My Secret Garden

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Creating an ‘outdoor living room’ in the garden or on the patio is increasing in popularity. And it’s easy to see why. They are the perfective place to relax or entertain. No wonder pergola kits are in such demand. But there is a problem. And that is the cost. A pergola kit is expensive. Some are very expensive. But there is a solution.

If you want to build a pergola and save lots of dollars then follow these tips.

Decide on the size of pergola you want bearing in mind the size of your garden and how you will use the pergola. For instance. if you want to use it for agreeably diverting think regarding the number of people, chairs, barbecue instrumentation etc. it will have to hold. You don’t want to build a pergola only to find out later it’s too little for what you want to use it for.

Don’t buy a pergola kit. Instead by a pergola plan in the size you need. It will come with a list of materials necessitated for construction.

Next, visit some hardware stores and cost out the materials. Treated pine will be the most inexpensive wood but treated cedar will last for decades so it may be the better long term investment.

For the actual building of your pergola you have two options:

  1. build it yourself. The DIY pergola erection may be finished in a weekend; or
  2. hire a local handyman to build it using the materials and instructions you will supply.

Either way you will surely save hundreds of dollars. You’ve added value to your home and got yourself a great spot to relax and entertain. Talk when it comes to win-win!


My Secret Garden

Welcome to Nancy Friday’s mystery garden, a concealed place where ordinary women are free to express the sexual dreams they have never dared to confide before. Safe behind the walls of anonymity, hundreds of real women responded to Nancy Friday’s call for details of their own most private fantasies. My Secret Garden is the daring compilation of those fantasies. When it introductory appeared, it developed a storm of outrage in the media…and an equivalent sense of exhilaration for those women who ultimately were capable to portion their sisters’ most intimate thoughts. Even now, in a new millennium, over then thousand women each year buy a new copy of this astounding classic of feminist literature. Join them in their exploration of the meaning of desire. Dare to read, dare to dream, and dare to discover the gorgeous blossoms, the winding paths, and the concealed nooks of female sexuality.

Review”You’ll blush, your pulse will race.” — The New York Times

“Delicious…women may share in their sisters’ mysteries and not feel that they are alone.” — Los Angeles Times

“Provocative.” — Women’s Wear Daily

About the AuthorNancy Friday is the author of seven books: My Secret Garden, Forbidden Flowers, Jealousy, Men in Love, My Mother/My Self, Women on Top, and The Power of Beauty. She lives in Key West, Florida, and in Connecticut.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

1.

“Tell Me What You Are Thinking About,” He Said.

In my mind, as in our fucking, I am at the crucial point:…We are at this Baltimore Colt-Minnesota Viking football game, and it is very cold. Four or five of us are huddled underneath a big glen plaid blanket. Suddenly we jump up to watch Johnny Unitas running toward the goal. As he races down the field, we all turn as a body, wrapped in our blanket, screaming with excitement. Somehow, one of the men — I don’t recognise who, and in my excitement I can’t look — has gotten himself more closely behind me. I keep cheering, my voice an echo of his, hot on my neck. I may feel his erection through his pants as he signals me with a touch to turn my hips more directly toward him. Unitas is blocked, but all the action, thank God, is still going toward that goal and all of us keep turned to watch. Everyone is going mad. He’s got his cock out now and someways it’s among my legs; he’s torn a hole in my tights under my short skirt and I yell louder as the touchdown gets nearer now. We are all jumping up and down and I have to lift my leg higher, to the next step on the bleachers, to steady myself; now the man behind me may slip it in more easily. We are all leaping about, thumping one another on the back, and he puts his arm around my shoulders to keep us in rhythm. He’s inside me now, shot straight up through me like a ramrod; my God, it’s like he’s in my throat! “All the way, Johnny! Go, go, run, run!” we scream together, louder than anyone, making them all cheer louder, the two of us leading the excitement like cheerleaders, while inside me I may feel whoever he is growing harder and harder, pushing deeper and higher into me with each jump until the cheering for Unitas becomes the rhythm of our fucking and all around us every one is on our side, cheering us and the touchdown…it’s hard to discerned the two now. It’s Unitas’ last down, everything depends on him; we’re racing madly, closely at our own touchdown. My excitement gets wilder, almost out of control as I scream for Unitas to make it as we do, so that we all go over the line together. And as the man behind me roars, clutching me in a spasm of pleasure, Unitas goes over and I…

“Tell me what you are thinking about,” the man I was genuinely fucking said, his words as charged as the action in my mind. As I’d never stopped to think before doing anything to him in bed (we were that sure of our spontaneity and response), I didn’t stop to edit my thoughts. I told him what I’d been thinking. He got out of bed, put on his pants and went home.

Lying there amid the crumpled sheets, so abruptly rejected and confused as to just why, I watched him dress. It was only imaginary, I had tried to explain; I didn’t in truth want that other man at the football game. He was faceless! A nobody! I’d never even have had those thoughts, much less spoken them out loud, if I hadn’t been so excited, if he, my real lover, hadn’t aroused me to the point where I’d abandoned my whole body, all of me; even my mind. Didn’t he see? He and his wonderful, ardent fucking had brought on these things and they, in turn, were making me more passionate. Why, I tried to smile, he will have to be proud, happy for both of us….

One of the things I had always admired in my lover was the fact that he was one of the few men who understood that there could be humor and playfulness in bed. But he did not think my football fantasy was either humorous or playful. As I said, he just left.

His anger and the shame he made me feel (which writing this book has helped me to realize I still resent) was the beginning of the end for us. Until that moment his cry had always been “More!” He had convinced me that there was no sexual limit to which I could go that wouldn’t excite him more; his encouragement was like the occasional flick a child gives a spinning top, making it run more quickly and faster, speeding me ever forward toward things I had always wanted to do, but had been too timid even to think regarding with any individual else. Shyness was not my style, but sexually I was still my mother’s daughter. He had freed me, I felt, from this undesirable maidenly constraint with which I could not intellectually identify, but from which I could not bodily escape. Proud of me for my efforts, he made me proud of myself, too. I loved us both.

Looking back over my shoulder now at my anything-goes lover, I may see that I was only too happily enacting his indirectly stated Pygmalion — D. H. Lawrence fantasies. But mine? He didn’t want to listen in regards to them. I was not to coauthor this arousing and attention holding script on How To Be Nancy, even if it was my life. I was not to act, but to be acted upon.

Where are you now, old lover of mine? If you were put off by my fantasy of “the other man,” what would you have thought of the one with regards to my Great Uncle Henry’s Dalmatian dog? Or the one fellow member of my family that you liked, Great Uncle Henry himself, as he looked in the portrait over my mother’s piano, back when men wore moustaches that tickled, and women long skirts. Could you see what Great Uncle Henry was doing to me beneath the table? Only it wasn’t me; I was cloaked as a boy.

Or was I? It didn’t matter. It doesn’t, with fantasies. They subsist only for their elasticity, their capacity to instantaneously incorporate any new character, effigy or idea — or, as in dreams, to which they bear so close a kinship — to incorporate conflicting ideas simultaneously. They expand, heighten, distort or overstate reality, taking one further, more quickly in the direction in which the unashamed unconscious already knows it wants to go. They present the amazed self with the incredible, the prospect to entertain the impossible.

There were other lovers, and other fantasies. But I never introduced the two again. Until I met my husband. The thing with regards to a good man is that he brings out the best in you, desires all of you, and in seeking out your essence, not only accepts all he finds, but settles for not one thing less. He brought my fantasies back into the open again from those depths where I had prudently decisive they will have to live — vigorous and bright as ever, yes, but never to be spoken aloud again. I’ll never forget his reaction when timidly, vulnerable, and partially ashamed, I decisive to peril telling him what I had been thinking.

“What an imagination!” he said. “I could never have dreamed that up. Were you genuinely thinking that?”

His look of amused wonderment came as a reprieve; I realized how much he loved me, and in loving me, loved anything that gave me more ample life. My fantasies to him were a sudden unveiling of a new garden of pleasure, as yet unknown to him, into which I would invite him.

Marriage freed me from a heap of things, and led me into others. If my fantasies seemed so revealing and imaginative to my husband, why not include them in the novel I was writing? It was regarding a woman, of course, and there must be other readers besides my husband, men and other women too, who would be intrigued by a new approach to what goes on in a woman’s mind. I did in truth devote one entire chapter in the book to a long idyllic reverie of the heroine’s sexual fantasies. I thought it was the best thing in the book, the stuff of which the novels I had most admired were made. But my editor, a man, was put off. He had never read anything like it, he said (the very point of writing a novel, I thought). Her fantasies made the heroine sound like a good deal of kind of sexual freak, he said. “If she’s so crazy when it comes to this guy she’s with,” he said, “if he’s such a outstanding fuck, then why’s she thinking when it comes to all these other crazy things…why isn’t she thinking with regards to him?”

I could have asked him a question of my own: Why do men have sexual fantasies, too? Why do men seek prostitutes to carry out sure acts when they have perfectly layable ladies at home? Why do husbands buy their wives black lace G-strings and nipple-exposing bras, except in pursuit of fantasies of their own? In Italy, men scream “Madonna mia” when they come, and it is not uncommon, we learn in Eros Denied, for an imaginative Englishman to compensate a lady for the privilege of eating the strawberry cream puff (like Nanny applied to make) she has kindly stuffed up her cunt. Why is it utterly respectable (and continually commercial) for cartoons to dwell on the sidewalk figure of Joe Average eyeing the passing luscious blonde, while in the balloon drawn over his head he puts her through the most exotic paces? My God! Far from being thought reprehensible, this last male fantasy is thought amusing, family fun, something a father may share with his son.

Men interchange sexual fantasies in the barroom, where they are called dirty jokes; the occasional man who doesn’t find them funny is thought to be odd man out. Blue movies convulse bachelor dinners and salesmen’s conventions. And when Henry Miller, D. H. Lawrence and Norman Mailer — to say not one thing of Genet — put their fantasies on paper, they are recognized for what they may be: art. The sexual fantasies of men like these are called novels. Why then, I could have asked my editor, can’t the sexual fantasies of women be called the same?

But I said nothing. My editor’s insinuation, like my former lover’s rejection, hit me where I was most sensitive: in that area where women, knowing least in regards to each other’s unfeigned sexual selves, are most vulnerable. What is it to be a woman? Was I being unfeminine? It is one thing not to have doubted the answer sufficiently to ever have asked the question of yourself at all. But it is another to know that question has all of a sudden been placed in somebody else’s mind, to be judged there in numerous indefinable, unknown, unimaginable contest or comparison. What without doubt was it to be a woman? Unwilling to argue with regards to it with this man’s-man editor, who supposedly had his finger on the sexual pulse of the world (hadn’t he, for instance, published James Jones and Mailer, and in all probability shared with them unpublishable sexual insights), I picked up myself, my novel, and my fantasies and went home where we were appreciated. But I shelved the …


Most helpful customer reviews

13 of 16 people found the following review helpful.
2Kind of made me sad to be a woman!
By Nikkita
I first heard about Nancy Friday from “Men in Love”, a collection of men’s sexual fantasies. I found the fantasies in that book to be fascinatingly deep, thought out, and precious to the men who had them. You could actually see the world the man was building in his head. So when I heard there was a book by the same author about women’s sexual fantasies I was very interested to see if they measured up.

8 of 10 people found the following review helpful.
5Utterly Fascinating
By Chris
As a 24 year old man, I loved this book. The majority of the content is simply what it says it is: women’s descriptions of their sexual fantasies. I felt this gave me a lot of insight into how women relate to their sexuality.

2 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
5An excellent study and excellent erotica too!
By Patrick D. Goonan
I have enjoyed every Nancy Friday book that I have read. In this one, Nancy Friday, brings together women’s fantasies under one cover and tries to represent different commonly occurring themes. The book is well organized and gives a great sense of women’s interior fantasy life. It is also RED HOT and broke ground at the time in overcoming ignorance and shame where women’s sexuality was involved. There is also a similar book on men’s fantasies called Men in Love.

See all 13 customer reviews…

My Secret Garden

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My Secret Garden

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My Secret Garden

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My Secret Garden

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My Secret Garden

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My Secret Garden

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