Love Not Given Lightly. Tina Horn

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Love Not Given Lightly - Tina Horn


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      Love

      Not Given

      Lightly

      Profiles from the Edge of Sex

      Porn Stars, Perverts, Femme Dommes, Rent Boys,

      and other Professional Lovers

      Tina Horn

      ThreeL Media | Berkeley

      Published by

      ThreeL Media | Stone Bridge Press

      P. O. Box 8208, Berkeley, CA 94707

      www.threelmedia.com

      © 2015 Tina Horn

      Cover design and interior illustrations by kd diamond.

      Book design and layout by Linda Ronan.

      All rights reserved.

      No part of this book may be reproduced in any form without permission from the publisher.

      library of congress cataloging-in-publication data

      Horn, Tina.

      Love not given lightly : profiles from the edge of sex / Tina Horn.

      pages cm

      ISBN 978-0-9905571-0-4 (paperback)

      ISBN: 978-0-9905571-1-1 (e-book)

      1. Sex customs—United States—History—21st century. 2. Sex (Psychology) I. Title.

      HQ18.U5H67 2015

      392.6—dc23

      2015007288

      For my sweet bear

      and all the professional lovers

      “We must not allow the paths of desire to become overgrown.”

      —andre breton

      “Power is what distinguishes the psychic discourse of desire from the social rhetoric of sex. . . . What we on the margins have been most able to appropriate of this discourse is the power analysis that so much of the discourse of patriarchy is structured precisely to mystify. In many cases, its demystification is precisely what has allowed us to survive.”

      —samuel r. delany

      “It’s a business doin’ pleasure with ya!”

      —dolly parton, in

       The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas

      introduction

      Who the hell is Tina Horn?

      December 2014

      by Tina Horn

      I wrote the stories in Love Not Given Lightly to explain how and why I was transformed into Tina Horn.

      or;

      I wrote these stories because Tina Horn transformed into me.

      or maybe;

      Tina Horn wrote these stories, and you can send all complaints her way.

      Actually, I’m not convinced that Tina Horn exists. I’m not entirely convinced it’s Tina Horn who is writing these words. Maybe it’s actually me.

      But am I not Tina Horn?

      If not, then who the hell is she, and why is she always hogging the bathroom?

      Tina Horn was born in 2006 (fully-formed and perfectly legal), when, looking for a flexible gig to support my rock & roll lifestyle, I typed the word “dominatrix” into the Adult Gigs section of San Francisco Craigslist.

      Or, was she in me, archetypically, all along? Is Tina Horn the real me? An amplification of my id, a creature of camp and confidence and creative impulse who animates my body? Did I have to become a sex worker in order to unleash her?

      Robert Zimmerman once told Rolling Stone: “I didn’t create Bob Dylan. Bob Dylan has always been here.”

      Obviously, I am Tina Horn, and I know what it’s like to Do, or Perform, Tina Horn. She looks like me, she sounds like me, and she finds the same things erotic. She puts more effort into her appearance, than I do. She’s more agreeable, less cerebral. But, am I only Tina Horn when you’re paying for my time? Am I Tina Horn when I sleep? When I die, will Tina Horn die too?

      Most importantly: wardrobe and attitude and ontological status aside, what is Tina Horn good for?

      Here’s an excerpt from one of those zines, circa 2008.

      Marxist critic Walter Benjamin used prostitutes as examples of dialectical images, where the commodity and seller are the same and reveal the system of representation that produces them. He was on to something, but somehow I doubt Benjamin ever strapped on six-inch stilettos and hogtied men for money (although, of course, we can never be sure).

      I can’t remember exactly what I thought was going to happen when I created Tina Horn, but I know I got what I came for. Sex work is glamour and danger and boredom and drama and shock. Sex work is adrenaline highs and clandestine secrets and surprise orgasms. Sex work is a blue velvet Crown Royal bag stuffed full of lacy thongs, Bitches Brew on an Ipod shuffle, suggesting the girl you have a crush on for a double. It’s also the stench of shit and madacide, the misery of a zero’ing shift when you need to make rent, the insidious non-consent that hits you when your guard is down, the casual judgment from a friend at a party. For me, it was usually dangerous fun—occasionally violent, and always interesting.

      Sex work defined my twenties, and continues to define my career even though I have slowly been retiring since 2013. As I did less and less sex work, I had to ask, where was Tina Horn going?

      Well, I animated Tina Horn, and my clients enabled her to thrive. Yet it was my fellow sex workers that made her possible. That’s why I wanted to write about them. They made the job emotionally sustainable, significantly safer from harm.

      These are the stories of people who have learned how to tell you the stories you want to hear, especially the ones that hurt.

      The title Love Not Given Lightly comes from a song by my favorite musician, Lou Reed, who died not long after I finished the first draft of this book. The song is “Venus in Furs,” named for the Leopold von Sacher-Masoch novel of the same name, both of which are notorious odes to the erotics of domination and submission.

      I used to play this song in session, slithering around to the pace of the tambourine, reveling in how weird it was and how much it made my clients squirm.

      Maybe Lou Reed was a sadomasochist, or maybe he just enjoyed scandalizing people. Either way, Lou totally got it. He got the literary value, he got the irony, and he wrote a line that has always encapsulated both BDSM and sex work to


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