Broadening the
(erotica) horizon
Charlotte,
or Charlie as I called her, was the best thing that had ever happened
to me. We met one night while I was out clubbing, getting over my
third divorce, and we have been inseparable ever since. She was
everything I wanted in a woman. When we first met she had been
slightly overweight, nothing too drastic, but she had insisted on
slimming down for me even though I didn't mind what she looked like.
After all, my previous wives had all been – how should I say –
curvaceous?
Her body was
absolutely perfect. She was five feet, seven inches tall, had an
incredible thirty-six C chest and an all-over tan. She had gorgeous
brunette hair that draped around her shoulders, finishing halfway
down her back. Her teeth sparkled when she smiled as she had never
smoked or had any work done on them. Her eyes were a gorgeous green
that always seemed to catch the light.
And
so begins one of my e-books, Addicted to Charlie. From the opening
description it sounds like any other male/female romance. A guy
describing his perfect partner, the woman he loves. The way he
describes every small perfection of Charlotte tells you just how much
he is in love with her, however the description doesn't end there.
Oh, and I nearly
forgot to mention that between her legs, where she should have had a
neatly trimmed pussy, she had a magnificent eight inch cock. You see
my Charlie was a transsexual, and if anybody had ever said I would
have ended up in this kind of relationship I would have laughed.
Suddenly the
male/female romance is no more and I have taken you into the world of
transgender erotica. Now before you hurriedly, because I can
guarantee some of you will, leave the page just think about it for a
second. The beginning description has you wanting to know even more
about this perfect woman, this woman that has captured the heart of
our protagonist yet, as soon as you do, fear enters your mind - fear
of the unknown.
But
why? Why are people so afraid to believe that transsexual women, as
well as men, have the same feelings as every body else and why
shouldn't they, because after all they are human just like you and I.
They just want to be healthy, happy and live a life just as you or I
would, a life of dating, sex, love and, above all, happiness
I
began to write trans romance because I got sick and tired of reading
story after story of transsexuals being treated as nothing more than
sex objects to be used and abused, just for the titillation of the
reader and I wanted to show that transsexuals want exactly the sort
of life everyone is ENTITLED
to.
It is 2013 and all
this hate, all this Transphobia, needs to end and if my writing
gets just one person to see the real person from a positive point of
view then I am doing exactly what I intend to do.
JSMorbius
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