When I was 19 years old, I’d never seen any porn, but as a hormonal teen-ager with a normal sex drive, it sounded like a wonderful forbidden fruit. So I decided to buy a copy of Playboy to see what I had been missing.
I was nervous about it, but I went into a convenience store on Green Springs Highway in Birmingham and asked for a copy (since it was kept behind the counter). This was the first and only time I’ve ever bought any porn.
At first, I was amazed at what I saw. These were physically perfect women who were clearly ready to have sex with me — or pretty much anyone who would pay them, presumably. But after the initial rush of hormonal excitement died down, I quickly realized that the pictures didn’t arouse me in the same way that my own girlfriend did.
Let’s be honest. The women in the magazine were physically perfect in a way that my girlfriend couldn’t be. (I didn’t understand at the time that not even those women were actually physically perfect.) Physically, everything about them was just right. But I realized that I was far more attracted to my own girlfriend and to other women who I knew — women who couldn’t possibly be that “perfect.”
Why?
It didn’t take me long to learn something that I’ve never forgotten.

Creating work that I’m proud of gives me elusive feelings of joy
We can’t defeat existing system; we must build better one instead
Inflated expectations make good people act like entitled children
Top secret weapon for homeland security: the ‘Sno-Cone’ machine
China’s one-child policy: Unintended consequences on a grand scale
Romantic interest no easier now than it was for me in sixth grade
Was he angry to lose his family? Or because he lost his control?
Taking Donald Trump seriously means ‘Idiocracy’ is already here