You are browsing the archive for 2008 August.

Catalina loves The Week In Kink (#8b)

3:35 AM in Syndicated by S!|kenB!tch

ProPhotoTours.com – Side-by-Side, Start-to-Finish Photographic Workshops

Last week I took the easy way out and sent you to BestSexBloggers.com. This week I did my homework! I included blogs that aren’t on BestSexBloggers.com. Of course I’ll start with a synopsis of our own blogs. We haven’t been writing as much of our own content – this week we became the marketing department for Fetlife.com. If you haven’t checked out Fetlife yet, what are you waiting for? It’s the best social networking site for kinky people just like you!

This week’s Week In Kink is brought to you by the caffeine and nicotine keeping me awake to write it.

Catalina Loves:

Catalina Says:

Mr. and Mrs. Kink.com:

Breathplay.info:

Sgt. Major’s Briefing Room:

Mz Berlin’s Blog:

Satine Phoenix’s Blog:

Lady Sascha, Cocktease Extraordinaire:

Waking Vixen:

Marky D. Sade’s Bondage Blog:

Related Blogs

  • Related Blogs on Adult Business
  • Related Blogs on Anal Toys
  • Related Blogs on Briefing Room
  • Related Blogs on Erotic Fiction
  • Related Blogs on Lesbian Bondage
  • Related Blogs on Marketing Department
Submit this content to FetSpank.com

by Admin

Family Friendly Sex Club // Current

11:37 AM in Listener Submitted by Admin

Family Friendly Sex Club // Current

Watch the Video Watch the Video

Submit this content to FetSpank.com

by Admin

Orgasm! [A Highly Sexualized Culture]

6:29 AM in Listener Submitted by Admin

200808120629.jpg

Why don’t we have more sex?

Why isn’t it our primary pastime? You could blame it on modern Capitalism, as Wordsworth put it, “lays waste our powers” by hypnotizing us into endless “getting and spending.”

Then there’s that Foucaultian thing called the Rationalization of Sex.

This puts sex under the disciplinary pressures of modern science, reason and morality and squeezes the juice right out of it. In a nutshell, we’re still a bunch of repressed Christians.

It would probably take an army of psychiatrists and historians to pinpoint all the reasons why Western religion developed such antagonism toward human sexuality. More important is the question:

Is this attitude justified? Are there ethical, rational reasons to support the religious condemnations of normal human desires?

Perhaps the most detailed and insightful answer came from none other than humanist Bertrand Russell, who said a “morbid and unnatural” attitude toward sex is “the worst feature of the Christian religion.”

And much of what he said applies with equal force to the other Western religions. He asserted that church aversion to sex is not only unfounded but harmful.

Against the prevailing anti-sex views of religion, he argued that sexual pleasure is a positive good, and that religious objections are based not on reason but on dogma.

But perhaps his most important argument was that religious anti-sexuality attitudes inflict untold human misery, especially on women. He observed:

“Monks have always regarded Woman primarily as the temptress. They have thought of her mainly as the inspirer of impure lusts.”

So the church has done “what it could to secure that the only form of sex which it permitted should involve very little pleasure and great deal of pain. The opposition to birth control has, in fact, the same motive.”

The Perfect Sexualised Society

On the fair island of Mangaia, floating somewhere in the South Pacific between Samoa and French Polynesia, there live a people who, according to Jonathan Margolis’s O: An Intimate History of the Orgasm, enjoy “a profoundly erotic culture”:

“Young boys on the island are instructed at the age of 13 or 14 in the erotic arts by older women. A typically ‘good’ girl has three or four lovers between the ages of 13 and 20; and all women are said to orgasm, usually several times, during intercourse . . .

“Young male Mangaians . . . learn several techniques of intercourse, plus cunnilingus, kissing and sucking of breasts, and are taught always to bring their partner to orgasm several times before allowing themselves to ejaculate – and only then in time with one of their partner’s climaxes. . . .

“Perfect sex on the island consists of . . . five minutes of foreplay, followed by 15 to 20 minutes of energetic thrusting, with active female participation. . . . The female’s final orgasm should coincide with the man’s.

“The typical 18-year-old Mangaian couple make love three times a night, every night, until their 30s, when the weekly average drops to a mere 14.”

Here’s My Question: What the Hell

Is Wrong with the Non-Mangaian World?
But first, a COCKTAIL-PARTY DISCUSSION TOPIC: “Cleopatra was said to have fellated a thousand men, including a hundred Roman noblemen in one night; the Greeks referred to her as Merichane–‘gaper’, ‘the ten-thousand-mouthed woman’ and Cheilon, the ‘thick-lipped.’”

Now, back to us non-Mangaians and what’s wrong with us: according to Margolis, a British journalist who’s written this fine, funny and ever-so-informative history about a subject dear to all of us.

He blanchlessly admits that “my children . . . are so accustomed to their parents walking around in the nude that they have been known to remind my wife and me to ‘put some clothes on’ when they have friends to stay”.

Modern Capitalism, as Wordsworth put it, “lay[s] waste our powers” by hypnotizing us into endless “getting and spending.” Then there’s that Foucaultian thing called the Rationalization of Sex.

This puts sex under the disciplinary pressures of modern science, reason and morality and squeezes the juice right out of it. In a nutshell, we’re still a bunch of repressed Christians.

PARTY TOPIC: Semen, which contains mood-altering hormones like testosterone, estrogen and prostaglandins, is essentially “an antidepressant . . . when entering the woman’s body topically through certain internal tissues,” e.g., the walls of the vagina or the inside of the mouth.

Furthermore, the act of orgasm itself releases in both men and women a bunch of pleasure-inducing neurotransmitters such as dopamine and serotonin, which facilitate the flow of happiness-inducing endorphins, which happens to be what some antidepressant drugs are designed to do.

Coming, it turns out, is a fabulous antidepressant, which should arrive as interesting news to those on Xanax or Zoloft who’ve lost just about all their sex drive.

Margolis takes up several fascinating themes early on, among them: why are men’s and women’s sexual equipment sort of mismatched, so that “penile penetration is rarely involved other than in a peripheral role with the attainment of orgasm for women”?

Women may get “plenty of psychological fulfillment conducive to orgasm from penetrative sex” that doesn’t stimulate the clitoris, “but, according to every serious study and the vast majority of anecdotal evidence, it is downright unusual for a woman to reach orgasm solely through the friction of conventional sexual intercourse.”

Theories attempting to answer this “evolutionary paradox of orgasm” abound, but the most endearing, if not persuasive, belongs to researcher Lionel Tiger (apparently his real name), who suggests that the relative elusiveness of the female orgasm is one of nature’s enigmatic tricks.

The time and care it takes for a woman to come works “as a selective mechanism for women to choose mates not as an animal would, by body size, ferocity or aggressiveness, but by qualities such as intellect, sensitivity, kindness, reputation and popularity–plus a little dexterity with finger or tongue, for added spice.” Metrosexuals everywhere, raise a glass.

PARTY TOPIC: “The average ejaculatory volume” (2.5 to 5 cc’s) “contains about 60% of the American recommended daily intake for vitamin C.” (Subtopic: Why some people never catch colds.)

Most of O is a history, starting from “Orgasm B.C.,” when men apparently hadn’t yet figured out that sex led to pregnancy and offspring (and whoa, the domination of women that ensued when they caught on to that tidbit of cause and effect), and on through the Greek, Roman, ancient Eastern and early Christian eras.

Margolis is interested in everything orgasmic and treats us to evidence from anthropologists, scientists, historians, poets and diary writers, which he uses in the service of the thesis that by and large—and male domination aside (admittedly, a big aside)—Western culture was doing all right in the sack until St. Paul and St. Augustine came along: “St. Augustine . . . crystallized the belief that sex was fundamentally disgusting.”

Until the Church got into the act, masturbation, extended foreplay, oral and anal sex, and homosexuality (the primary ways people come besides straight missionary sex) ran fairly rampantly and guiltlessly. Europe’s sexual dark age (almost a millennium long) lifted with the Renaissance, darkened again during the Victorian Era, and lifted again in the 20th century.

Margolis is much subtler than this capsule argument suggests, of course—he brings out, for instance, how the public face of sexual discourse during the supposedly sex-dead Victorian era is partially belied by the bawdy delights recorded in diaries of men and women of the time.

PARTY TOPIC: “Women’s orgasms, with their satisfyingly multiple muscular contractions, are an infinitely bigger and more expansive experience than the sensation men have when they ejaculate.”

Back in the halcyon 1970s, the poet Richard Howard wrote that “the Bible calls it ‘knowing’ while the Stuarts called it ‘dying,’ the Victorians called it ‘spending,’ and we call it ‘coming’.

A hard look at the horizon of our literary culture suggests that it will not be long before we come to a new word for orgasm proper—we shall call it ‘being.’”

Howard, of course, turned out to be a poor prophet: AIDS took care of the idea that coming could take center stage in modern life, and what a virus didn’t accomplish the new great awakening of American evangelism, if this election means what a lot of us are thinking it means, might: a lot of people seem to want to make sex Augustinely disgusting again.

Which means sex looks to be turning genuinely political again; buying and reading this book may be the patriotic act a lot of us need right now. Not to mention coming. Remember, coming is very, very good for you.

Have yourself a wonderful Mangaian night.

[From Radical Left :: Orgasm! [A Highly Sexualized Culture]]

Submit this content to FetSpank.com

by Admin

Usmagazine.com | Pro-Family Group Slams New Gossip Girl Ads

12:38 AM in Listener Submitted, News by Admin

200808110037.jpg

OMG.

Four new promo ads for the second season of Gossip Girl have caused quite stir.

The Parents Television Council has slammed the shots, which show a topless Leighton Meester making out and Chace Crawford in bed with an older woman.

See photos of the Gossip Girl cast before they were stars.

“I think it reeks of desperation, if they have to position themselves as so edgy and so controversial that they’ve been called out by us,” Melissa Henson, PTC director of communications, told the Associated Press.

CW marketing boss Rick Haskins defends the campaign, saying it caters to their 18-34 female demographic.

“What we’re trying to do is communicate with the audience in a way that they like and can appreciate,” he said. “This sort of campaign resonates with someone who likes Gossip Girl.”

See photos of how the Gossip Girl cast spent their summer.

It isn’t the first time promos for the show have gotten people talking.

A campaign last spring featured cast members under the headline “OMFG.” (CW’s Haskins said at the time that the initials could stand several things including “Oh My Freaking Goodness.”)

Around that time, the PTC rep said the show was “undermining” positive values that parents are trying to instill in their children.

The second season of Gossip Girl starts September 1.

[From Usmagazine.com | Pro-Family Group Slams New Gossip Girl Ads]

Submit this content to FetSpank.com

by Admin

No sex please, they’re teenagers | TV & radio | guardian.co.uk

12:24 AM in Listener Submitted by Admin

August 4, 2008 11:30 AM

Gossip Girl
200808110020.jpg
Gossip Girl: in the headlines

The US media is having a collective hot flush over some supposedly scandalous advertisements for season two of teen drama Gossip Girl. The ads have so far brought the show the kind of publicity producers have wet dreams about.

But the posters really aren’t that big a deal: Yes, they show teenagers kissing and hint at sexual relations to come. Yes, kids watch the show, and yes, they will see some depictions of sex, but it’s all pretty PG and the characters involved are all over 18.

The real reason everyone’s so worked up is a puritanical attitude, common in the American media, which decrees that Good Girls Don’t. (Have sex, that is.) And if they do, they shouldn’t enjoy it. And if they do, they must be punished. It’s a double standard: the first episode of Gossip Girl showed a male character try to force sex with two girls, and yet he ended the series a hero. Meanwhile, the girls who had sex with more than one guy experienced guilt and ostracisation in addiction to being dumped. In TV-land, then, betrayal is worse than rape.

This warped attitude to young women’s sexuality can be seen in every teen drama to hit the small screen. Tori Spelling’s Beverly Hills 90210 character Donna wasn’t allowed to have sex until she was in her early twenties because Tori’s producer father Aaron was scared of ruining her real-life reputation. In My So-Called Life, the girls who had sex, Rayanne and Sharon, had to deal with serious family problems that virginal Angela escaped. And you might say that one of the reasons Lauren Conrad was chosen to front her own spin-off (the clearly staged but nonetheless brilliant “reality show” The Hills) over her Laguna Beach co-star and arch rival Kristen was because the latter was a good-time girl with far too many boys’ numbers in her BlackBerry.

But no teen programme has ever taken the threat of young women’s sexuality more seriously than that ode to longwinded angst-ing, Dawson’s Creek. Not only did Andie get dumped after losing her virginity and Gretchen lose her baby and her place at college after considering abortion for a nanosecond, but the only two girls who had a healthy attitude to sex got killed off. That’ll teach them.

Young men, meanwhile, get to have the time of their lives on TV, simply by not having a uterus. Super stud Pacey Witter made it out of Capeside alive while Lucas Scott remains an idol in One Tree Hill, no matter how many girls he messes around. Gossip Girl’s Chuck Bass will never really be reprimanded for being a lying, cheating, wannabe rapist… whereas his female counterpart is currently suffering an extreme rehab regime. I guess equal opportunity castigation would be too much of a drag for the mostly male producers of these shows.

So instead of getting worked up about some ultimately harmless advertisements that won’t shock anyone who’s started puberty, perhaps we should all be concerned that teen TV is encouraging young people to develop some unhealthy and gender-biased beliefs about the link between sex and morality.

After all, that’s much more disturbing than a few pretty posters…

[From No sex please, they're teenagers | TV & radio | guardian.co.uk]

Related Blogs

  • Related Blogs on Arch Rival
  • Related Blogs on Good Girls
  • Related Blogs on Lauren Conrad
  • Related Blogs on Male Character
  • Related Blogs on Real Reason
  • Related Blogs on Sexual Relations
  • Girl Bee
  • Related Blogs on Tori Spelling
  • Related Blogs on Two Girls
Submit this content to FetSpank.com

by Admin

Author urges Olympics athletes to have a Full Body Orgasm

7:17 AM in News by Admin

Author and body-psychotherapist Oscar Naval is urging our competitors to tap into all their physical, mental and spiritual powers as they strive for gold.

Releasing his book Full Body Orgasm – Your Energy To Love, Health, Wealth, And Happiness to coincide with the opening of the Olympic Games on August 8, Oscar believes our elite athletes have an excellent chance of winning more medals than ever before if they draw on the power of the Full Body Orgasm flowing through their bodies.

“The full body orgasm (FBO) is unrestrained joy and pleasure that opens the doors of peak experiences in all aspects of life,” says Naval. “In other words, if you can fully experience the energy of an FBO, then you will experience joy and pleasure in everything you do in life.”

This book takes a holistic view of the meaning and the function of the orgasm in the broader sense of the word as it relates not only to sexuality (the body) but in the mind and spirit as well. The FBO is your life force energy. It is a rich, personal, spiritual connection with yourself, everyone, and everything you experience in life.”

Oscar says his newly-released book incorporates a catchy title about feeling that unrestrained joy and pleasure in your life everyday. “It is truly amazing to have a ‘Full Body Orgasm Lifestyle’ or what I like to call an ‘FBO Life’. I know this may sound a bit strange to call it a lifestyle BUT that’s the best description for really feeling that good.”

His personal growth book equates the living of an uneventful life to that of a quick sneeze, “… the orgasm may be analogous to a sneeze-a pelvic sneeze, if you will. There is a slight build up and then, “Ah-choo!” It’s over – and so goes your life.”

Oscar says that an FBO life is true wealth. Gerry Robert, the best-selling author of Millionaire Mindset and president of LifeSuccess Publishing, one of the publishers of the FBO book, commented that: “having the concepts of the energy of sex and money in the same book is amazing.”

US born, and now based in Melbourne, Australia, Oscar holds a Diploma of Body-centred Psychotherapy from the Institute of Core Energetics, Australia. He is also a Hawaiian Lomi-lomi massage therapist.

The book is available from the Ingram Book Group and the Australian Book Group.

The eBook version can be downloaded from www.youpublish.com/fullbodyorgasm

Submit this content to FetSpank.com

Catalina loves The Week in Kink (#8a)

11:03 PM in Syndicated by S!|kenB!tch

Photography by Knight Digital

This week, The Week In Kink is brought to you by the BestSexBloggers.com.  The one place where all the sex bloggers contribute along with the best photographers to create the most diverse blog about every topic related to sexuality that you can imagine.

It’s impossible to pick favorites this week.  I haven’t even had time to read blogs.  I have 586 things sitting in my Google Reader as I type this due to the admin work involved with setting up Best Sex Bloggers.

This week, then, I’m kind of taking the cheater’s way out.  I’m sending you to the week’s kinkiest posts at BestSexBloggers.com — they are probably all the posts I would have selected for this week’s edition anyway!

I’ll be back next week with The Week in Kink (#8b) and some of my favorite picks, as soon as I get caught up on reading!

Related Blogs

  • Related Blogs on Admin Work
  • Related Blogs on Best Sex
Submit this content to FetSpank.com