Groundhog Day and sex are not a natural pairing in anyone’s mind, except mine. This story starts with my sex education, which can be summed up in six words: “DON’T EVER LET ANYONE TOUCH YOU!”
I never got a sweet book explaining the birds and bees, or a little pink kit with everything I would need to become a woman.
No.
From the time I was about five years old, all I remember my Italian mom saying, very emphatically, was “DON’D A AVER LET A ANYONE A TOUCH A YOU!”
It was the early ’60s — things were different then. A girl had her reputation to worry about. Nice girls didn’t, bad girls did, period. (Just watch the movie, A Summer Place, if you don’t believe me.) My mom knew she’d only have my childhood years to convince me men were lechers, who’d be all over me any minute. Once I hit puberty, she figured all bets were off.
I understood her concern, I had some cute moments from three to six, so abduction was possible. But once those permanent teeth came in I looked in the mirror and figured boys weren’t going to be a problem.
Then I hit nine and discovered my fully developed Roman nose, which went really well with my new beaver teeth and wondered if I’d ever get anyone to talk to me, let alone touch me.
Thoughts of sex never even occurred to me, until I was sitting on my parent’s bed talking with my sister about having babies. She asked me if I wanted to have kids someday. I unwittingly said yes, to which she replied, “EEEEEEEUUUUUUU! DON’T YOU KNOW WHERE THEY COME FROM?”
I snapped, “Yeah, I know, they come from — your stomach.” Then she said, “Yeah, but do you know how they come out?” To be honest, I hadn’t given it much thought, and responded, “Well, don’t they cut open your stomach or something?”
Relishing her moment of superiority, my sister said, “No, they come out of another place, THINK ABOUT IT.” Then she sashayed off, as only an older sister can do. I stood there, thought about it a moment, and responded, “EEEEEEEUUUUUUU, NO SIR!” And this was before I ever wondered how babies got in there in the first place, but I was pretty sure it involved some touching.
Once I stopped envisioning me popping out of my mother’s private parts, the shock wore off. At the time, my concern was my teeth and nose. I hoped, if I got braces no one would notice my nose, then I too, could have a normal adolescence where I could learn more about this touching thing. I begged for braces so I wouldn’t look like an Italian rodent, and my dad caved in.
The braces came off at sixteen and, although I never had a microscopic Barbie doll nose, I was OK with make up and a blow dryer standing by. I thought I was set.
Then I began the long wait for the right boy. My mother had a speech she gave when I complained about why some boys were such jerks. She delivered it with such passion, I believed it was the truth about sex and love:
“Da boyz, wen a you’re a young a gal, alla dey wanna do issa fool a round a. But a somma day when you get a lilla bait older, dey gonna start a lookkin a for a niza gal, and dey will a peekka you cause a you’re a good a dezent gal. You don’d a gatta geeve a dem nading bekozza who loves a you comes after you. You’re a gooda gal. Dey don’t wand a puttana.” (Puttana, as you may recall, is the Italian word for whore.)
It was my mom’s Italian twist on Carole King’s, “One Fine Day,” which featured empowering lyrics like, “Though I know, you’re the kind of boy, who only wants to run around. I’ll be waiting and someday darling, you’ll come to me when you want to settle down – OH!”
Mom’s speech worked wonders through junior high, high school, and even college. But somewhere in my early twenties, I began to have my doubts. (Don’t mock me, I was raised Catholic and, as Billy Joel wisely said, “You Catholic girls start much too late.”)
I started to suspect mom was wrong when I saw adventurous girls always getting boyfriends, while I spent a lot of time home with my virginity. There was no such speech for my brothers. She’d look at them and chuckle, “Aaaay, be careful gigolo,” as they were leaving the house. I imagined the truth was somewhere between the two extremes and I navigated it as best I could.
I believe I held the title, “Oldest Living, College-Educated Virgin East of the Mississippi – for maybe five years – an impressive feat in the ‘70s and early ‘80s. I should have charged admission so people could file past in awe to see what an actual virgin looked like.
By 25, my virginity became an albatross. I couldn’t wait to get rid of it, yet there were no takers among the non-drug addicted, upwardly mobile, single men I was attracted to. Men, who happily dated me, were wary once they knew, and one guy actually dumped me because of it.
Tap-dancing around the truth was much easier than coming clean with male acquaintances. Female friends were incredulous. They’d say, “Really…still?” Then they’d look at me amazed and tell me about their first time at fourteen, sixteen, or eighteen in their living room or the back seat of some car.
I had non-virginity envy.
I got a lot of grief, usually from guys I wasn’t attracted to, who couldn’t believe I was in my 20s and not sleeping with everyone. They’d continually ask if I was a lesbian, as though anyone who wouldn’t have sex with them must be a lesbian. They are the very men who make straight women want to be lesbians.
Since I’d held onto my virginity as long as I did, I wasn’t about to just toss it out, like a used tea bag, without giving it serious consideration. I decided that when the time came, it would be nice if it was a man I was attracted to, in love with, and who I could conceivably consider marrying. As time wore on I gave up on the marriage part, and could only hope for the love part, but dammit, I was not giving up on the attraction!
I finally found someone I thought was cute, whose company I actually enjoyed, who seemed to enjoy me. I almost convinced myself it was love, until I really got to know him. He was a tall, blonde, blue-eyed cad with dimples, who I found out was seeing someone else while he was seeing me. What a bummer to wait all that time, only to discover you’ve just shared it with a creep, but that’s what you get when you’re in a hurry.
The upside to the story is that my virginity was roused from it’s burrow and scampered away on Groundhog day, which I thought was nicely metaphorical. I’ve never missed it once. All I can say about the whole virginity thing is, losing your virginity is a natural process in life. Why make it such a big deal for women when it’s no big deal for men? Who says a woman’s worth should be based on nothing more than a flimsy piece of tissue?
My mom did not concur. She wanted me to be a virgin until death, if I wasn’t married, which seems like a waste of perfectly good body parts. She hung onto her fantasy about my virtue until I married.
The day after the wedding, she kept asking me pointedly, “How are you?” I cluelessly replied, “I’m fine, why?”
Then I heard a very loud, “OH, SO YOU LIKED ITTA HUH?”
It took me a beat to realize what she was asking, then I laughed and said. “Yeah, it was fun, OK?” To which she laughingly replied, “Hmmmh, attsa pooty good!”
But one night, in my thirties the truth about sex finally came out, over a hot cup of tea at the dining room table. The news was on in the living room and they were talking about Madonna.
“I can’d a standda datta Madonna,” she spat out the words. “Ha dare a she take a da Blessed Moder’s name when a she’s a nading but a puttana. She stings (stinks)!”
“Yeah, but men love her, men love puttanas,” I said definitively. She shot a shocked look across the table at me and said, “Oh yeah? Ha do you know?”
I said, “Ma, trust me, they do.” Then her gaze sort of drifted away and in a defeated tone she said, “Yeah, I know. Why you ting a dey lige a dem?”
I fired her words back, “Why you ting a dey lige a dem? Ma, I think we both know why they like them, but I can’t believe all these years you told me men would love me because I was a “niza gal,” and now you’re telling me you knew all along how it really was?”
Then she stunned me with this, “Well a honey, whad else a was I gonna say?”
I was disappointed that she didn’t believe most of what she said. But what I thought, wasn’t true either. It’s not just sex that makes a man pursue a woman (although I’ve never seen a case of it turning them away).
But this part is true; “Who loves you, comes after you.” You can be a virgin or the town trollop, and if someone loves you, he or she is going to seek you out, no matter what.
That’s the real truth about sex and love.
Happy Groundhog Day!
P.S. You may have noticed that I’m now posting my blogs as an audio file, so if you don’t have time to read, you can listen instead. Please let me know what you think! (I’m going to try and go back and record the older ones too, but this will take a while!) And please share my blog posts. If you enjoy them, maybe your friends will too! Thanks for reading!
No Comments
Mary
February 1, 2016 at 8:26 amAhhh, Fran. Yes, I agree, the last part IS true, those who love you will come after you, & seek you out. Another funny memory I had forgotten about me in here too! And sex becomes that much less of a big deal as you age. Love the groundhog and the story! 🙂
Fran Tunno
February 1, 2016 at 9:56 amThanks Mare. Don’t worry, I am the keeper of the memories, at least for now.
Nicol
February 1, 2016 at 1:18 pmOh, this is such a good story! and I love the audio idea!
Fran Tunno
February 1, 2016 at 10:57 pmThanks Nicol, glad you like the audio. If you’re too busy to read, at least you can listen while you make dinner. xo
Karen Zigler
February 1, 2016 at 3:42 pmLaughed out loud so many times Fran!!! I love the audio too. If we can’t see you in person at least we can hear your voice! Great writing, great audio. Love to see your blog come up on my feed!
Fran Tunno
February 1, 2016 at 10:59 pmOh Howie, you know how to make my day! Thank you so much, I’m so glad you liked it. Apparently Di Walker had the same problem in college. If only I’d known, we could have commiserated! Thanks for always reading. Feel free to forward it to any sheltered Italian friends.
Chuck
February 1, 2016 at 5:52 pmBravo, Fran! What a pleasure to hear the audio on this! As another of your fans said, it was laugh out loud funny. You’ve created an entire movie with this vignette! I see it so clearly, I wish I had the skills and talent to make it. Groundhog Day will never be a neglected holiday by me again. Now I know what’s at stake! Happy Groundhog Day to all of us! 😉
Fran Tunno
February 1, 2016 at 11:02 pmAwww Chuck, I am thrilled you liked it. I’m sure Quentin Tarantino will be approaching me soon to write the screenplay. Thanks so much for reading/listening and taking the time to write! You are the best!
btunno@bernietunnoins.com
February 2, 2016 at 12:58 pmHappy Groundhogs Day you little strumpet:)
From: At Frans Table To: btunno@bernietunnoins.com Sent: Monday, February 1, 2016 7:48 AM Subject: [New post] The Real Truth about Sex and Love – A Groundhog Day Story #yiv9430658357 a:hover {color:red;}#yiv9430658357 a {text-decoration:none;color:#0088cc;}#yiv9430658357 a.yiv9430658357primaryactionlink:link, #yiv9430658357 a.yiv9430658357primaryactionlink:visited {background-color:#2585B2;color:#fff;}#yiv9430658357 a.yiv9430658357primaryactionlink:hover, #yiv9430658357 a.yiv9430658357primaryactionlink:active {background-color:#11729E;color:#fff;}#yiv9430658357 WordPress.com | Fran Tunno posted: “Groundhog Day and sex are not a natural pairing in anyone’s mind, except mine. This story starts with my sex education, which can be summed up in six words: “DON’T EVER LET ANYONE TOUCH YOU!”I never got a sweet book explaining the birds and bees, or ” | |
Fran Tunno
February 2, 2016 at 7:46 pmThanks. You were a wonderful role model!
Mary
February 4, 2016 at 10:14 amGotta chuckle at those lilla zingers Bern & Fran. 😉
George A. Maupin
February 2, 2016 at 2:04 pmYour mom’s reaction to the songstress, Madonna, has some clues in it about the basis of the Italian-Roman-Catholic-view of sexual roles. Briefly, the Blessed (thus Holy) Virgin was held in awe BECAUSE of the Virgin-Birth doctrine. The mental-emotional link between “Holy Virgin” and “Holy-Virginity” is suggested by the titles Blessed Virgin Mary (and Madonna, etc.) If virginity is held in awe for R-Catholic girls, then it is easy to sell the concept of the celibate-life for boys who want to become priests, etc. In that “Holy-Father” doctrine, R-C altar boys hold life-long celibacy in awe. OK, that is as brief as I can make it. (The German-Catholic lady, Ute Ranke-Heinemann who wrote “Eunuchs For the Kingdom of Heaven” exposed the hypocritical basis of “holy-celibacy” in the Vatican’s twisting of a certain quote from Jesus). Thanks for the Ground-Hog Day title. Finally, I recommend these titles for more research on the subjects you & your mom shared. 1. “My Mother/Myself” 2. “Men In Love.” and this late-life title – best of all of Nancy Friday’s titles in my view = “The Power of Beauty.” More on that may follow. Your former R-Catholic altar-boy friend, George Anthony Maupin. [Please send your current private e-mail address to me at the one below; I am still needing some voice-over work done].
Fran Tunno
February 4, 2016 at 3:50 pmWow George, well said… like a true former Altar Boy! The nuns would be proud.
Pamela Ellis
February 5, 2016 at 1:43 pmI enjoyed your audio. Nice addition and another great story.
Fran Tunno
February 6, 2016 at 9:44 amThank you Pam, I’m so glad you liked it! My family is scandalized, but they’re dealing with it fairly well.
lafriday
February 9, 2016 at 7:21 pmFunny! An interesting anthology would be how all we good Catholic girls traded our virtue for love/lust. The Act of Contrition could serve as the epilogue.
Fran Tunno
February 13, 2016 at 11:29 pmLove it Linda. Yes, we did — sooner or later it comes down to fate!
Mickey
February 26, 2016 at 7:02 amI should not have listened to the audio while drinking coffee. Now I have to clean the screen! I can even hear your mom saying that!!
Fran Tunno
February 26, 2016 at 7:58 amMickey, that is the highest compliment you can pay me! Thanks for reading and sorry about the screen!
margaz2013
April 19, 2016 at 2:47 pmObviously I am behind in reading your blog! I howled with this one and yes, Groundhog Day will be remembered every year from now on!! I love the audio as it reminds me of you coming into my classroom and reading to the class. I was spellbound as you read. I loved it and still love the emotion in what you have to share!!
All Catholic girls can relate to the virginity vs puttana dialogue one would have internally! I can relate to the shock value of the singer Madonna by others, but not being able to share how much I liked her songs… I was TEACHING in a Catholic school at the time. That would be grounds for dismissal, LOL!
I love this story! Thank you for sharing another piece of life! Marianne
Fran Tunno
April 20, 2016 at 9:19 amHi Marianne, I had a feeling you would be able to identify! Thanks for always reading and being one of my best supporters!!!! xo
I Could Use Your Help – Can You Nominate Me? | At Fran's Table
June 8, 2016 at 8:35 pm[…] My personal favorite: The Real Truth About Sex and Love – A Groundhog Day Story — 1642 word – Feb 2016 […]
Happy Groundhog Day! | At Fran's Table
February 2, 2017 at 8:59 am[…] http://bty.xel.mybluehost.me/2016/02/01/the-real-truth-about-sex-and-love-a-groundhog-day-story/ […]
Chas Madonio
February 2, 2017 at 9:36 amWow! I feel like I know all your secrets now. Too bad it happened on Ground Hog Day rather than July 4th when all the fireworks would have been going off. Or maybe they were!
Fran Tunno
February 2, 2017 at 7:40 pmMight have been a firework or two. Thanks Chas. My brothers wanted to disown me after reading this.
Debby Libengood
February 2, 2017 at 5:36 pmYou are hilarious Frannie! From someone who always thought you were so pretty, it’s unimaginable that you thought of yourself as an Italian rodent pre braces!!! Happy Groundhog Day!
Fran Tunno
February 2, 2017 at 7:41 pmThank you Debby, but I truly did. I guess some of us are never content with what we see in the mirror – which is more a reflection on me than anyone else. Just starting to figure that out now! Thanks for reading!
Suzette Calleja
February 3, 2017 at 5:35 pmI loved your story. I can relate being raised catholic and going to catholic school.
Just a short story. I used to work at the post office at the front counter, and every Christmas I would ask which version of stamps the customer would like Christmas trees or Madonna with a disgusted look like that puttana, and I would reply no the real one the Virgin Mary, then they would have a sigh of relief and a smile and say YES!!♡
Fran Tunno
February 5, 2017 at 6:37 pmThat is too funny Suzette, I love your story! Thank you so much for sharing that great story and for taking the time to read! xoxo
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February 2, 2018 at 6:08 am[…] reason, which embarrasses my brothers when I talk about it, so you’ll just have to read my Groundhog Day blog post from two years ago where I explain it all. Be forewarned — it involves […]