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Getting All Kissy Kissy

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How
much PDA is okay? And how much is just plain nauseating? Ruchira Bose asks
around
I was chatting happily with my friend, when they blew
into my dinner party like a tornado, Meena and Vicky, attached at the hips, arms
intertwined, giggling, whispering, kissing, kissing and kissing, ONLY! The fun
meter dropped to the floor. Every woman instantly felt undesirable; every man,
inadequate. All this kissyface was cute when they first started going out, but
ever since the scene they made at my last party, I'd put them on secret
probation. Now I was ready to knock them off my guest list for good. Why is it
that the worst perpetrators of public displays of affection (PDA) seem oblivious
to their offence?
After a few glasses of wine, I'd had all I could
take and said, "There's actually a roomful of people here. Why don't you guys go
home to privacy?" Meena feigned shock: "Were we misbehaving? (giggle) Sometimes
I think you old maids are just jealous."
"Believe me, you're taking
it too far," I wanted to snap, but Meena's comment gave me pause. I had to admit
that their recent PDA had made me question my own love life. Maybe all this
smoky affection was making me feel unloved or worse, unloving. Then Shivani,
another guest and a member of the eye-rolling council against Meena, said, "But
c'mon, there have to be some limits." So what are they?
Too Much Public
Touching
I brought the subject up at the dinner table. (People
always come to my parties expecting me to bring up some embarrassing topic.)
"When does touching become too much, publicly speaking?" Everyone agreed that
assuming you are over 21 and have stopped attending "let's make out in the dark"
parties, there are some unspoken dos and don'ts.
• Do express
yourself freely and lovingly, but not if you make others uncomfortable.
•Don't worry about it if just one person complains, but do pay
attention if three or more crack down on you.
Take my friend
Sharmishta and her husband, Ritesh, who openly snuggle. I've caught them
smooching in the backseat on picnics and goose one another on the way to the
bathroom. And yet, they are a joy to have around. Their happiness and sexual
energy are even a bit contagious. Another couple, Mitsy and Dhruv, tell me
"We've noticed that we often have sex when we get home from such double dates.
The opposite is true of nights spent with a couple we know who are complete
exhibitionists! If it's them, we come home irritable."
Steamy Outside, Chilled
Inside?
Does too much PDA signal a bad relationship? The morning
after my party, I was still thinking about Meena and Vicky, worried that my
girlfriends and I were just jealous. God, I thought, had we turned into those
kinds of women? Impossible - we are a bunch of hopeless romantics.
What was it then? It suddenly came to me. Sharms and Rits are just as
rambunctious as Meena and Vicky, but there's a difference: They're not
performing for an audience. Their affection seems spontaneous and authentic,
while Meena and Vicky's floor show seemed calculated and phony. No wonder it
made everyone uncomfortable. But why would a couple put on such a graphic show
for friends?
I got my answer two weeks later when Meena told me that
she and Vicky had broken up. She admitted that when they were alone, they were
unable to muster up any affection at all. "I think we were trying to reassure
ourselves by showing off to everyone else," she confessed. Meena's honesty
surprised, and freed,
me.
Quiet Fires Can Smoulder
In Private
Last summer, we stayed at a time-share place with a few
other couples. Gayatri and Sid, I noticed, kept a physical distance, but they
seemed close emotionally. One day, I came back from the beach earlier than the
rest. I heard laughter and a whispering from the bathroom that was so intimate,
I stopped in my tracks.
A few minutes later, Gayatri emerged - hair
wet, bathrobe askew, all blushy - followed by Sid, who gave a quick tug on her
belt, then vanished upstairs. Gayatri made 30 seconds of polite convo with me,
then followed him up, two steps at a time," narrates Vrinda. Now there was
intimacy to envy! Sexual energy is most delicious when it's kept quiet and
savoured between two people, like a magic word or a secret. Here are ways to
snuggle without bringing the wrath of friends on yourself:
Instead of
trying to keep up with the couple across the room, look for ways to enhance
moments when you two are by yourselves.
• Hold hands.
•
Flash a wink across the room or a long table.
• Choose a spot next to
him on a couch instead of sitting politely in a chair across the
room.
• Sneak a mini make-out session in an elevator.
•
In public, instead of steamy smoochies, share a short sweet and teasing kiss
(the French kiss isn't the only type)
• Steal a rendezvous on the
fire escape or the back of a train - Hindi film
ishtyle!
Cold Fact?
An
informal survey has confirmed that there's little or no correlation between
excessive PDA and a sweaty sex life. In fact, the opposite appears to be true:
Too much PDA is often a sign that something crucial is missing from the
relationship. Public love can be a smoke-and-mirrors special effect, designed to
keep the attention off a real problem, a sexual or emotional
incompatibility.
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