Tag Archives: sex

Sex in Review?

Sex!  What is it that makes everyone and their brother blogger want to write about it?  And why, the last week of the year, the last week of the decade is writing about sex coming to the forefront?

First, there are many reasons bloggers want to write about sex.  In the case of Big Little Wolf’s “Sex vs. Lovemaking – why are we so confused?” my guess is she wrote it to provoke discussion among her readers.  She has started something as there are not only comments in response to her writing but entire separate blog entries, such as this one, that were spawned from her thoughts.  Some of the blogs that have provided responses to Big Little Wolf’s are The Wild Mind’s “Sex or Making Love?  Who Is Confused?” and Jassnight’s “Sex – the Master’s Division.”

In some cases, bloggers write about sex because it brings in readers.  For those of you who have recently written about sex, take a look at your numbers.  People are drawn to sex.  It is a taboo in American culture, as far as rational discussion goes, but it is also a subject that people are drawn into as they feel they shouldn’t be.  I am casting no judgment on whether this is healthy or not.

In other cases, bloggers write about sex because they have to as a job requirement.  Have you ever read any of the blogs at Nerve.com or even some of the ones at YourTango.com?  These blogs are the ones whose jobs are to discussion sex, sex toys, sexual positions, relationships and such.

So why is it that these questions about sex seem to be coming up (pun fully intended) here during the last week of the year, the last week of the decade?  The reasons for this are as varied as the reasons for blogging about sex to begin with but I am going to concentrate on one reason.

We all want relationships with other people.  We all need connectedness.  We are sitting on the cusp of a time when we all look back and attempt to reflect on the goals that we made for the past year, or in this particular case, possibly the past decade.  In most cases, at least one, if not more of those goals, will have to do with friendships, relationships, or sex.

As we are evaluating what we did this past 365 days or 3650 days, we are also looking forward to what we will be doing in the upcoming days.  Please realize that goals, resolutions, aspirations – I don’t really care what we call them as they all are the same thing – are not realistic if they are not measured.  We need to review what we have done and continue to do as we strive to change or complete our resolutions.

I looked back over my aspirations from 2005 and on.  Each year I put down something along the lines of “Be proactive in finding new friends and possibly a more than friend interest.” That is my evolved format.  It started out as I will find new friends, additional friends.  There were steps about joining online dating sites and steps about attending more events locally.  After all, what good is a “more than friend interest” who lives in British Columbia when you are a woman over 40 with six kids?  Actually, in looking back, I didn’t even put this as an aspiration in 2005 or 2006.  I knew that there was not time to invest in new friendships and relationships then if I had to search them out.  The new people I met those years were people that were thrown into my life somehow.

The reason sex is in everyone’s mind this time of year is that these resolutions from the past year are up for “review.”  As in your occupation, reviews are ways to find out how to improve performance.  So if you had a “relationship” as a resolution last January and are still not in one, how do you improve that performance?  If you are in one now, what is the thing most likely to be thought about in the improvement category?  Well, in some cases, you may think it is communication or time spent together but more likely than not, when you think about improvement in the newer relationships, sex is going to come to mind.

So, whether we want to get some or whether we want to think about if the sex we are having is sex or lovemaking, it is normal to have our minds wonder to this topic at this time of year.


Pleasure

This entry is where my entry this morning/afternoon was suppose to go.  Unfortunately, I was not lubricated enough to discuss pleasure this morning.  I am now downing my third beer and am getting much happier and a bit more risqué in my thinking/writing.

After reading “Men’s Junk” at Momalom.com, I got to thinking about pleasure, about why we want it and why we avoid it.  I know an entry about penises got me thinking like that.  So, let’s think about that.

Pleasure, especially sexual pleasure, is something that we should all enjoy.  While we may want to wait until we are married or in a committed relationship, we should all look for pleasure in our lives.  Whether the pleasure comes from sex or from talking or from intellectual pursuits, we need it in our lives.

Yet, so many of us let pleasure have a back seat.  We do not think it is necessary.  Let’s take pleasure in the form or intellectual pursuits as an example.  If we derive pleasure in this way, why would we not continually pursue education?  Why would we not think that life long learning is a necessity?
If we look at it, as the author of “Men’s Junk” did, from a sexual angle, just think of those of us who do not like sex.  Sometimes there are psychological reasons for this that are totally understandable.  My guess is that there are equally as many people who do not enjoy sex for other reasons:  their parents made them think it was dirty; they can only think of their penis or vagina in terms of functionality, not sexual pleasure; or other reasons.

I want to focus in on why we deny ourselves and our significant others sexual pleasure.  Do we all really believe that sex is dirty?  Come on!  You may need a shower afterwards but not because you are dirty but because you are so damn hot.  Sexual needs are real and need to be satisfied.

To that end, how can anyone believe that their significant other’s sexual organ – whether a penis or a vagina – is not to be touched, is not to be enjoyed by both parties?  There is no reason to deny pleasure to your partner.  Trust me, in the end, your partner will reward you with pleasure in return.


This and That

I have to tell you that I have had so many entry ideas running around inside my head I have been paralyzed.  I have been unable to get any of them out.  These wonderful inspirations are coming from the Half Drunk Challenge that Momalom.com has put out and continues for the next two days.  So, with the little time I have left in today – yes, I realize it is just barely noon but I still have to run and then back to Oneonta for a swim/dive meet, I am going to put some thoughts out there.  And, I am going to start with a reaction or two that came flitting into my mind when I read “Men’s Junk.”

I am going to preface my thoughts with this statement.  I am going to talk about penises because the original post did.  I am going to talk about penises because that is what I know best in this context.  I have to presume that there are lesbians out there that feel the same way about vaginas as some women do about penises but for me, this is going to be about penises – sort of and mostly.

As I was reading the original author’s thoughts, I got to thinking about parenting and penises.  Yes, I know that usually a woman needs a penis to get pregnant and become a parent but that is not quite where I am going.

As children grow up, a lot of their values and later thoughts are formed.  Are we doing these children any service by teaching them to call penises and vaginas by “pet names,” regardless of how cute these names may sound when a two year old blurts them out at the mall Santa or when it is quiet in church.

A lot of the disdain and general lack of support by women for penises comes from what they learned as a child.  If your mother always referred to your penis by some strange name or something that may indicate it is only for urinating – I cannot tell you the number of women I hear calling, even to other adults, their sons’ penis “wee wee,” chances are you are not going to want to become friends with your husband/boyfriend/lover/significant other’s penis.

When children are old enough to say the words vagina and penis, parents should encourage the proper terminology.  Parents should also make sure that children know that these organs have many reasons for being.

Let’s take this story which comes courtesy of #1 when he was not quite two.  I was rather largely pregnant with twins as #1′s second birthday approached.  He was two so there was not, in my mind, any reason to correct him when he said there were babies growing in my stomach/tummy.  For the most part, and as far as a two year old is concerned, that is where the babies were.  Actually for the 25 year old me, it was hard to believe my uterus could expand as much as it was for the twins so how could I expect a two year old male to get it.

Then came the morning I was sitting home on disability and having a cup of tea.  It was a morning that #1 was not at preschool as he was young and only went two days a week.  Being the good pregnant woman, I was having herbal tea – a habit I continue to this day.  #1 came over and started batting at my cup and telling me to stop.  I got up out of the chair and put the cup on the kitchen counter where #1 could not reach it.  I called to him and explained I had put my tea down but he should not bat at hot liquids – always a teachable moment.  He said, “Mommy canNOT drink hot tea.  It will burn the babies in her tummy.”

I was stunned.  The teachable moment was not about the hot liquid burning him if he caused me to spill the tea.  The teachable moment was going to be female anatomy.  I sat him on what was left of my lap and started in.  In the end, I settled for mommies have compartments and babies are not in the same one that hot tea goes to.  It was the best I had for a two year old.  I didn’t think uterus was necessary but I did tell him, at the end of the talk, that it was called a uterus.  Thankfully, this was not what he screamed out in church that weekend.

So parents, take note.  You form the way your children will look at sex of all kinds and how they will look at reproductive organs at a very young age.

Next – and heaven help you all as I think this is going to be a long one, let’s look at the adult point of view.  I happen to like sex.  I have always liked sex.  I am not sure that the person who wrote “Men’s Junk” does but maybe.  Hard to tell.  I like the pleasure and the release that comes through sex.  I also love the children that I have and they come through sex, too.

I have to be honest.  I like penises, at least most of them that I have met.  I am not afraid, whether at a fancy restaurant for a tete a tete or in the bedroom, to run my hand over a man’s thigh – providing that is where our relationship is – or even over his penis.  I know what turns a man on and am not afraid to discuss it with my children.  They do get a little queasy when mom discusses these things but we have had the discussions – from trust to sex to how to put on condoms to love.

I have explained to my children that a relationship needs to be two-way, sort of like those radios they wanted as kids.  It does no good if one person in the relationship isn’t really in it.  You need to talk about all kinds of things, including what give you and your SO pleasure.  If you do not discuss these things, how are you to know?  We are all so different individually that just thinking you know what will pleasure someone else is not good enough.

There are some ways, other than talking, that might help you find these pleasure areas.  If there is a great deal of trust in the relationship, it is possible you can “feel your way” around what will give your SO pleasure.  Sometimes, this exploration is fun but if you accidentally do something not so pleasurable, this can also be a problem.

Anyway, the long and the short – no pun intended as far as the penises go – remains that communication is tops for any kind of relationship:  man/woman, man/man, woman/man, parent/child,etc.  You have to talk.  You have to trust.  You have to explore.  All of these are forms of communication that are so  necessary.  And just remember, as a parent, there are tons of teachable moments so teach your child/children that the body is a beautiful thing and meant to be enjoyed.


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