexual affair. But there were feelings, so there was an emotional affair. Well, in fact, you know, you can have a very erotic experience without touching anything because you're imagination. You know, it's like Pust's famous line. It's not the other person that's responsible for love. It's your imagination. Yeah. So the character has a very erotic
experience in this room. To me, it's as sexual as they come. And I think one of the things I try so hard, especially in my work with heterosexual couples is to decouple sex from intercourse. Yeah. That if there is no penis entering of a vagina, then that meant there was no sex. And which is actually a thing that two women can really sites them much more easily. But in it is so entrenched that this is where sex starts. And then it becomes so narrowly focused on those genitals.
Yeah. Which when those genitals are not as available, people don't really know what to do. Yeah. I know. I do feel like all the little comments throughout the day are sex to me. Yeah. Like four plays starts at the end of the previous orgasm. That's that's that the thing, right? It's the ways that you keep that energy that you continue to eroticize your partner. You see you sexualize your partner. That doesn't mean you're constantly thinking about
having sex with him. It means that you see them as a sexual being. And rather than you see them as your partner in management ink. And then at the end of the day, you know, you think that you can
just roll around and suddenly be all hot and sweaty. Yeah. You live together? No. Do you think that that structure by definition allows for the preservation of that energy in a way where setting up home, living together, paying bills together, maybe having children together, you know, being a couple, even without the legality of marriage, but being a couple in a system.
Right. Yes. I mean, rather than you are a couple outside of a system. Yeah. I mean, I know plenty of like divorced moms who went on to find a new person and that became a new family unit, right? I didn't want that. I wanted to get to live alone with my child and kind of figure out what my home was. Like what, like just sort of almost start from scratch. Like here's who I really am. Sorry, it took so long, but just we can just, I'm just going to be me day and day. It takes so long.
Life, we get to know ourselves better. We develop confidence. We may even have had those thoughts 20 years before, but that didn't mean that we had the confidence to live by them. And I think it's developmental. I don't think people at 20 or 30 know necessarily what you call who they are. I know. I really, yeah, I agree. And I've kind of had to tell myself with my, you know, when I think about my child kind of going through all this, it's like, well, I'm showing them
change. Like I'm modeling, like you get to change, you get to grow and change your whole life and become more yourself. Like as you get older and how old were you when you started to write the book? How long did it take? Yeah, I started at 45 and finished it 49. Now I'm 50. So I think I started meeting probably around 42. Wow. You know, and I wrote it over two years. I actually had never thought about what stage I was in when I started to write it. Wow.
That I began to think as I was reading your book. I thought of it as the stage of my youngest is five. I can finally start a project where I can read a book and remember the beginning when I reached the end. And I am ready to do something new and something creative. And so I took a year to write the initial article and then the book project came out. But I didn't associate it with where I'm at. I just thought about all the things that I had learned professionally too, that I had questioned
and I had never imagined. Promises that we were instructed with about the meaning of sexuality in relationships. How do we interpret sexual stillmates in the context of the overall relationships? All these truths that I had kind of learned and I began to question them one by one. And that's when I said, okay, love and desire, they relate, but they also conflict. And they're in lies the mystery of eroticism.
That's what I want to prove. What is the nature of desire in long term relationship? Because in effect, you don't challenge the love of your relationship. You challenge desire and you challenge a certain experience of deadness that creeps up in you and in him. And in him. I mean, he's actually, I think he's a very important character in the book and not spoken enough about.
Well, I'm a couple of star piece, so I'm not just looking at the female partner, but I in this case he's a man, but I'm very interested in his character, in his energy, in his own fantasy life, in his own relationship with Karo, which energizes him, which he then brings. He seems to be able to bring it home. I mean, it's interesting. I've gotten so many messages and emails from women who said I never would have been able to say all the these things to my husband,
but I gave him the book and somehow he was he was able to understand it. And now we've changed everything. We've begun these conversations. And I think in some ways it's exactly the goal of my course. It's really interesting. Yes, they go together. It's amazing how little people talk about this, especially with the person they're having sex with. Right. Okay. Keep going. Yeah, it's so hard. I mean, I see you with the course, like really brilliantly trying to figure out how do you
do? It's like seeing around a corner that you just can't see around, you know? And I think it does begin with a lot of questions like you were saying when you started writing, mating, like, why are things the way they are? And she begins to ask that in the relationship. And he's really important to me that he's a good guy. Like I didn't want the book to be about him in the sense, like if he's doing terrible things or things that are, you know, you can't live with then, like,
well, of course, it's it's a less universal story in a way. It had to be about her. And I think in doing that, I sort of accidentally gave him more personhood because he's not just the instigator of her, you know, as often happens in a story. It's presented as less complex. Well, she was going into her darkness and he was sort of content to have the darkness of women near him without having to go into his own. Yeah. And then in some ways, that's often the women's
role in this culture. Like I will contain all the all the emotional turmoil and complexity and badness sometimes, you know, and you can remain like an upstanding citizen of a world that frankly was made for you. And I guess, I mean, it's been interesting as the book comes out. I mentioned some, you know, women have given it to their husbands and so forth. There's also been a lot of
men who've written me who just identify with the narrator and with the woman. And it kind of made me think, oh, just as my whole life I've read these heroes journeys and learned and gotten very good at being ambitious and brave and conquering and all these things that we attribute to the masculine or whatever. I mean, I'm great at those things. I'm a great, you know, art type old man in a way. But the whole like world of interiority that I have with my friends,
like when we spend five hours in a row together, those men have no access to. And until it's sort of modeled for you, like this is how intimately we're allowed to talk as humans, you know, any of any gender, you can talk in this much detail, you can feel this much, the emails I've been getting or the DMs should say are like as if they were deprived of that knowledge. And they feel almost like they shouldn't get to know it. You know, they shouldn't even get to know about this kind of
thought or conversation. But they are identifying it with their deepest selves, you know, not maybe with their lived relationships, but with their own feelings. And that's, I didn't, you know, that isn't what I was thinking about when I was writing, but that's quite moving to me. It's interesting. When you talk about the institution of marriage and you say that it was created to serve men, yes, there's a lot of that, but I also think that when we look at the kinds of relationship that
you write, there's no winner. Yeah, this thing is not working better for him than for her. Right. Even though men are more socially, if they are in a relationship, they are less likely to be in a bad health situation, they're more likely to live longer. I mean, there's a lot of indicators that say that the well-being of men in the context of a relationship goes up and the well-being of
women goes down. But that's really by choosing certain kinds of indicators. I think in terms of losing oneself in terms of disconnecting from one's own sense of pleasure, from one's desires, from one's, you know, sense of aliveness. I don't know that the situation is by definition
worse for women and men in same-sex relationships, it exists no less. Yeah. You know, there's something about the needs for creating the structure of the domestic that exists somewhat, well, the way that Stephen Mitchell says, you know, we all have two sets of fundamental human needs, security, adventure, stability, change, predictability, surprise, familiarity, novelty. And these two sets of needs actually spring from different sources and pull us in different
directions. And basically, for me, the fate of desire in modern relationship is about reconciling these two seemingly opposing sets of human needs. Right. Right. So, there is a certain context that is more likely to maintain desire, but it is not the same context that is more likely to, you know, what a love story needs is not the same as what a life story needs. Right. Right. And this is the mystery for me. We have to take a brief break, so stay with me and let's see where this goes.
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I feel like it's one of those things. Sometimes when you read a great text when you're young or at a certain point in your life, you read it but it doesn't really click and then you might continue living your life and suddenly you're like, oh, that's what she was talking about. People should feel reassured that even if they don't feel like they're doing it well or getting
it all, it's all going in and it's now a resource so they can recognize it in their life. You know, I had all these questions but I was like, oh, she's not going to want to talk in detail about her life. But I guess like I wanted to know, like I know what's erotic for me or what's for play for me. And the writer and me want some details from you, like I want to know what you like.
You know, it's interesting. It's not a direct answer to your question. It's something that I was talking before because you go to see the sendo crinologist and she's starting to talk with you about hormones and all of that. One of the very interesting findings about hormones, therapy, and women is that the placebo response is around 50 something, 52, 54 if I remember well. Can't be the exact number maybe but it's astoundingly high. So you ask yourself, what does that say?
If half the women respond to a placebo, it says that if she goes to get help because she says I want to experience some arousal again, even spontaneous arousal. I want to experience the energy of my body that I used to know and not just feel completely numb. If she thinks about herself, if she attends to herself, if she pampers herself, all of those things will have an effect comparable to the hormones. Or in other words, in your case, if you give her a new plot, sometimes she doesn't
need hormones, just give her a new story. A story that motivates her engages her, ignites her. So that to me is a very important piece. So it's like how do for me it's a ton of different things. Sometimes it has to do with music and singing. I love to sing and I love to dance. Now the difference is that you can sing and be very, very sad but you cannot dance and be sad. The body just wants to dance when it is completely collapsed.
And so I love both of these things and anytime. I mean, it is probably not much else that can get me out of a mood than to move. And then it's about paying attention to, I grew up above a clothing store. And I grew up in a clothing store of my parents. So clothes make a big difference. To paying attention to making yourself feel good to it's that. Then it's about laughing. I mean, I have a partner who has a phenomenal sense of humor and can really take me out of
different situations. And I find humor is an exquisite form of intelligence. And then a lot of it is doing new things together with my partner. Things that we haven't done from travel to art to projects that we do together. It's throwing ourselves into expensive and new situations rather than settling on what is more cozy and familiar. It's like, you know, the friendship part of a relationship loves to be cozy and comfortable.
But the erotic part of a relationship wants to experience novelty and mystery and surprise. So I am very an active seeker of those kinds of things. So it's a lot of different things. And I think because sometimes it could feel like, oh, you're just an experienced junkie. And it's really not the reason I'm actually really, really interested in eroticism is because I grew up in the community of people who had experienced massive trauma. They were all Holocaust survivors.
They all had lost pretty much their entire family, their entire life. And I was fascinated by how does one get up after all of this and still find the taste to live and maybe even a joy to live. So that's why my interest came up and why I keep thinking about a liveliness because a liveliness is freedom, possibility, adventure, self-definition, self-determination. It's all of that. It's not just excitement. And part of why I got then hooked myself in it is because I thought,
if you are the child of that legacy, you better do something with your life. And I meant I wasn't then I have a little life. Whatever I defined as a little, I wanted a rich life, not money, not fame, not rich, rich with people, with experiences, with meaning, with meaning. And because I had to make up for all those who hadn't had a chance to live. And it's from that place that my drive comes. It's a very young old drive and I spend decades not connecting the dots. Yeah, it's a part wild.
You know, so when you say like, you know, why didn't I do it earlier? Because earlier you plan the seats. But you don't always know why. And then one day I write my book, like you wrote your book. And I remember the conversation with Jack about that where I just really understood that distinction. I'm not writing a book about sex. I see loads of people who have regular good sex, but that doesn't make them feel alive. And I know people who have not that much sex
anymore, but they have an energy in their relationship. That spark, that june sequah. What is it? Right, right. That's what good me interested. Yeah. Oh, that's so important because it also it sort of cuts through this idea that pleasures kind of connected to luxury or something, you know, that there's like I feel like when I've been forced to contend with my body, the most it's been out of suffering, you know. And that's when I've been kind of most in my body and learned to
notice what it feels and wants. And I think somehow sex and pleasure got very divorced from from the same body that feels pain. And there really is all the same. And you need in a way you need to understand both to understand either of them. Can you understand pleasure without understanding pain? Yeah, that's sort of right. And somehow humor connects them too, right? Yes. Yes.
I mean, it's the same as can you can you be happy without having known sorrow? And humor is the part that's like points at kind of the wrongness of that, you know, and that that's okay, you know, that they're mixed up the suffering and the pleasure and the pains and the different that pleasure isn't this one creamy thing. I mean, you speak really eloquently about that, of course, but that it's like a whole person, you know, along with their childhood and all their, you know, all their
suffering is part of what they have to work with and pleasure wise. So the one thing that was thinking about that, you know, you brought up humor as well and playfulness, but also the playfulness of the language. Sexuality is a very treacherous language. In itself, it isn't a very interesting language as invocabulary and talking about sexuality is often, especially I have to say in this
society, it's either smut or sanctimony. Right. And it's very, I mean, so much of what I've tried to do is to provide a vocabulary for talking about sexuality that is neither of these extremes, and that just helps to develop a comfortable metaphorical language to talk about one's desire, one's preferences, fantasies, fetishes, and frustrations for that matter. But you bring, you know, you've got a ton of these fantastic metaphors from the one that everybody quotes of the
the whistling tea kettle to, but it is an amazing image. You kind of visualize it immediately. That's what metaphors do. So I'm very curious about your quest for that language, your playfulness in the language. It's not just that it's raw and unwarranted and all of that. It's more than that. I mean, I guess I have to be interested and surprised by anything I'm writing, you know,
for it to come alive. And so with any topic that's kind of been hit a lot, I mean, you know, it's like I go off the path in order just to feel surprised and to feel it as it really happens in life because, you know, when it's interesting, presumably all the sex in the book is like worth writing about, you know, then you want to come up with like, well, what's, like I remember what that feels like, you know, but it doesn't, it's not going to work just to write
something that happened in my life because I'm not surprised by that anymore. So I have to be surprised all over again, you know, like have my breath taken away. I remember the point, there's a character, I don't want to give a subway or whatever, who who's kind of a smaller character in the beginning and who comes back midway through the book and the narrator spends like a night with her. And I was so, I kind of knew this night was going to happen in some form,
but I was so shocked that it was her. And I was like, oh my god, she was there all along. I do it's a great place to stop. Thank you Miranda and Miranda July is the author of All Force and tour the force and an artist that you absolutely want to discover. So it's a pleasure. Thank you. It's such an honor. If listening to my conversation with Miranda July inspires you to want to learn more, I invite you to read All Force by Miranda July and I invite you to explore my course,
the Estére Perreilles Desire Bundel. It has two parts, bringing desire back for if you are really stuck and playing with desire for if you actually want to take the flicker and see to what extent it can become a more heavily burning flame. Where should we begin with Estére Perreilles is produced by Magnificent Nois, where part of the Vox Media podcast network and partnership with New York Magazine and the Cut. Our production staff includes Eric Newsom, Destry Sibley, Sabrina Farhi,
Kristen Muller, and Julian App. Original music and additional production by Paul Schneider and the executive producers of Where Should We Begin are Estére Perreilles and Jesse Baker. We'd also like to thank Courtney Hamilton, Mary Alice Miller, and Jack Sol.
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