[:::: Authors Note ::::]
Throughout our lives, we all go through seasons. I have enjoyed writing stories and working through the emotions inherent in a Loving Wives tale for the past season. Sure, most of us like the little bit of erotic storytelling in these tales, and most of us that write are used to being ridiculed for our plot lines or, as in my case, my grammar and editing. But still, we persist. Why? Because we like to write, we have stories inside us that we want to tell. These stories tell of love, betrayal, pain, anguish and yes, sometimes redemption, compassion and the ability to forgive that lots of rude feedback tend to dislike.
In this story, I am taking a little bit of a different spin. I want to try it from a different perspective, I am going to have our main character (MC) talking directly to the reader about his challenges, passions, betrayal, and recovery. So, I will speak to you for this story like we're breaking the fourth wall.
I will point out that while there are a few elements of me as a person here, our MC in the story is not me. The actions and experiences are different to my life; that story is still in progress. In this case, I am just using the perspective and my name 'John Other' as an exciting way to tell the tale.
I hope you enjoy "Writing as a Loving Wives Author."
[:::: Writing as a Loving Wives Author ::::]
I've been a fan of reading stories for years, one of the first books that I can recall as a kid is a book about a character called 'Grug'. He was an odd-looking non-human character that always came across as drab and grumpy, but the colours in the world around him were bright and cheery. Then, as I got older, I enjoyed the 'choose your own adventure' books. Later still, I found sci-fi, I loved the drama of epic space battles or the lengthy descriptions of technology that had no place in our modern society.
I've never read a bibliography, and I was not too fond of self-help books as all they did was give you a sentence or two about how the author's experience should be life-changing for you, then fork over more of your hard-earned dollars for the following change your life experience that still left you empty.
I was in my early twenties when I discovered Literotica. I found stories here with all of you, stories told in such vivid detail that I could not ignore them. There were romance stories of two people, or more, finding love. Non-human stories of love between humans and things that weren't. Even the taboo stories of incest that I loathe to admit to you, I read. I did enjoy the more romantic of them rather than the dark ones. In reading the stories here with all of you, I had found a guilty pleasure that was my secret. Sure, porn was good to beat off with, but it was instant gratification and didn't linger in my mind like a good story here on Literotica does. You unquestionably know what I mean.
There were only a few categories that I stayed away from, I wasn't into BDSM or gay erotica, and while I don't have anything against people who love that, it wasn't for me. The other category I avoided for some reason, was Loving Wives. For years the category of Loving Wives continued to taunt me as I looked through the new stories. For some reason, I felt that it was taboo for me, but unlike the secret thrill I got from reading a story about other more risqué topics, I just didn't read any Loving Wives tales.
I bet by now, some of you are now laughing at me. Not only am I a pervert and a deviant, but I am currently writing stories for the category that I avoided. So, what changed? Well, like so many of you that dutifully read here, leaving passionate comments on mine and other authors stories, my story is that of a woman, well, three women actually, that brought me to writing this tale.
Some of the fantastic Loving Wives authors write because they have a gift for the written word. They know how to spin a phrase, bringing the emotions inherent in the syllables of their words to life. I can tell you that I have spent many a time in their stories wanting to rage on behalf of the main character betrayed, cry at disaster as I commiserated with our MCs or feel my heart soar with delight as the MC triumphed over adversity, usually caused by a cheating spouse.
These authors, including
SaddleTramp1956
,
Blackrandl1958
,
Vandemonium1
, and others you will find in my favourites, are inspiring. Their stories are exceptional in their telling, so when I read something from them, I always know I am going to be on an emotional roller coaster, holding on for dear life, eagerly anticipating what's coming until I get to the end of the tale. Like all of you, when I'm done, I want the next story they have written.
For the rest of us, we are not as gifted in our words as these authors are, but we write anyway. We have deep-seated emotions that we don't know how to address, except to write. We have been hurt, sometimes by our own hands, other times, by those around us. But we write here because our pain and emotion align with this category of Loving Wives.
Myself these days, I write with the encouragement of my wife and my therapist. Unlike the great authors above, I am not an English literary genius. I passed English in high school, but it was never front of mind to me. I found school boring, I paid enough attention in class to pass overall, but I was always more interested in the girls than words.
Speaking of girls, my first girlfriend, Rachel, chased me in high school. She wanted to spend time with me because she thought I was cute and had a sense of humour. Rachel was a Chinese Aussie; she had an Australian father and a Chinese mother. Rachel had a beautiful brown skin tone that I adored and the tall slim build of her father. We only dated a month, never getting past holding hands or a quick kiss. Too shy and with awkward teenage hormones, we parted as friends.
On reflection, coming out of high school, I now understand that the tapestry of our past influences the stories we write or the comments we leave here on Literotica. But with each interaction in life or online, we all know it shapes us, giving us the emotional content to build our stories. So even those of you who leave nasty comments at the end of our stories because you don't like what we write. I recognise you also have your personal journey influencing your comments.
We know the Loving Wives category is full of betrayal; the stories published are often dark, bringing out both the pious and the evil in us. And I say this because writing as a Loving Wives author, you, my reader, know my betrayal is coming.
I suppose one of the reasons I have poor grammar is that I didn't go to university like many of my classmates. I didn't see the point of spending years of study to get an entry-level job in some firm when I could be gaining experience in the real world. As a result, I've been called some pretty vicious names in the comments of my stories and gotten some pretty nasty comments about what I write with my lack of punctuation. Still, I like to write stories, and as I learn to work with various editors, the final product is getting better, that is, as long as I don't rush it out too quickly (or post the wrong version as I did initially with this story😊).
But coming back to our narrative, as we all know, this category is often about betrayal and pain which keeps us all coming back to read the next story in the hope that it aligns with our experience or give us hope for the next step. For me, that came about around three years after leaving school. I worked for a software company doing support on their service desk, doing quite well as part of the team. I had also started dating a girl, Julie. She was a little shorter than most girls her age, Julie had a cute button nose, medium-length blond hair and pale blue eyes. Julie and I went to the same church. We were both part of the young adult crowd, built a friendship, and when I one day asked her out, she said yes.
You know what's imminent, well you should, this is a Loving Wives story...