Sechs Faktoren die unbewusst beeinflussen, mit wem Du im Bett landest:
- Angst macht attraktiv
- Rot wirkt
- Ohr und Unterarm
- Geschmack ist wichtig
- die Pille stellt alles auf den Kopf
- der Einsprung
Willkommen in meinem Leben. Es ist nicht immer einfach mit mir, aber wem sage ich das ...
Doch schon taucht die nächste Frage auf: Wie nennt man es? Vulva ist korrekt, aber klingt für manche Ohren irgendwie seltsam. „Wie eine Mischung aus Volvo und Vulkan,“ begründete Sexualforscher Günter Amendt in dem legendären Buch „Sexfront“ seine Abneigung gegen das Wort.Weiter auf welt.de: Vulvalogie: Das Mysterium des weiblichen Sexualorgans
Menschen mit Behinderung und ihr Sexualleben – ein schwieriger Spagat zwischen ganz natürlichen Wünschen und vielen Tabus und Barrieren.Interessanter Podcast auf Bayern2: Lust und Frust bei Menschen mit Behinderung
Ein solches Mädchen hat Wehen über drei, vier, fünf Tage – bis das Baby stirbt und dessen Schädel wegen des nachlassenden Innendrucks kollabiert. Der tote Körper kann jetzt den Mutterleib verlassen und liegt anschließend im Staub neben der Mutter, deren aufgerissener Körper ungeschützt den Elementen ausgesetzt ist. – Sehr oft stirbt die Frau dann an einer Blutvergiftung; oder sie erliegt einer Embolie. Und für die meisten, die überleben, wäre es besser gewesen, sie wären gestorben.Es geht um die Scheidenfistel, eine bei uns fast unbekannte Folge dramatischer Schwierigkeiten bei der Entbindung. Dieses Schicksal trifft vor allem sehr junge, mangelernährte Mütter in den ärmsten Regionen dieser Welt. Nach den körperlichen Qualen kommen die seelischen. Sie verlieren nicht nur ihr Kind, sondern auch ihre Menschenwürde.
According to a new book, there are 237 reasons why women have sex. And most of them have little to do with romance or pleasure.Die lesenswerte Buchbesprechung hier auf The Guardian. Lesenswert sind aber auch die Kommentare, die das Buch kritisieren.
I'm in the best shape of my life but my wife doesn't find me remotely attractive. I think I know what I have to do, but after 27 years I haven't got the vaguest idea what to do first, next? Anybody have any advice?Regina Lynn:
I agree with the other responses that your course of action depends in large part on the reason she's "not attracted."
Physical causes like depression, menopause, illness, fatigue, hormone imbalance, medication (including birth control pills), etc. can be addressed by going to a good doctor.
Emotional causes like boredom, anger, past sexual trauma, trouble in the relationship, probably call for a good counselor.
Habitual causes like watching TV together in those last waking hours after all chores are taken care of, or doing an early morning run when one's partner's horniest hour is early morning, etc. can be addressed by committing to replacing one schedule habit with another.
And then there are the other parts, like a secret fetish, kink, or fantasy that one partner needs but for whatever reason does not share with the other.
I hate to give advice, because I never feel like I know enough, even about things I have researched exhaustively. I know that some "simple" things that have worked include:
- throwing away the tv (but be careful as some marriages only work because of shared tv, lol)
- reading, watching, or listening to erotic content together
- taking a workshop at a place like babeland, good vibrations, hustler, or other adult retail store & sex ed place (by sex ed i mean "how to do stuff" more than "how biology works")
- trying something kinky, role playing, going on dates to sexy destinations, taking a weekend at a B&B that suits your tastes (warning: most are frilly victorian but not all!)
- scheduling sex and committing to using that time for sex only - which does not have to mean intercourse
- trying new toys (for both of you)
- flirting by text, flirting in public on social media sites, flirting in IM
There are several books on this topic, in the self-help and sexuality section, and while a lot of them are crap (in my opinion), some are good. You'd have to look through and see what ones appeal to your personality and situation.
And none of this will "fix it" if your wife doesn't want to want to change, so that's an obstacle that takes a lot of emotional fortitude to address.
But I believe it is our responsibility in a partnership -- whether married, monogamous, poly, traditional, or totally weird -- to try to align sexually and to commit to making sex a priority. I don't mean a priority as in setting quotas, but truly acknowledging that sex is essential to a relationship (leaving out the whole 'asexual' thing here).
Sex erases all those little annoyances and disagreements that can arrive from living together, relieves stress including relationship stress, adds to health and wellbeing and to the emotional, mental, and spiritual bond as well. Once upon a time I thought sex was an "extra" but that the relationship was really those other three things -- and when I finally did learn that i was wrong, I was mortified.
Good luck and if you want to give more detail, either on list or privately, that's fine.
"Opening" the relationship and seeing other people is generally NOT a good idea at this juncture, if you want to keep the marriage together.
-- personal note --
I know from personal experience that if a person commits to just getting started, that the desire eventually follows the action. But the person has to WANT to try, has to WANT to endure those 5 - 30 minutes until the blood starts to flow, etc. I have literally told myself, out loud, that "worst case I'll be bored, but I'm not going to DIE," and made myself get started.
Almost always, the desire shows up along with the physical arousal (which is one reason Viagra works for some women some or all of the time).
Now, in my case, there was no marriage involved, so if the desire (or the arousal) NEVER happened, I didn't need to go to bed with that person again.
I have been the person who did not uphold that responsibility or commitment, and I spent almost a decade being scared and disinterested and my patient, patient then-husband helped me through a lot of stuff, and my one regret about our entire 13 years together is that it took me so long to get interested and even enthusiastic about sex. It took a lot for me to make that change but the first thing, as the cliche goes, was to WANT to WANT to want.
--
I really hope this helps! I know both men AND women in your situation, and
it's really painful and suckie. But it is not inevitable or un-resolvable.
What's more disturbing -- that teens are texting each other naked pictures of themselves, or that it could get them branded as sex offenders for life?Der ganze Artikel auf salon.com.
Let me get this straight: Today's teenagers, who are products of the electronic age, still don't understand the permanence of a digital record?(Zitat von hier)
I've been reading with prescient horror about "sexting," the 21st-century equivalent of getting to third base. Sexting may not be new, but its potentially deadly consequences are in the news. A little background:
Sexting is act of sending, by text or by email, boudoir pictures of yourself to a girlfriend or boyfriend, the one who is, like, for sure marrying you after high-school graduation. For my generation, it might seem as naughty as flashing your boyfriend during a Flock of Seagulls concert. The only harm back then: his teammates would find out, and you'd avoid the cafeteria for a week.
The act of emailing nude pictures of your underage friend can bring charges of child pornography. And that little felony can ruin your life.
What's happening now is much more dangerous, and... wait for it... possibly felonious.
When dream boy cuts a girl loose (or vice versa), he still has her sexy pictures in his phone, and within seconds of the lover's spat, he can instantly soothe his bitter soul by digitally spraying his friends' cellphones with her racy shots.
Even if he sobers up the next day and says he's sorry, each of his teammates has feasted on her personal porn. Eventually, they tell two friends… and so on... and so on.
It goes without saying this is more of a problem for girls than boys, as sexual "reputations" are mostly damaging to one teenage gender.
While the rumor mill can eventually die away, sexting leaves permanent evidence, and it can be devastating. In fact, girls caught up in its blowback have reportedly been ostracized, taunted, and even physically assaulted.
In one girl's case, her mother said it led to suicide.
Mädchen haben im Schnitt zwischen elf und zwölf Jahren das erste Mal Geschlechtsverkehr, Jungen nur ein Jahr später, Aufklärung findet über Pornos statt, die Pärchen auf dem Schulhof küssen sich nicht mehr, weil sie das im Porno nicht gezeigt bekommen, Zwölfjährige haben Gruppensex, der Partnerwechsel wird unter Teenagern zur sportlichen Herausforderung, Verhütung spielt kaum eine Rolle.Die Hauptursache seien ...
[...] einschlägige Internetseiten, Filme und nicht zuletzt [...] das enthemmte Verhalten ihrer Eltern [...]. Viele Kinder, vor allem die der „sogenannten Unterschicht“, hätten schon früh ein Drehbuch zum Sex im Kopf, der Sex werde zur Droge, „die fehlende Liebe und Geborgenheit und Werte ersetzt“. Perspektivlosigkeit, das Gefühl, nichts wert zu sein, befördere den Trend, Bestätigung in der Sexualität zu suchen, erläutert Siggelkow.Auch die deutschen Behörden und die meisten anderen Studien ein deutlich positiveres Bild zeichnen, so sehe ich hier eine Entwicklung, die unsere Gesellschaft ebenso treffen wird, wie sie bereits die Amerikanische getroffen hat (siehe Buchlinks unten).
Der Wissenschaftler [Stuart Brody von der University of Paisley] ließ 24 Frauen und 22 Männer Tagebuch über Ihre sexuellen Aktivitäten führen - und setzte sie schließlich einem Stresstest aus: Sie mussten einen Vortrag halten und Rechenaufgaben lösen, immer unter Zeitdruck und immer an der Grenze ihrer Fähigkeiten. Die Stressreaktion wurde über den Blutdruck gemessen. Das Ergebnis: Die Probanten, die vor dem Stresstest Sex gehabt hatten, waren entspannter, der Blutdruck stieg weniger stark an und normalisierte sich schneller.
Wahrscheinlich gilt auch hier: