Downloadable Internet icon Cindy Margolis says she was so obsessed with starting a family, she launched into a 14-day, round-the-clock sex marathon on her honeymoon.
09/12/2004 - Cindy Margolis - © Lee Roth / RothStock / PR Photos
Page Six reports that she reveals all in her new book, "Having a Baby . . . When the Old-Fashioned Way Isn't Working," out this week from Perigee.
The Playboy model writes that she and Guy Starkman "had two weeks of the most amazing, nonstop sex you could imagine . . . in the hotel room, on the balcony, in the hallway. We had sex on the beach, sex in the ocean, on a beach chair, in our cabana, in the woods, around the coral reef, while swimming with the dolphins, on a swing, in a tree, behind the swim-up bar . . . romantic sex, hot sex, steamy sex, drunk-on-our-love sex, passionate sex, not-so-passionate sex . . . sex in the bathtub, sex in the pool, and even under the snack bar!"
Alas, all that marital bliss was a wash in the fertility department.
"I must be going nuts," she recalled thinking. "I thought I was being punished for my past mistakes: I should never have cheated on my first love with that cute actor who turned out to be a jerk!"
Margolis went all new-age and California-like in her quest for pregnancy:
"I set up a baby shrine next to my bed . . . I wrote letters to my unborn baby. I lit fertility candles, saw a psychic and then a healer, and even had my stomach blessed by a priest, a rabbi and a minister. When all that didn't work, I was convinced it was because God saw through me," Margolis writes.
Margolis turned into an ovulation ogre, making her hubbie drop anything he was doing to try to sperminate her:
"I would call Guy off the basketball court, out of a meeting, away from a family function, and even home early from a business trip . . . I even told him once that if he didn't get home within 10 minutes and have sex with me, I would find someone else who would."
Happy news, after years of this behavior Margolis consulted specialists who recommended in vitro fertilization and a surrogacy pregnancy.
In 2002 her son, Nicholas Isaac was born.
Three years later she had twin girls, Sabrina and Sierra, through a surrogate.
"Please, never give up the faith," Margolis writes.
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