The following chapters describe a period of unease and discontent in the sexual relationship between my wife Rene and myself and how we gradually opened ourselves to new sexual experiences which brought us closer again and gave us greater satisfaction. During this past year we revived and enriched our desires, reestablished our positive sexual partnership and, for the first time, engaged in sexual experiences with other people. I have participated in most of these new erotic explorations though often my greatest satisfaction comes in supporting my wife's more active role and my highest excitement from watching her with others as she seeks greater sexual fulfillment. Rene and I understand better now the primacy of our sexual desires and the importance of new sexual experiences to who we are individually and what we have become as a couple. We are in tune with our stronger libidos and embrace the lust and the ardor and the sexual urgency deep within us. Now, we don't deny our needs or avoid what may help us meet them. We can draw on what we have rediscovered or newly learned in the past year about how to satisfy ourselves.
What I have written here is based on memory and on entries from the journal I have kept most days since high school. Quotes are based directly on my journal entries or are as close I can recall them, and many incorporate my wife's recollections. Even if some wording is not exact, all reflect to the best of my understanding the intent and the character of the speaker. The first four chapters were completed within two weeks of our return from a recent vacation in Barcelona and Languedoc. Rene has reviewed my drafts and I have made many revisions based on her corrections and suggestions. My wife and I look forward to future pleasures to be described in later chapters as I find time and inspiration.
In the Beginning
"My name is Henry. I am 34, a lawyer in a long established firm in the upscale village of Eindhoven in Westchester County, north of New York City. Handsome enough at six feet two inches, sandy hair, blue eyes, good build. Since my high school years women have seemed attracted to me and I never suffered for lack of sexual opportunity. My need often to seize these changed a decade ago when I met my wife to be.
My wife, Rene, 31, is an artist--a painter--and a strikingly beautiful woman. Now, after working hard to regain it, she has again a firm and luscious body. Lovely face and bright appealing smile. Long chestnut hair, deep brown eyes, sensuous mouth. Ordinarily elegant, stylish in the way she presents herself. When she wants to be, stunning in her sensuality. A low husky very sexy voice. Five feet seven, 128 pounds with the right curves in the right places--but very much in balance, in pleasing proportion, nothing exaggerated. Her long legs, her tight ass, even her ankles, are lovely to behold! As ravishing as she was when we met over nine years ago.
We met at a pool party at my uncle's country house in Columbia County. She was with another guy. As I soon grew accustomed to, Rene's personality, beautiful face and perfect body always attracted a group of men. When I first approached the group she was with that afternoon she was describing her first job at a new gallery in SOHO. I was struck by her remark that in fact the most interesting new art could be seen in several small galleries in Brooklyn. She named them. I took the opportunity to mention to her I recently had visited those galleries and others nearby while working a summer job for a law firm in that neighborhood. Her quick glance confirmed I had gotten her attention, though I soon passed on to mix with other guests. As she was getting ready to leave I caught her for a minute without her companion and asked if she would meet me to visit a few of those galleries some afternoon and then to have a drink to talk about what we had seen. To my surprise and pleasure she said yes. We did meet and walk and talk and have dinner two weeks later. Things moved fast from there. After five weeks we moved in together. I finished my law degree at Columbia the next year and eighteen months after we met we were married. We celebrated our eighth anniversary this past summer.
We were drawn to each other by mutual physical desirability certainly, but we soon found we shared common interests and were compatible in many other ways. We both enjoyed art, historical and contemporary, though Rene preferred the latter more than I do. We both were devoted readers, especially fiction, though I preferred the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries; Rene enjoys contemporary fiction more than I do. We both like watching modern dance and foreign movies and listening to a variety of contemporary music, especially from Africa and Asia. We both love hiking, traveling, and eating in French, Italian and Indian restaurants. From the first I admired Rene's paintings and over the years I have been supportive of each new artistic direction she has taken.
Rene is more gregarious than I am. She enjoys parties and receptions--and dancing--more than I do. She is usually ready to engage with strangers, always looking for new friends, while I am less willing to spend time with people who don't share my interests. I dislike women who are giddy and who giggle, who are preoccupied with celebrities, high fashion and the latest hot consumer items, or who are unable to engage in discussions of contemporary social and political issues. Though Rene often has to fend off the attentions of men she finds uninteresting, she readily responds to men she finds attractive. At times she becomes very flirtatious. At first I minded that. But not now.
Rene and I lived together four years in Brooklyn. I worked for a large law firm and Rene's painting career was beginning to take off both through her work being included in group shows and in selling more of it through several galleries. Then suddenly our lives and our plans for the future changed dramatically when we learned Rene had inherited over six million dollars from her great aunt, Teresa. While Rene was an undergraduate at NYU she had grown very close to this aunt after the death of her husband. Aunt Teresa lived just off Washington Square and Rene cared for her during her final illness. The inheritance was not a complete surprise, but the amount certainly was. With a new sense of security we reconsidered what we wanted for the future. After many discussions, we decided to opt for a quieter, more comfortable life in a more bucolic setting, though one still very accessible to the city. We bought an 1850 farm house and property a mile from the center of Eindhoven, 30 minutes north of the City by commuter train.
The farm house, which we recognized would need a great deal of remodeling to suit our needs and our tastes, was set far back on a quiet winding road and in back looked out over a large field with a pond and woods further on and a very narrow distant view of the Hudson. What appeared to have been a horse barn, still with stalls and a hay loft overhead, intrigued us with its longer term potential. Using more than a half million dollars from Rene's inheritance funds we worked with an architect and a contractor to reconfigure and modernize the farm house. We took one of the upstairs bedrooms for a temporary studio for Rene, knowing that it would later become a guest bedroom, and another for a study/library with a large screen for movies and television. We created a master bedroom on that floor all across the front of the house. We upgraded the covered porch on the front of the house and added another one across the back. The change we especially valued on the first floor was converting what had been two large rooms in the rear of the house into one long single room for the kitchen and dining area and with large windows all across and French doors in the center leading to the long porch across the back.