Part One, Chapter 2
Copyright 2006, 2007 by Harvard Perspectives Press
As it turned out, I was not on the road to marrying Carter Cobb. I discovered feminism, of a sort, while volunteering at a battered women’s center in Chicago that summer, and I returned to Cabot Academy in September with a healthy disdain for the notion of marrying anyone. I wanted to do great things in the world and I did not want to be burdened with any kind of bondage, neither the claims of my family’s manufacturing empire or emotional entanglements, nor the expectations of some preppy husband-to-be who had been raised to think that he could simply select me to accessorize his life of privilege and power. Nor was I in any danger of being enchained in this latter fashion. I was still just 17.
But I returned to campus under a full head of steam and persuaded CC to allow me to substitute Mary Wollstonecraft and Charlotte Perkins Gilman and Sarah Orne Jewett and Kate Chopin for Hardy and Lawrence and Hemingway and Fitzgerald, who I told CC were just a bunch of “shopworn whitebread male novelists. (It must have made CC wonder what I would make of his novel if and when he ever finished it! I wish that someone had at least introduced me to Sue Miller and Toni Morrison and Francine Prose and saved me from some of the lethal boredom I inflicted upon myself).
For CC’s creative writing class I tried to write poems and stories about oppressed women and triumphant women, but I never succeeded so much that I created anything close to what I would call a real woman. What I trial teaching must be for someone like Carter Cobb, always trying to strike the right balance between indulging and educating these overwrought 17-year-old intellects!
But there were benefits for him, no doubt. Even without the occasional pleasures that he must have experienced as a committed lifelong teacher leading me (or, for that matter, any of my classmates) into moments of revelation, heightened consciousness, and imaginative frenzy, there was the simple biological juxtaposition of a 40-something man and a 17-year-old girl. He was a discreet, respectful, and very sober man, who was reticent to take me anywhere I did not want to go, and our warm and very engaged student-teacher relationship never took a pedestrian turn into the ugly, the actual, or the explicit, so there is no need for justifications or euphemisms here, but CC was a man who appreciated females, probably almost irregardless of our ages, and it was manifest to me in every hour of our togetherness -- whether it was in a one-to-one tutorial session, or in some seminar with a dozen other girls, or in the activity upon which we soon embarked together -- that he found the wholly and wholesomely enchanting. Whether the private imaginative uses to which he subjected my charms were equally wholesome, I cannot hazard any guess since that is entirely his private business. Perhaps I am only projecting here, because of my very own very active and vivid imagination; after all, I must disclose if I am to be entirely honest that on more than one occasion during my senior year, I invited myself to sample privately and I should say in an exquisitely relaxed and solitary state, my imaginings of CC’s most private reciprocal charms, and I found them equal to every imaginary test.
It was after all, an extraordinary year of self exploration. Our headmistress, Miss Hermione Shohet, welcomed the seniors back that September with a lovely and well-intentioned talk that unfortunately became fodder for frequent parodies in the weeks that followed. She began by noting that in their senior years, Cabot girls had always been known to explore the world beyond our lovely little campus and to secure for themselves, primarily through the college admissions process of course, excellent perches from which to later access their fitting places in the worlds of the imagination and the intellect, of business and government and spiritual leadership, and of service. This introduction was perhaps too replete with statistics summarizing the matriculation histories of Cabot's recent graduating classes, but who can blame Miss Shohet for being as obsessed with benchmarks and measurables as any other headmistress, after all. In any case, she was talking about our futures, and self-absorption is no less the primary industry of Cabot seniors than any other group of 17-year-old girls, so she held our rapt attention.
It was only then, as she tried to divert our attention from our places in the world to a more introspective focus, that she perhaps began to miss her rhetorical marks. And in the process -- since I began the morning a little exhausted after flying into Boston the evening before and staying up all night catching up with my friends after the summer’s separation -- I have to admit that she began to lose me, and I drifted to the edge of waking and sleeping, a place that can be quite pleasurable lying in a hammock at our summer cottage on Lake Michigan or in my bed at night, but a little risky, if one is sitting in public, in the chapel no less, with several dozen classmates and one's teachers.
“But as we explore together the great world that beckons us beyond the cozy confines of the Cabot campus," Miss Shohet entreated us with the kind of sweeping polemical flourish that we "old girls" had come to expect of her, "let us also never forget or give short shrift to the delicious pleasures of self exploration."
Those were her words, and I do not embellish by even a single syllable. On either side of me, Nicole and Bebe cracked totally up simultaneously, barely stifling their explosions of laughter sufficiently so as not to bring on some form of institutional discipline. I enjoyed the moment myself, a little sleepily and a little less consciously than my friends. My dimly formed impression was that, all up and down the chapel pews, girls were winking at one another or raising eyebrows or gesturing knowingly, if also in some cases a bit lewdly. Were we a bit cruel? Were we a bit dirty minded? Should good breeding and its concomitant call to repression have kept us from even noticing Miss Shohet’s unintended double entendre? Possibly so, but we were just 17, as I think I have already mentioned, and we could not be held responsible, could we?
"Let your intellects serve as a lubricant for your young imaginations," Miss Shohet exhorted us, and my well-lubricated young imagination, still teetering on the edge of sleep and wakefulness, began to wander deliciously quite in spite of every ounce of practical sense that I possessed. My eyes fluttered and closed and I was transported timelessly to a scene of total fantasy, borrowing much from the chapel scene where I began my imaginative pursuit is that morning, yet wildly different. My kitty cat purred as my dreamfingers petted her gently and then firmly through my little plaid skirt, and I began to experience a vision of other girls, my classmates I imagine, as much as they were anyone, caressing themselves in wanton fashion to the left and right of me, their bums sliding a bit forward in the pews as their tanned and slender legs splayed involuntarily open, their underpants were pushed down, pulled aside, and probed through, with fingers working hungrily in, well, delicious self-exploration.
I lifted my own hands to my face, touched fingertips against my cheeks and lips, and wet my fingers lightly and inexpertly on my lips and tongue, still gone, but blissful in my enjoyment of this journey. My own hands could not help moving downward in the kind of dreamy, empowering solidarity with my dreamsisters to busy themselves in pleasuring me as if they had been the hands of boys I had imagined, even if I had never known them, pressing at first gently and then harder, harder on the uncovered mound and the fuzz fringed opening, which just then was my very center. For a few seconds or a few hours then I must have been asleep, must have fallen totally down this rabbit hole, but the waking world still pulled at me like guilt so I tried to be discreet, to keep my posture rigid, but slide forward I did, my knees parting, then falling limp as I continued the pressure and my kittycat began rising up, champing almost against the palm of my hand and the splay of my fingers with a rhythm of its own as I pressed down again and again, and then again, as my left hand fluttered up and I pressed in hard and sharp against my tender nipple, twisting it, smothering it, cutting at it, hurting it, oh. That guilty monitor watching over me from inside would have been embarrassed by my breathing with its quick catches had I not felt wholly taken away already to the dream chapel where other girls were rubbing themselves with half-closed eyes, their plaid skirts riding high, underpants forlornly down at their knees and ankles, feral moans of pleasure almost drowning out Miss Shohet as she exhorted us from the dream pulpit, “Explore yourselves! Lubricate yourselves! Let me watch you and taste your delicious pleasures!”
I gasped and arched my back and then it was starting to happen for me right there in the real chapel, but thank god Nicole gave me a swift, sharp elbow in the ribs and I caught my breath and smoothed my skirt and sat up straight in the pew.
"Geesh, Ali, who are you thinking about?" she whispered.
Later, I protested that I had fallen asleep and had been dreaming, and hadn’t my friends ever heard of the notion that people couldn't be held morally responsible for their dreams? Nicole and Bebe had a great deal of fun at my expense, but they eventually assured me that my reverie had appeared to them to last only a few seconds, no matter how long it seemed to go on for me as its dreamer. I suppose their hearts went out to me a bit because at first I was truly worried that I ruined my reputation for ever if the entire senior class had seen me pleasuring myself in the chapel, but Nicole took pains to let me know that nothing of the sort had occurred that morning. And besides, she added with a characteristic mix of mischief and generosity, if they had seen me and been able to figure out exactly what I was doing or imagining, well, I would probably be a heroine to at least half of them for helping them to find the keys and unlock the doors to the only real sexual pleasure they were likely to experience during their final year at Cabot.
Nicole's point, in which Bebe and I were quick to concur, was that, whatever the percentages for early sexual experience might be in the world at large, and whatever experiences we might be able to enjoy her (or not) during summer or Christmas or spring vacations, there simply was not much chance for such pastimes -- except the most solitary of them -- on the Cabot campus during the academic year. Our little dances with the boys from Middlesex or Belmont Hill School were heavily chaperoned, so you could have a little fun grinding a preppy or two into submission on the dance floor, but where did that leave you? High and dry?
"Or low and wet," quipped Bebe. We both looked at her with the kind of mock look of haughty disdain that we might expect of our mothers, if we said something very vulgar or, say, confessed that we were dating Catholic boys.
What other options were there?
We had heard of a few girls who had experimented with each other, but it all seemed so entangling. Who wanted to worry about whether you would be respected in the morning by your own roommate? We all just knew each other too well.
There was, theoretically at least, the possibility of an affair with CC, or some other faculty member, but that would take a level of idiocy on the part of both parties that hardly seemed likely absent extreme desperation. People got caught. They got fired or bounced out of school. Lives got ruined.
One or twice a week we rode the commuter rail train into Harvard Square and naturally there were girls who fantasized regularly about finding true love with a Harvard boy. Perhaps there were even some who tried to pull it off. But the disappointing truth was that Harvard boys had just too damned many choices, sexually speaking, and consequently had no need to fool around with nice little plaid-skirted girls who had to be signed in back in our dormitory rooms at Cabot Academy most evenings by 10 o'clock, no matter how cute we might be. One of us could have paraded across Harvard Yard clad only in her little plaid skirt, holding a sign that said
HONEST!
I AM NOT JAILBAIT!
TRY ME!
and not attracted as much as a turned ahead from the brilliant young Harvard boys.
So it began, under Miss Shohet's mandate, as a year of delicious self-exploration. All three of us were still virgins, although each of us -- according to the perhaps slightly embellished reports we brought back to Concord at the end of the summer -- had expanded her experience and developed certain advanced ancillary skills with older boys that summer, myself and the toney suburbs of Chicago, Nicole in and around Grosse Pointe Farms, and Bebe on the Upper East Side and the environs of her family's summer cottage at Saratoga Springs. They had all been nice enough boys, and they had respected our prim and proper limits, all the more all the more so as we developed and demonstrated other skills at bringing things to a conclusion as aptly as if we had each been born wearing kneepads. And here we were back at Cabot Academy, each with a mental treasure trove of vivid memories to fuel our delicious self-explorations. It was a wonder any of us got any school work done!
Without ever intending such a thing Miss Shohet had freed a good number of the girls in the senior class to overcome their inhibitions and make masturbation a topic of open and candid conversation, one I might add that held our attention for months. Some of us have never tried it, some had been trained in their cabins at summer camp and had been practicing it as if it had been ballet or gymnastics from the age of 10 or 11, and one girl had learned it and tried it mutually with a college boy (who just happen to be her cousin) the previous summer on the Vineyard. We discussed fantasies and techniques and even the taboo possibilities of semi-public self-pleasuring, and it would be only the slightest exaggeration to say that we came to constitute a kind of cult ,one that selected as our anthem the Cyndi Lauper song "She-Bop" and as our cult goddess not one of our own number but a middle-aged woman named Betty Dodson who had authored a delightful and informative (and very well illustrated) book called Sex for One, which the members of Cabot Academy's senior class made into a local bestseller at the nearby Concord Bookshop, a few blocks down Main Street in the village center.
So, I will say again, that for many of my senior sisters. It was a year of so of delicious self-exploration. And so also for me, until one, lovely, crisp and sun-filled afternoon that October, when Carter Cobb stopped me as I crossed the school green and offered me a proposition that I simply could not refuse.