Hot Sex Without Holding Hands

Kink In Exile tackles head on the masturbation question that’s been percolating around the intertubes (and, obviously, in real life) recently

Someone did in fact ask why it might be hard for some people to orgasm with a partner if most of their orgasms have been through masturbation. I should first clarify that question to say “...if they can masturbate to orgasm successfully.”

...

The way people masturbate is often different from the mechanics of partnered sex. You may have learned to masturbate in an environment of secrecy and so you do it quickly, but find that partnered sex doesn’t allow you to reach that tempo. Or maybe you find an angle from which to approach your own genitals that feels soo good, but is harder to do with partnered sex. Your body gets used to the way you’ve been getting it off and expects that kind of contact; you change things up, don’t go fast enough, or don’t hit the right spots and suddenly it doesn’t work. Keep in mind also that many women can’t orgasm from vaginal penetration alone. So what do you do? Pay attention to how you masturbate, how your partnered sex looks and what physical differences exist there in. You can then try masturbating in a way that is more reflective of partnered sex or adding toys to partnered sex to make sure you’re hitting all the right spots.

She said it here.

There’s been a fair amount of conversation lately about the merits and demerits of masturbation as it relates to partnered sex. Given that masturbation is now effectively mainstream… as is conversation about sexual function and dysfunction… it’s a good time to talk about integrating solo and partner sex competency instead of imagining they are or should be separate.

At least for women back in the 1970s Shere Hite announced a strong correlation between learned masturbation position and, I think, orgasms during intercourse. (Darn it I’m probably going to have to look it up now.) Anyway, I distinctly remember her saying something about women who learned to masturbate in face-down or curled-up, upper-legs-crossed positions having difficulty and thinking yeah, that could be a problem. Although that was so long ago now that rear-entry intercourse was still largely considered a (demeaning, intimacy-avoiding) kink.

I had a little epiphany about sex and masturbation a couple of years ago, based on remarks from someone who said she never got off on intercourse and so she’d wait till her partner was asleep and then masturbate really surreptitiously. That experience was probably more unusual for men but since the advent of Prozac and other anti-depressants many men need a manual override to have orgasms during partner sex as well. There’s also, as you hint, a bit of a subculture among young men (at least) who might fantasize madly about whoever they’re oriented to… but in practice prefer the pace and, possibly, the auto-focus of masturbation. Oh, and finally, there are any number of people in kink who don’t care for or who even actively dislike, say, being beaten black and blue while it’s happening,_ who nevertheless get off hard in anticipation, on recollection, or both. So my epiphany was that we ought to get over the idea that we ought to reconsider not just the 70’s notion of “simultaneous orgasms” as ideal but the idea that intercourse is the “right” way to have orgasms at all.

The key, though — one that Hite missed or disregarded in her post — is that just because you develop one set of neural pathways to orgasm (through this position or that sensation) it doesn’t mean that’s the only way you’ll ever be able to do it. The obstacle, at least physically, is that it can take almost as long to grow the nerve pathways as it did to learn the first way. That’s fine if you mix it up while learning (something Betty Dodson talked about at least in her workshops.) It’s harder if you learn on the sly, if you’re uncomfortable or in denial about doing it at all, or if you get the idea (from porn, say, or bible-study classes) that it’s supposed to be this way instead of one’s own way. Or, preferably, ways.

None of this is to say orgasms during partnered sex is bad (in fact, as they say in the blogosphere, “heh.”) It’s just that as Kink In Exile points out, if you’re pretty good at having them by yourself, and if neither you nor your partner are brow-beaten and/or drum-beaten into being embarrassed that it might be so. And while I’d never make promises, who knows? Given that expectation stress and performance anxiety are major buzzkills, not worrying about it might even improve one’s odds with one’s partners.

See also:

If you’re an adult you can click here to see a probably-not-work-safe image.

#permalink

It’s kind of interesting that the post of mine that you linked (the Accuse one) has been the most-visited one over the last month or so, according to the stats. Made me do a bit of wondering, there.

But what I wanted to mention was this: I think that this is where men’s sex toys can be really useful, depending upon the material and texturing. UR3 is somewhat good for this, but that’s mainly because of its ability to simulate the consistency of flesh — so it’s mostly useful when it comes to artificial vaginas/full pelvis casts rather than handhelds. (And the main limitation is that they tend to come with a standard ribbed texture rather than anything designed to be more realistic or produce more varied sensations.) Fleshlights, their horrendous marketing aside, tend to be the best, especially when using the Lotus, Twista or Vortex sleeves.

Over the last year or so, the conclusion that I ended up reaching was that… well, when it comes to reworking the neural pathways, so to speak, on one’s own there are two advantages to taking this approach: the first is that a variety of toys can allow for a variety of sensations — orgasm gets detached from particular ways of reaching it, and this allows for a greater ability to perceive different kinds of sensations.* (In the Fleshlight forums, people often refer to this as recovering from Death Grip Syndrome.) And the second is that masturbating with a toy differs from masturbating with one’s hand in one important regard: the sensations are one-way. Feeling in the penis doesn’t get mixed with feeling of the penis.

That last change — which is, in many or even most cases, the pivotal difference between solo and partnered sex — tends to have a striking impact, and I suspect that it’s a big factor in why there can be such a difference in orgasm between masturbation and sex with a partner. Probably a pivotal one.

Positive as all of this is, though, it tends to uncover a disturbing fact: a lot of our sexual practices seem to rely on the fact that we’ve established certain neural pathways in the first place. Broaden those and rework them, and the experience of partnered sex changes; and not always for the better. If a partner has a stereotypical view of how people with your biology react, that becomes blatantly apparent.

As a result, orgasm with them can become far, far more difficult. And not without cause.

—-

  • Porn, I think, can work in much the same way. So long as it varies from what we normally experience in partnered sex, it can broaden the ways in which we reach orgasm, much the same as different sleeve textures and such are able to do. It just uses a different sensory path.

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.