Pamela Anderson Is Here to Save Your Sex Life

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With her bleached blonde hair and buxom assets, Pamela Anderson may famously known as a sex symbol, but these days, the former Baywatch star and vegan activist is writing books about intimacy in the era of hookup apps.

Lust for Love: Rekindling Intimacy and Passion in Your Relationship, which was released April 24, is co-authored by Anderson with Los Angeles rabbi Shmuley Boteach, who has written more than 30 books on love and relationships. The duo paired up to encourage us to get off our smartphones and start paying attention to the people around us — namely, our partners.

Anderson, who has been through several partnerships herself — marriages to Tommy Lee, Kid Rock and two marriages to Rick Salomon — now lives in the south of France with her 32-year-old French boyfriend Adil Rami.

This book reads like a conversation between the two authors, who offer tips on how to keep the fire alive in your relationship, like meeting at a hotel in the middle of the day to have sex, bringing sex toys into the equation and touching each other under the dinner table at group gatherings. They also pull examples from the past to illustrate the present, drawing upon the turbulent romance of Napoleon and Josephine, the poetry of Anaïs Nin and the love story between Estés and Manawee from Women Who Run with the Wolves).

PAPER caught up with Anderson about online distractions and why commitment is sexy.

You recently released your new book Lust for Love. Where does the conversation begin between you and your co-author Shmuley Boteach?

We met because he was curious how my public and private persona were at such odds. He knew my neighbors who had a birds eye view of my real life as a mom and active participant in the community. We met and both decided that each of us should write a book. Then [we] thought [it'd be] even better to write a book together on the topic of sensuality. I was writing already about a sensual revolution to make up for the disaster the sexual revolution handed us in love and relationships, commitment and romance. He had such great advice for me — I was facing a difficult divorce — with all the elements of love but desensitization, modern thinking and distractions destroying my every day. Shmuley is brilliant. He has great advice for anyone wanting to be in love, and stay there.

 

"Fight back. Fall in love. It's rebellious."

 

A revolution of intimacy feels timely, what are the most important step people can take?

To not be lazy or take your lover for granted.

A lot of people are dealing with online temptations (secretly flirting with other people online, joining hookup apps). Why are you a firm believer in monogamy in today's dating world where polyamory is becoming more popular?

Mental fidelity is a challenge, but worth it. I make sure to clear my phone and social media of temptation. I'm human after all and love is respect — I only have eyes for my lover — and I'd rather peel back layers and be brave, vulnerable and have great sex with someone I trust and love. Not just mediocre sexual situations in loveless encounters. It's too easy. I'm stronger than this, and I demand more.

How can people make love again passionately if they're in a relationship where it has fizzled out?

Remember what you love about that person and start there.

What is the most damaging thing to a relationship, in your opinion?

Infidelity and lies. Be brave enough to be honest.

Is one way of getting out of a porn addiction turning to the pillars of eroticism?

Porn is for masturbation — I think the most unfulfilling part of sex. It's numbing us. And it goes with the times — fast food that is unfulfilling. We are all zombies on phones, under surveillance and right where they want us. The bewildered herd. Make an effort to come back to life. Choose to live. Not fall into the trappings. Fight back. Fall in love. It's rebellious. Now we need this more than ever. And combat everything. We are stronger in pairs.

 

"Don't be afraid to commit to someone.

It's sexy."

 

The book covers divorce, porn and erotica. How do you feel about those topics today?

I am a romantic. I keep trying, but I believe in respect. And know that there is someone right for you — you just do your best. Don't be afraid to commit to someone. It's sexy.

What is the secret for the art of making love?

To learn about the other person — a wonderland who changes every day. Learning, growing. It is never boring if you keep learning.

Lust for Love: Rekindling Intimacy and Passion in Your Relationship is out now.

article via www.papermag.com/pamela-anderson-sex-life-2564662917.html

Lust for Love

When two people from radically different backgrounds agree wholeheartedly on something, listen closely. There is a good chance that what they have to say might just be important. Let this book be the proof of that. The co‑authors of this book, Rabbi Shmuley Boteach and I, are indeed very different people, from very different traditions, and with very different approaches to life and the world. An outspoken, courageous, and prolific speaker and writer, Shmuley is also a religious teacher. The perspective he brings to Lust for Love is drawn from years of experience providing advice and counseling to married couples.

My background contrasts with Shmuley’s. Many would consider it the opposite of his. But while the broad strokes of my biography are well known, there is also a private side of my life that few will have heard. I started modeling for Playboy at the age of twenty-two and spent my twenties as a cast member on Baywatch. At an age when most people are discovering themselves for the first time as adults—in a time before the Internet had yet taken over our lives and everyone had a taste of celebrity—I found myself sharing my own image with a generation. I watched as my name broke out from my immediate circle of friends, eventually reaching households all over the world.

Surreally, I was called a “sex symbol,” a “bombshell,” a “goddess.” It was a disconcerting experience for a shy, small-town girl from Vancouver Island—a quiet, studious girl who loved her mom and dad but who also had to deal with no small amount of trauma. In the early days it was tough, grappling with uncertainty and the sense of exposure. But I discovered I felt comfortable as long as I pretended to be someone else—playing the part in public, finding within myself a different persona for every shoot. Some might smirk, but in no way do I want to disown the Playboy years or diminish their importance to me. These experiences were a sort of university for me.

Through them, I was given the opportunity to meet and befriend fascinating and beguiling people—men and women, souls and intellects—whose experiences and character and wisdom shaped me. It was an education—unique and brilliant and precious. Thinking of these years I am reminded of the words Anaïs Nin wrote on the development of woman on her own terms, rather than as an imitation of man. The theme of “woman finding her own language, articulating her own feelings, discovering her own perceptions.” It’s sometimes assumed that I should want to renounce those years as decadent or foolish. This is not the case. In hindsight, I am very proud of the independent, unorthodox path I took, a path that allowed me to develop on my own terms, and not—as some might presume—on the terms of men. I am proud of the intense spiritual rewards my life has brought me and the wisdom I have been lucky enough to receive. Most of all, I am proud and in awe of the women I’ve met along the way—powerful, wise, fascinating women; women as diverse and varied, as contradictory and manifold, as the types Nin lists in her diaries: “the masculine, objective one; the child woman of the world; the maternal woman; the sensation-seeker; the unconsciously dramatic one; the churlish one; the cold, egotistical one; and the healing, intuitive guide-woman.”

I want to do justice to these women. I don’t at all renounce my past. It is out of those experiences—and with these companions and guides—that I was able to define myself. It would have been so easy to lose myself then, eclipsed behind a stream of images. But I was there, among these women, and it is there I came to understand the power and autonomy that was available to me in sensuality, there that I came to possess myself in that power, and that is what saved me. It hasn’t all been roses. Over the years, I learned that fame can also be a prison. It can leave very little room for a real person to live behind it, very little space for honesty, and very little time to age, or mourn, or love. Life is untidier than celebrity makes out. At times in my life it has been hard to shake the sense that my life was happening to someone else—that I was the lesser twin to my public image: Pamela and me. It was Pamela who won the praise and the credit, renowned but shallow, never really allowed or expected to have any depth, while I was the thoughtful, sensitive one, reading voraciously, searching for meaning, suffering through my divorce and raising my boys, sometimes waking up and wondering where the last twenty years had gone. “Look for something hard enough and you will find it,” my father once told me.

Lately, I have taken a hard look at my life and experiences, and I’ve realized that I have a lot to say. Playboy models aren’t supposed to have much to say—at least according to some—but it is this very background that I draw on for my philosophy. That’s why, when I first met Rabbi Shmuley Boteach, I did not expect that we would find so much to agree on. I was introduced to Shmuley through mutual friends based in Malibu. He wanted to recognize my activism at the Champions of Jewish Values International Awards Gala. I was honored that I—having no Jewish background—would be recognized in this way. I went along, curious to meet him.

Our first conversations were cordial but fascinating. He had heard I was a very good mother and was interested in how this reconciled with my public image. At the time, I was going through a difficult stage of my life and was preoccupied with the problem of happiness in marriage. Naturally, the discussion turned to this theme—to marriage and the difficulties it faces in our society. I was fascinated to discover the wealth of insight he had into both the eternal and modern problems of love. He had a great ability to put his finger on the complexities of romantic life, concisely and simply. It was a surprise to me to discover a religious teacher who was so awake to the needs of intimacy between lovers, who understood that love must closely trace the contours of passion if it is to endure. I was also intrigued to discover my beliefs about the importance of sensuality and sex in marriage being reflected back in fluent quotations from scripture. My father gave me a keen interest in mythology and folklore, and I have always had a huge respect for the wisdom buried in the mythologies of ancient cultures.

So it was there—not in religious scripture—that I always looked to get perspective on human sexuality. On reflection, though, it is not surprising there is agreement between mythology and religion. Religious traditions are also human traditions, and sex and love are at the core of human experience. Such timeless and enduring expressions of human experience would naturally contain the same basic truths, the same delicate wisdom. As fascinated as I was with his ideas, Rabbi Shmuley was also intrigued by mine. He was very interested in what he saw as apocalyptic contradictions in my character and how they related to the topics we were talking about. It was clear from our discussion that I—just like anyone—have experienced my share of heartache in life. But, he exclaimed, if anyone should be free of the loneliness of our society, surely, it should be me. It should be Pamela—the lifelong cover girl. The woman who—as the tabloids and gossip blogs would have it—could have any man she wants. If Pamela could be lonely, if her heart could be broken, that’s an apocalypse! What hope is there for anyone else?

Of course, as we both knew, this is a myth—I am a human being just like anyone else. Experiences affect me as much as they do anyone else. And, as the great psychologist Carl Jung once wrote, “Even a happy life cannot be without a measure of darkness, and the word happy would lose its meaning if it were not balanced by sadness.” But the question itself was fruitful. We decided that perhaps, instead of despair, it would give people hope or reprieve to know that we are all—without exception—on the great quest for romantic companionship and sexual contentment. During the course of our conversation, we realized that this supposed contradiction in me led deeper into the issues we were discussing, toward an understanding of the reasons for the death of love, of passion, of sex, in our contemporary society. That was when we decided to work together on a book—a book that would capture these tensions, that would diagnose the problems of romantic passion in the twenty-first century, and that would point toward the solutions.

Our book is a call for a fundamental change in relationships that will impact not only individuals but society as a whole. We want to inspire a revolution in human affairs that we believe must happen to afford the greatest possibility of romantic fulfillment to the greatest number of people. It is a sensual revolution that follows other cultural and sexual upheavals in our recent past, an adjustment that can restore balance to the way men and women relate to each other. This transformation isn’t something new to humanity. We experienced it a long time ago. We simply need to rediscover it and practice it once again in our modern relationships.

Ancient mythologies carry its secrets. It is the first flowering of human sexuality in a time before histories were written, and it can be found throughout the literature and poetry and philosophy of every age and every culture. It is the enduring art of human intimacy. Our book is about how it has been lost, and not for the first time. Human intimacy has been distorted before, by technologies that changed the way people connected to each other, and it was necessary each time for society to relearn how to love. In 1946, Nin wrote of “the dangerous time when mechanical voices, radios, telephones, take the place of human intimacies, and the concept of being in touch with millions brings a greater and greater poverty in intimacy and human vision.” We are living through a similar change. How much has the “communications revolution” impoverished intimacy? There have been great strides forward in recent decades: sexual liberation, global activism, and a revolution in information. These are precious gains and should not be lost. But without a practiced understanding of the mysteries of human intimacy and sensuality, the technologies of our age can easily lead us into alienation, disaffection, and loneliness. Shmuley and I agree: if the arts of intimacy and sensuality have been forgotten, they must be remembered again. Our culture must rediscover sensuality and sexiness, for the sake of meaning and value in our intimate lives. Our hope is that this book—the joint efforts of the most unlikely of co‑authors: a rabbi and a Playboy cover girl—can help make that happen.

Assange, my Book Lust for Love and What I’m Reading?

Stay Aware -

Julian Assange is a political hostage with multiple states fighting over his body -
I'm concerned about his health and well being. His human rights have been abused before without sunlight
but this is extra ordinary.
Incommunicado.
No visitors. No internet.No phone calls.No access to outside world.

I believe this is Torture
A slow painful death
At the hands of The US-
I feel for Ecuador.
They have received so much pressure.
No one wants to deal with him. Because of political fall out.
Ecuador promised to protect him against political persecution. Not just protect him against a death penalty

He must be protected.

« We are all Julian Assange ».

It’s naive to think because he is in this position that he must have done something wrong.

This is why he needs public support.
He has only unraveled some important truths.
And he is being silenced anyway possible. If he were not in the public eye.
He’d be dead.
This is why I remind people-
He is a human being.
And not a robot or computer screen.
He has sacrificed his freedom for us.
I’m surprised that Western societies typically believe that if someone is imprisoned -
They must have done something wrong -
and just get on with their day.
I was taught to question authority-
but maybe most are thinking  too much ‘me first’ ‘me too’
I fear it’s another sign of a dangerous narcissistic society.
Full of self help gimmicks

or
Take a pill to feel better. or worse-numb.. (Narco Capitalism) (amazon.com/Narcocapitalism-Life-Anaesthesia-Laurent-Sutter/dp/1509506845/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1524516547&sr=1-1&keywords=narcocapitalism)

"Every capitalism is, necessarily, a narcocapitalism - a capitalism that is narcotic through and through, whose excitability is only the manic reverse of the depression it never stops producing, even as it presents itself as its remedy. Of course, this remedy is nothing but a forgetting - that ablation of organ sensation that Freud highlighted, which ultimately found its ideal form in the anesthesia practiced every day on millions of consumers of antidepressants"

Also -
I wanted to comment on this
NY Post article- (nypost.com/2018/04/18/sex-tips-from-pamela-anderson-and-an-orthodox-rabbi/)
I’d like to clarify
My book Lust For Love is not a self help book or a book about sex tips.
It has nothing to do with my private life, my Age.
or my track record-
and
I preferred the Title “The Sensual Revolution” (amazon.com/dp/1478992786/ref=cm_sw_r_tw_dp_U_x_HUeXAbX2WDPCB)
It is a humble observation about the times we are in romantically.
A conversation starter -  
Because -
what we discuss in the book - is being discussed- behind closed doors in tears amongst friends .
I wanted to collectively start a conversation.
to help-
before it's too late and we are too numb,
to save LOVE ❤️

I’m now reading
A Lover’s Discourse by Rolan Barthes (amazon.com/Lovers-Discourse-Fragments-Roland-Barthes/dp/0374532311/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1524515260&sr=1-1&keywords=a+lover%E2%80%99s+discourse+by+roland+barthes)

Pamela

Intimately Magazine Interview

-It will be a year since you entered a new decade. We see a Pamela who is secure, active and renewed. How are you feeling in this moment?
 
I don’t believe in counting years,
obsessing on someone’s age—but it seems we are collectively distracted by such meaningless issues- when so much in the world is at stake-
Life keeps moving- We are constantly learning and changing –
This is how we stay young- remain curious-
The more years we have, the more opportunities-
but I fear young people are stuck in a holding pattern, subjected to propaganda to numb their brains on purpose-
keep everyone busy on instagram, snapchat and video games and you can’t be a rebel- you can’t cause problems- too busy doing NOTHING!
Fight Back!
And Love is the ultimate to fight for- it keeps us Alive – and in this very heavily sedated period-
There seems no need to chase, to learn the art of seduction or chivalry—and this is what keeps your heart beating or singing—Love and all it’s complexities, nuances that maturity doesn’t help with- we are all the same-
We are babies in love-
 
-How do you think you’ve evolved as a person up to now?
 
I’ve always felt the same- I have a big imagination I think-
When I was 5-
I wanted to dig my way to China – I had a secret spot where I was actually digging – and my mother’s spoons always went missing- I used to fly (in my imagination or dreams)to my friends homes who had lots food in the fridge and toys in their closets—and I would play and eat all I could -
 
I wanted to help animals and people too-
I knew I was going to live a wild life—
that I just needed to hold on and venture out alone- I am a loner- I’m very alone, even when I am next to people-
I take big risks and go on grand adventures—
I’m on one right now— in the South of France-
I don’t know what I’m doing, or how I got here – or what will happen tomorrow- it’s not important-
I live for today

-Is there anything you would change about how you’ve lived your life?
 
I cant help how I live-
And to be honest I don’t remember most of it— I’m too busy living today—I’m not a big story teller- and I meet people 2 and 3 times before I remember them-
Of course my Children are my pride and Joy—I’m so proud of them- and their wildness and their imagination and abilities to make music, and create – and they aren’t afraid to love—this is the most exciting part-
The rest of my life is just crazy life- doing my best, my part.. my art, trying to help where I can- and do what makes sense to me—I realize it may not make sense to others-
that’s fine with me-
 
-You’re the woman with the most Playboy covers ever. For you, that was about more than just fun and wild living. You’ve said that it gave you the freedom you needed. What is freedom for you? How has it saved you?
 
Playboy was my university I learned everything important there—
I met artists, and activists and forward thinking people- they opened up my world—I took my power back this way— I was slightly traumatized as a child- and
I was always a bit of a creature—my nick name was “PUMA”..
And some now call me “little bird”..
I think I have cat-like thoughts –
I am free in my fantasies…
But, in love I am a slave-

-There’s obviously a wide disparity among some of the figures you’ve referenced. Why are all of them important to you?
 
I am interested in interesting people – and I also like to be around other worlds—
now I come home to soccer and discipline- It is very new for me- but I’m fascinated -
I’m blessed to be able to leave the rest of my work outside my relationship and home— I don’t need to share all of my adventures or quests- and,
I don’t need to spend my life explaining—
I’d rather hear about someone else’s day-
learn a new language-
I can rest at home and stop thinking.. or worrying-
I feel safe-
I’ve created a life that I think I could only dream up –
and it all hangs by a thread-
 
-When you look back now at the 90’s, how do you remember them? Was it your golden age, or is the golden age still to come?
 
I don’t know- golden is golden- I’m living my best life now, then and hopefully in the future-
We will have to see-
 
-You were quoted as saying “When I hear about countries closing their borders instead of opening their arms sometimes I wonder what’s happening to humanity.”
 
It’s insanity the selfishness
 
-It reminds me of Einstein’s quote: “I love humanity but I hate humans.”
Do you agree with that sentiment?

 
I think we need to learn all we can from each other-
nobody is perfect- especially humans-
Happiness is living your passion- it takes strength and effort—humans can be lazy and uninteresting- We have to push each other to grow—our friends, our neighbors and in our relationships—I’m definitely a “pusher” – but
I know when to back off too and let things happen- let go.
 
-I want to read you a bit of the famous Walt Whitman poem, Song of Myself:
“A child said, what is the grass? How could I answer the child? …I guess the grass is itself a child, the produced babe of the vegetation. Or I guess it is a uniform hieroglyphic, and it means, Sprouting alike in broad zones and narrow zones. Growing among black folks as among white, Kanuck, Tuckahoe, Congressman, Cuff, I give them the same, I receive them the same” What do you have in common with humanists like Whitman? How can we turn literature into action?

 
I’m sure I’ve read all of Whitman, This is what we need to do- read, read, read-
Put poetry in our minds, hearts and souls
This will save the world-
 
-Where do you think you can trace the origins of your activism? And your veganism?
 
Empathy, fairy-tales, mythology – Carl Jung—reading, art, growing up in the forest on an island surrounded by beauty,nature, animals and then sprinkled with fun sparkly women—
My mom – she is a force- she never stops and also has been madly in love since she was 16(a waitress) with my father (who is a poet and chimney sweep) and still together –when my dad hung a dead deer in the back yard after hunting with friends—I realized where meat came from—I was so upset- my dad never hunted again—children are great teachers- I explained to him how horrible it was in children’s terms and he never thought of it like that before- and never hunted again.
 
-What projects are you working on most actively now?
 
My life is performance art- this is what David LaChapelle tells me—
But as for Film
David will direct a film starring Sergei Polunin and I
They are still working on the script-
and in the mean time I’m shooting a funny french film in August with Philippe Lacheau- I’m excited to perform in French -
And the Werner Herzog project is a work in progress too
 
I’m very active with my foundation working with The Courage Foundation supporting Julian Assange and The Sea Shepherd Conservation Society, PETA, and HelpRefugeesUK, Cool Earth
 
-How was working with James Cameron for “The Game Changers”?
 
I was the first investor and believer in this film – then James Cameron came along and said this might be ‘the most important film of his career’ – and brought a lot more credibility and money to the project-
It is being well received at film festivals  - It’s an important topic Veganism- for men – busting the myth that men need to eat meat- Meat causes impotency and  a vegan diet is progressive and healthy - The strongest men in the world are vegan— So many athletes are recognizing this- almost like a secret weapon—but word is spreading- and that’s a great thing for animals, humans and the planet-
 
My foundation also produced a film with Naomi Klein about climate change--
 
-“Activism is sexy,” you said not long ago. Does everything have a sexy side? What does that word mean for you?
 
Sexy = compassion – Living romantically means being engaged in the world- To feel everything – to not turn away – to commit yourself to the world and be inspired and help when it struggles—it’s a metaphor for love--
 
-Speaking of activism… we know what you think about bullfighting in Spain. So what would you say to the bullfighter who tells you that they are the ones who really love animals the most?
 
I think it is very cruel- and unnecessary- such a sad way to be entertained- I’ve learned so much about it- it’s heartbreaking what the bulls are put through so that the Matador can put on a pretty outfit and call it Art or culture?—something’s are better left in the past-
 
-You came to Europe just after Trump’s victory. Was that a coincidence?

Just good luck
 
-What do you like especially about France?
 
I always knew I’d be living in The South of France at this time in my life- and here I am – I fell in love with France while shooting for Playboy and never wanted to leave—My boys love visiting me here and think it’s funny that I speak French –I’m learning all I can- and my kids love that I am brave and are inspired by my fearlessness -
 
-According one of your posts about UK, France and USA a year ago, (“makes this the opportune time to discuss politics romantically”), do you think politics can always be discussing romantically?
 
A romantic struggle yes-
 
-You’ve been working hard with Sea Shepherd. Given the latest news about the huge plastic island in the Pacific (three times the size of Spain!), how do you fight against such terrible things?
 
Try to stop using plastic- it never goes a way—
Once you learn something you must put it into action—we all are responsible for every choice we can make- we need to switch to green energy, walk and ride bicycles more—simple things that are helpful—if we all do something- it makes a big difference—don’t give up- you are an activist if you do the simplest things like pick up garbage—or read- or visit museums- Intellectuals unite-
 
-Aside from activism, you’ve also been spending time painting. Where did your artistic side come from?
 
I’ve always loved Art, but never believed I could draw or paint—my brother Gerry is an amazing artist and my neice Kylie – wow—so much talent in the world  -
I just want to be brave and attempt all things—I also like blowing glass and welding – I love heat, fire, charcoal- I love writing most of all and am very inspired by Anais Nin and Frida Khalo
 
-Up to now, we’ve only seen two of your drawings on Instagram. Will we see more?
 
When I make more I will share them-
 
-On April 24, you and Rabbi Shmuley Boteach will publish your new book, Lust for Love: Rekindling Intimacy and Passion in Your Relationship.
 
I don’t like a gimmick title to sell books- I preferred my Title The Sensual Revolution
This book is not just about sex. And I don’t want it mistaken for a cheesy self help book-
I think this it is an important book.
We make observations in simple terms and give our impressions.
And Shmuley has some great inspiring solutions. His ideas are quite racey even for me-
I’m searching too I want the same things.
Maybe I’m addicted to love, romance.
I have no education in this field –
except life experience.
I’ve tasted blood
Maybe I’m sharing a unique perspective.
I came from a very romantic family –
and it’s deeply rooted in me to be engaged in the world and care about others.
 
-Why did you decide to write about this, and what can we expect to read?
 
I wanted to share my thoughts on the subject of love- I write a lot of short stories and live a romantic life- no matter who else is in it—
 
It takes courage to be open and vulnerable, to walk into unknown places. Allowing another person access to our inner world is intimidating. Often, we don’t even want to know what’s inside of us— especially when it comes to sexuality.We lack self‐awareness.We hide from ourselves, refusing to explore the dark impulses within...
We stay on the surface, splashing in the sunlit waters, too afraid to dive deep where the sunlight doesn’t reach. But that is where we need to go, and it takes courage to do it.
 
-In the book you invite people to start a new sexual revolution (60´s), this time including sensuality. In your opinion, how would you do this?
 
To ask people to trust-
To just make that choice is a revolution-
To become emotionally vulnerable to another, to share your insecurities, your dreams, your weaknesses, your fantasies requires faith that the other person will not abuse you or shatter the glass heart you have entrusted to their care. We keep so many things guarded because we’re afraid of getting hurt, but love drives out fear. If we want to live an erotic life and have a lasting relationship full of mystery, novelty, forbiddenness, even sinfulness- We need to be fearless.
When we are fearless, our life and our love expand, reaching into the depths and heights where the infinite dwells.
We need a sensual revolution.
 
-In addition to the book, you´ve created your own lingerie line “Pamela Loves Coco de Mer”. Could you tell us more about it and why did you choose this brand?
 
I love Coco de Mer—I’ve been a long time client- I love lingerie and sexy things—Coco de Mer is naughty enough for me—I like the edgy-ness – we need to push the boundries a bit to have fun- I’m just not a ‘victoria secret’ kind of girl.
 
-What advice would you give to people who are just starting out in show business or in the film industry?

I’m the worst to ask advice—I’m never calculated or ambitious—I did not pursue this life—it pursued me—maybe that’s the answer—but It’s a wild ride when you let life happen to you—to let go of control-
 
-You’ve said “I am just a little girl… learning all I can.” But you’ve already become a legend like Marilyn Monroe, Sophia Loren, Birigitte Bardot. How does that make you feel?
 
It’s all so hard to believe- so I just concentrating on trying to get through the day .

 

The book Lust for Love will be released on April 24 2018, pre-order click here

Good Morning Britain

Re Julian Assange

Julian would not want me to say this.
But I am deeply concerned about his health and well being.
This is torture.
I believe he is being killed slowly ... his human rights are being abused. .
And the UK must help

Julian is:
1)not allowed visitors
2)no telephone calls
3) journalists and the press cannot speak or get access to him
4) no internet

It’s very disturbing because this is due to pressure from the US.

If it wasn’t already clear to everyone, Julian Assange is a political hostage in the heart of London.

He has no freedom because the US is threatening to put him in prison for the rest of his life. He’s brave and principled and what is portrayed in the media is not true, I know him better than the people who write about him and they are on the wrong side of history.

The US attorney General says his arrest is a priority, no one should face life in prison for doing their job, which is advocating for everyone’s access to the truth about war crimes and corruption.

There is a lots of evidence that Julian is politically persecuted by the US and that the UK government has a duty to ensure that he is not exposed to that US persecution.

This has always been about the US case. The UK government has so far not recognised his asylum so that means that he has no protection from a US extradition.

All he cares about is the US extradition.

——

Re- a few questions I get asked -

What about breaking bail?
Julian already served all the time while in prison and house arrest before seeking asylum- (between 2010 and 2012) which count as time served. It’s now 2018! The bail issue is simply a technicality to keep the situation going. It is cruel and cynical. It is a blight on the UK and looks bad.

On the Swedish case?
: the investigation was dropped over a year ago and he had already been cleared plus was never charged in the first place.
Any suggestion the Swedish case could be reopened comes from a face saving effort by the prosecutor, and that suggestion has been criticised by the entire Swedish legal community in numerous op-Eds (no one has taken the side that it could be reopened) as an effort to mislead the public and save the prosecutor’s reputation.

——

I have a message for the Prime Minister Theresa May: woman to woman, this is a terrible situation that no one should be in, let alone a publisher for publishing the truth. Before something terrible happens to Julian-
the UK should come to an agreement to protect him from a US extradition, which is all he cares about.

—-

I want to appeal both to Ecuador, a brave country to protect Julian, but at same time urge them to continue protecting him and give back Internet.
And then,
at the same time, now that he is not charged with anything,
the UK should protect him from the US who now has Mike Pompeo (former CIA) as Secretary of State -
same one who said Wikileaks should be treated as "hostile non-state agency"..
People have to understand the US is after him and wants him in prison...
and UK doesn't want to confirm or deny there is an extradition request...

I think this video by Vivienne Westwood is very clear.

Please watch -

Self Discipline

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Any advice you have for relationships trying to survive in the digital age ?

Self Discipline !
Never put yourself in situations where the small embers of attraction to someone else will catch fire.
Don’t laugh off all those little erotic attractions you feel. These will either have to be suppressed or they’ll naturally grow.
If you’re flirting with other people, you’re diluting erotic desire for your spouse. This is especially true with online interaction. Don’t spend your time on your phone or computer when you should be focusing on your lover -
if you’re always holding a screen up to your face, you’re not paying attention to your lover.
This creates unhealthy jealousies. The next thing you know, your lover is checking your computer histories, stalking you on social media, trying to find any hint of infidelity.
My father once told me that suspicion within a relationship is self-fulfilling.
He said that “if you look hard enough for something, you will and it.” This can ruin a relationship.
So, put down the gadgets, stop flirting with others,
and put your erotic energy into your partner.

I love this song by HER .. youtube.com/watch?v=Uj9y5xkHZaU

Lust for Love will be released on April 24 2018, pre-order click here