“Two peoples’ lips together, their breath, a little
bit of their soul…
A kiss is where the romance is.”
I have to agree with Meg
Ryan’s character in one of my all-time favorite movies French Kiss. (If you haven’t seen it, buy or rent immediately!)
Now, not all kisses are romantic, but whether in real life or in fiction it’s
hard to deny that kisses are powerful things.
Admittedly, a tangible touch
someone lays smack dab on your kisser is likely more exciting than reading
about two people smooching in a book, though I’d argue to say a paper kiss puts
an on-screen kiss to shame any day of the week for the sheer power of your
imagination at work, but I digress.
We’re talking about kissing,
one of my absolute favorite things to write, read, and shoot, partake in
myself. Not all kisses are created equal, certainly. And a first kiss … whether
the first ever, or the first with someone in particular, is irrevocably,
epically significant—which is why it’s usually the most anticipated moment in a
love story.
Those baited breaths, that
suspended moment of longing, of doubt. The anticipation strung so tight your
chest can barely contain your savage heart. And then… Wham! Lips touch, hearts
collide, souls are shaken, and lives are changed. Or they’re not. But what I
love about fiction is where that moment takes me. And this is where…
Forget about my first kiss.
That was so far from magical it was practically tragic. Since I’m not much for shyness
and I’m a die-hard romantic up to my ears in diapers and dirty laundry, let's
talk about something swoon-worthy like a life-changing kiss.
If we rewind about ten years,
before I married my handsome hunk of a husband and had three of his wonderfully
exhausting children, you’d find me tutoring the college baseball player in
statistics. This usually took place on campus or at a local coffeehouse. But
while I waited for the blockhead to get a clue and ask me out on an actual
date, we studied. Talked. Became friends. It was incredibly frustratingly
awesome. And then one night we studied at his apartment where his rowdy roommates
had us escaping to the quiet of his room whereupon we sat on his bed and
actually studied statistics.
Totally
romantic.
One would think this would
be a convenient place to make his intentions known. But that wasn’t the man I
was falling for. This was not an opportunistic moment for him. It was the
foundation for a much bigger goal. So at the end of the night, when I was about
ready to crawl out of my skin, he took my hand, walked me to my car, and then …
asked if he could kiss me good night.
There was something spellbinding
about that question. If I were writing the scene I knew I wouldn’t have had the
hero ask. In my mind I'd have him be
decisive and claim that kiss as if his life depended on the meeting of our lips
rather than his show of superhuman restraint in making me grant him access to
my pearly whites.
Funny thing about romance,
it's not usually what we expect or what we've been programmed by fairy tales to
think it should be. And perhaps
therein lies the magic of falling. An equation can’t compute it. The variables,
well, they vary. Statistics have no bearing. In other words, it’s beyond our
control and the result is beautiful chaos.
In that moment, the brain
and the jock were standing on the precipice. He’d taken the time to learn me
before making his move, instinctively knowing I needed that moment to be
something I couldn’t have written or planned or even braced myself for.
But now, I remember…
His endlessly deep voice
like the rasp of a rosined bow over my nerve endings. The intensity in his
moonlit brown eyes as he made himself vulnerable to me, laying his desire at my
feet, surrendering his control. I was hypnotized, barely squeaking out a nod,
falling like a wing-less fairy not bothering to reach for her pouch of fairy
dust. I was a goner before he laid those gorgeous lips on me. My last first
kiss. The cool autumn night a contrast to the cocoon of heat created with the
man who was helping me write the most perfect first kissing scene I couldn’t
begin to do justice with words.
It changed the course of my
life in an instant. And I'm convinced we anxiously await that moment on the
page because while it likely differs greatly from our own experience, and it
isn’t meant to belittle or replace a perhaps less eloquent reality, what it does is transport us back to that
pivotal moment in our story where we had no need for paper because we wrote the
memory on our hearts. The paper kiss’s power lies in its ability to flood us
with emotions and memories from those first inklings of falling. Of recognizing
that shift in your heroine’s journey as if you were walking in her shoes and
learning love all over again. That kiss…It’s more than tangled lips and shared
breath. It’s nostalgia. That first flicker of promise, the first glimpse of
happily ever after. It’s hope for the loved and the lonely alike. And sometimes
all it takes is one beautiful kiss to light the way.
<3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3
Amy Leigh Simpson writes romantic mysteries with honesty and humor, sweetness and spice, and gritty reality covered by grace. When she’s not stealing moments at naptime to squeeze out a few more adventures in storyland, she’s chasing around two tow-headed miscreants (Ahem)—boys, playing dress up with one sweet princess baby, and being the very blessed wife to the coolest, most swoon-worthy man alive. Amy is a Midwestern-girl, a singer, blogger, runner, coffee-addict, and foodie. Her Sports Medicine degree is wasted patching up daily boo boo’s, but whatever is left usually finds its way onto the page with fluttering hearts, blood and guts, and scars that lead to happily ever after.
Check out her debut romantic mystery novel WHEN FALL FADES available now for $3.99!
7 comments:
It's no wonder that you write such great kissing scenes;)
Ames,
This post is proof why you are published. Well done.
And my moment...the first kiss from the one I married happened after the date, at my parents house, on the doorstep when he, too asked if he could kiss me. Sigh. A never forget moment.
My first kiss was with a total stranger. At Disneyland for Night of Joy, when the park is filled with ChriStian teenagers and their youth groups. He was from California. It. Was. Magical.
My first kiss was with a total stranger. At Disneyland for Night of Joy, when the park is filled with ChriStian teenagers and their youth groups. He was from California. It. Was. Magical.
Thanks Deb and Mary! Mare, LOVE it!!!!
Oh swoon!!! Allison, a first ever kiss THAT magical??? I'm jealous! Dang!
I'm still waiting for mine. It would help if a guy I wanted to date would ask me out. But apparently I'm too picky and only attract the less than boyfriend material ones.
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