Alice Blog
An example of Asperger’s.
Question:
I just wanted to give an example of literal thinking for people with autism or Asperger’s. When I would hear “wow, this room looks like a pig sty!” I would think to myself No it doesn’t. Pigs have a fence and mud. I have walls, and a floor. |
Phyllis replied:
And this must make it very hard for you, because we often speak symbolically instead of literally. I’m sure that every reader can think of dozens of ways that ordinary conversation makes it difficult for people with Asperger’s syndrome. Thank you for writing.
What Does Alice Do?
Phyllis replied:
Any long-time Alice fan will tell you that I would NEVER answer that question until the very last book.
I’m Completely Serious
Question:
hey, okay so this email is gonna be completely serious. please understand this. im not trying to be rude. ok- so you now how alice masturbates? i figured you’d know a lot about it, since you write about it, and you get into detail with sexual things and how patrick fingers alice and how she gave him a hand job and stuff in intensely alice.(which was a good book! and i honestly think they should have had sex in right there, cause it was like perfect timing! but oh well haha.)
well-
you know how there is that thing called a jerk circle. (i think thats what its called) for a group of guys who get together and pleasure themselves. well me and a bunch of my girlfriends get together once a week, and we all masturbate, kinda like the jerk circle. (we’re in college, and we started this so it can calm us down from the stress and shit. and it can get crazzzy, a bunch of horny girls in one room-. we usually end it with spin the bottle. but not the average kiss, its with fingering each other and were usually drunk by this time) but all my friends tell me im doing it wrong, but i still get really horny when i do it, so i feel like im doing it right. they always show me how to do it, but every time i try it again they say im still doing it wrong. so how do i do it right?? are they just telling me im doing it wrong because it sure as hell feels like im doing it right!? i want to be able to pleasure myself when not having sex without using a vibrator or sex toys. i want to be able to pleasure myself knowing that im doing it right! please mrs.naylor help me here!
and one last question, do you masturbate?
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Phyllis replied:
I’ll have to take your word that your email is completely serious, because it didn’t seem so to me. For a group of college girls uninhibited enough to masturbate in front of each other, it’s hard to believe that you want to know if you’re “doing it right.” How can you say to anyone else “You’re not enjoying chocolate right,” or “You’re not enjoying a sunset right” or “You’re not enjoying your backrub right.” If you are getting pleasure, isn’t that what it’s all about? (I answered a similar question just a few days ago).
I Can’t Stop Thinking About It
Phyllis replied:
I would ignore them. I certainly would not suggest anything that would get a bunch of guys angry at you, and what they really want is a reaction from you. If you don’t feel safe at the rink, then you definitely need to tell your parents. But if someone is waiting to drive you home and watching you go in and out, and if otherwise you enjoy skating there, I would simply avoid the guys as much as possible. If at any time they are really in your face and can’t be ignored, the best thing to do, if you can swing it, is to give them a bored look–not angry, not funny, just a sort of “Ho hum, why don’t you grow up?” look. What guys do not want to be is boring.
WHY?
What Does It Mean?
Appreciate Your Honesty
Question:
I’m one of those adults who’s been reading your Alice books since I was in middle school. And I still love reading each new one as it comes out. I was looking through your Alice blog this afternoon and I just wanted to let you know that I so appreciate the honest, straightforward way that you answer all the questions you get. I hope when I have children that are pre-teens and teenagers that I will have the guts to show them how much I respect them by addressing their questions and concerns with as much honesty. I don’t always agree with what you say, but man, I honor your choice to be real and to genuinely concern yourself with the issues your readers face. Thank you for giving so much of yourself to the people who love your books.
P.S. I’m also kind of wondering if you have a new Alice book coming out this spring? I thought there was usually a new one every year, but I haven’t seen a single thing on Amazon or your blog.
Phyllis replied:
Thank you so much for your letter. If you go to “books” on Amazon.com and type in “Alice in Charge,” you will see the cover of the new book coming out this June.
Books Per Year
Should I Feel Guilty?
Phyllis replied:
Let’s forget “guilty” for the moment and try to understand why you cuss inappropriately, pull tricks to get out of band, and lie to your mom. Without knowing either you or your mom, your email seems to indicate that she is much too strict with you and you are reacting passive-aggressively by seeing what you can get away with at school without her knowing, instead of actually confronting her and having a serious talk. Since you seem to know that the hard-cussing, trick-pulling, hanging-out-with-wrong-crowd person isn’t really you, think about this: If you suddenly were given the choice to choose exactly the kind of person you wanted to be at school, doing the kinds of activities you really like, what kind of person would that be? Would you give up the cussing-persona to be one of the actors in a play? Would you be the kind of person who might attract the attention of the eighth grade guy across the street? Would you trade band for modern dance or girls’ soccer? Who is the real you? I know that it’s easier said than done for a girl, who is totally dependent on her parents for food and shelter and spending money, to sit down with her mom for a serious talk, but I think that’s what you need to do at a time she is relaxed and in a reasonably good mood. Promise to listen carefully to the reasons she gives for what she demands from you if she will listen carefully to the way you are feeling. Tell her that you resent her rules over the small things, like saying “Dude.” That you resent having an arbitrary age restriction for dating. That you want to be able to pick your own extra-curricular activities, and that band isn’t one of them. Tell her that instead of hanging around with kids she probably wouldn’t approve of, and being tempted to ditch band, and using words she wouldn’t like just to get even, you want to become a different sort of person, and you need her help by giving you more freedom. Then present your plan, and think it out beforehand: Perhaps you want to trade band for drama club next year; you want to join the chorus or the dance club or soccer or the computer club; you want to have friends in sometimes for pizza and DVDs and you want to include some guys. The very real fact is that if you continue doing as you are now, your mom is going to find out about it, or sense that it is going on, and will trust you even less. She will become more restrictive, not less, and you sure don’t want that. I did some incredibly silly things when I was 12, and I blush now to even think about it. I hung out with people not at all like me, knowing all the while I could never be serious about them. And I soon discovered I was turning off the people I really DID want to hang out with. By eighth grade I had become more the person I really was. Think about the kind of person you really want to be, the kind of people you hope to attract, and head in that direction. When your mother sees a growing maturity in you, she is far more likely to offer more freedom.
Do I Need to Read the Prequels?