NSFW Lesbosexy Sunday Wants To Make Sex Radical

Ryan Yates
Aug 4, 2013
COMMENT

Welcome to NSFW Sunday!

via sapphoria
via sapphoria

+ Why we should embrace a pleasure-centred idea of sex:

“In a better reality, sexuality would be understood as a fundamental part of human existence, its good inherent and not dependent on how it can be leveraged. Why? Because pleasure is a good thing. We should all feel more of it when we can. And sex, for many people, is a source of a uniquely wonderful range of pleasurable feelings – physical, emotional and spiritual.

It’s a simple concept, but in a society so disordered and divided when it comes to sex, it’s a radical one. Sex should feel good. Maybe that means candles and a rose-petal-filled bathtub. Maybe it means restraints and role-play. Maybe it means feeling gorgeous when you live in a body that advertisers tell you is ugly or wrong. Maybe it means having sex with someone of the same gender. Maybe it means feeling great about not having sex at all.

Pleasure-centered sexuality means that sex doesn’t have to come with self-loathing or anxiety; sex doesn’t have to be performative or even “normal”.”

via blackwomenink
via blackwomenink

+ Solo Poly talks about “friends with benefits” versus “dating” and how even though some people use friends with benefits to mean “person I am embarrassed to be seen with / might drop at a moment’s notice / do not actually value as a human being” writing off the term entirely is limiting:

“I’d allowed other people’s bad behavior and prevailing social norms to color my thinking about an entire category of intimate relationship — one that, in fact, I’ve been engaging in and enjoy quite well. By resisting that term, I was effectively cockblocking myself, reducing my options for mutually beneficial intimate connections.

The fact is, people can behave badly in ANY style of relationship. So if I choose to say “FWB” it’s up to me to make sure I walk my talk about the “friends” part. Also I make it clear to those partners: if they decide that, because we’re giving each other orgasms, they’re entitled to treat me disrespectfully — we’re done.”

Coreena, via coreena
Coreena, via coreena

+ Carlin Ross writes about what it’s like to orgasm on film:

“We shot from 11 am to 6pm. I literally orgasmed for 7 hours. We set up two cameras for each orgasm position – a tight pussy shot and a wide body shot. I looked right at the camera and described how I was stimulating my body…what I was feeling…why orgasm was important to me. I was panting – out of breath – sweating from head-to-toe. At one point, I just collapsed on the floor. Lawrence grabbed the camera and ran it down my body. I shared how my fingers and toes were tingling. The camera panned to my pussy to document my erection…the reddening of my labia and plumping of my clitoris.

It was so intimate. It was so pure. It’s the most honest work I’ve ever done.”

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via lasmujeresrealestienencurvas
via lasmujeresrealestienencurvas

+ Sailor writes about what it’s like to come out as a kinky switch:

“Just like when I came out first as gay, then as trans, and then finally as queer parts of me and my behavior that were viewed either by me or by others as strange all of a sudden had an explanation. I’M A SERVICE-ORIENTED SUBMISSIVE AND A MASOCHIST! What that clarity felt like was AMAZING. Now, fast forward to three years ago. I was at a play party and a couple of friends of mine were about to start playing with someone else. Among their arsenal of toys was a hockey stick. As I chatted with my friends I became curious of said hockey stick so one of my friends asked the person bottoming if I could hit her with it. She said okay so my friend asked me to hit her with the stick. I ended up hitting this girl with the wrong end. I found the moment amusing for sure but after being told of the error I’d made, I sheepishly walked away from them. To this day my friends cite that moment as a clear sign of my being a switch and it makes sense now because I like to consensually hurt people. It’s fun for me to hear the scream that comes as a result of something I’ve done but for years since that hockey stick incident, I denied at every opportunity that I was a sadist not because I had any shame of my desire to inflict pain, but because in my mind, I didn’t fit what a sadist should be like. I’m not big, mean, or particularly strong; I don’t wield giant floggers or long single tails; I’m not particularly mean when I play (at least I don’t think I am); and I don’t carry giant bags of equipment to play parties. Those signs were what for a long time indicated to me that someone was a sadist and since I’m not any of those things I just described, there’s NO WAY I can be a sadist, right?”

via curvy women
via curvy women

+ August is Anal Month!

+ Police blame Fifty Shades of Grey for a growing number of “handcuff incidents.”

via masculine of center
via masculine of center

+ Sometimes, sex toys are scary.

+ Are crowd-funded vibrators the future?

via pinktacolovers
via pinktacolovers

+ England, China, Iran and Saudi Arabia now restrict access to online porn, and Denmark, Iceland, Norway and Sweden seem to be facing a similar public effort. It is unclear what this means for other countries, but its pretty clear that porn bans are band-aid non-solutions to underlying problems:

“Porn seems like an easy target when compared to the deeper, more institutional problems women and children face. How are we to deal with the widespread domestic violence that wracks families everywhere and is compounded by the never-ending recession, the new economic normal? How are we to end sex trafficking? And what about all those girls and women who experience sexual violence, including date rape, at the hands of a partner?

Porn invokes people’s worst sexual fears/fantasies. Yet, it’s a fight almost impossible to win. Anti-porn activists are unsettled by the enormous increase and easily availability of porn (especially “hard-core or “gonzo” porn). They claim such porn harms women and children, contributing directly to gender inequality, violence against women and children and sex trafficking. This assertion is much debated. It’s not been made clear how restricting porn will put a stop to the actions that harm all too many women and girls in America.”

via my naughty thoughts tumblr
via my naughty thoughts tumblr

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Ryan Yates

Ryan Yates was the NSFW Editor (2013–2018) and Literary Editor for Autostraddle.com, with bylines in Nylon, Refinery29, The Toast, Bitch, The Daily Beast, Jezebel, and elsewhere. They live in Los Angeles and also on twitter and instagram.

Ryan Yates has written 1142 articles for us.

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