Rants and reactions to contemporary politics, art and culture.
Friday, April 28, 2017
Is Farting at Your Loved One, the Highest Form of Intimacy?
Royal Bedroom in Residenz Palace, Munich, Bavaria
Does your bedroom sound like the percussion section of the
Boston Pops in the morning? Does the faint aroma of the gastrointestinal
tract’s processing of the previous evening’s meal fill the air with dramatic
little touches that emanate from your duet? Do you and your
significant other get woken up by each other’s farts before the alarm clock has
a chance to ring? Have you built up so much trust that you feel free to fart on
each other’s legs? Do you begin to experience the symphonic effects of gastric
juices and gaseous effluence? Does your bedroom sometimes remind you of the
antiphonal chorus of a Gregorian chant as your soul mate’s emissions call out
like the honking of seagulls by the shore? Is there something primal about the
preverbal communication that goes on between old couples who fart freely at
each other, like pigeons tweeting as they chase after bed crumbs? Do the gases
and odors create a special warmth under the covers that promotes ecstatic
levels of spooning and cuddling that in turn make the final act of waking up, getting
out of bed and stepping into the frigid morning air all that more difficult? Think
of great lovers of opera and theater. Did Shakespeare ever consider Romeo and
Julietgetting to feel comfortable
enough to fart in front of each other? And what about Wagner’s Tristan and
Isolde? Was Goethe’s Young Werther suffering all the more because he was trying
to stop himself from farting in front of his beloved? What about Eurydice? Was
the real reason she went back to the underworld that Orpheus didn’t turn around
but continued on, farting in her face?
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