Sorry, But I’m Not A Sexpert 0 499

I’ve been writing about sex for 15 years, but one thing I’m not and would never claim to be is a sexpert. I’m a woman who’s out about being bisexual, kinky and sometimes slutty. I’ve penned erotica about bukkake, lap dancing, professional submission, Monica Lewinsky and French fries, among many other topics. I’ve written first person accounts of age play, pegging, threesomes, blowjobs, drunk sex, BDSM and owning two Hitachi Magic Wand vibrators.

Even though the first definition for sexpert listed at Dictonary.com is “a person who professes a knowledge of sexual matters,” something I would qualify for, their final “informal” definition is the one I think most people would think of first: “A sex expert, esp a therapist who treats persons complaining of sexual dysfunction.” That is the one that I am especially careful not to call myself.

But when I got an email from DatingAdvice.com applauding me for being one of their Top 15 Sexperts of 2015, I was flattered, but frustrated. Here’s the thing: I love writing about sex, and probably will always do it in some form. There are highs and lows, and stereotypes aplenty that come with adding “sex columnist” to your resume (you can read more about that in the title essay in my ebook Sex & Cupcakes), but in the end, I find it worth it precisely because I get to be entirely myself.

Yes, some of my work is journalism, where I consult experts on, say, dirty talk or swinging or lube, but even there, my voice is my own imperfect, un-expert, still figuring things out voice. There are plenty of amazing, smart, talented and dedicated sex educators out there who rightly deserve the title of sexpert.

What I hope to offer readers is something else: amateur honesty. I want to bare my soul, whether it’s in the form of erotica, where I can be playful with my words, taking something that may or may not have happened and using it to turn on people’s minds and bodies, or in nonfiction, where I can explore topics that many people are probably curious about but may not know who to ask about.

I want to play a role in the sex positive community, but I believe my role is as an encourager, a welcome, a teacher of erotic writing and an exhibitionist on the page, rather than someone qualified to give expert advice. I still have plenty of strong opinions and I don’t shy away from sharing them, but for me, one of the freedoms of the platform I do have is that I don’t have to pretend to have all the answers.
I’m far more of a student of sex than I will ever be a teacher of it, and one of the things I love most about my job is that I get to learn more all the time. I get to ask questions, and those answers are often ones I apply to my own personal life. For instance, I recently interviewed Cooper Beckett of the Life on the Swingset podcast about swinging. I’m not a swinger, but one thing I took away from writing about him is that it’s okay to have fantasies about someone other than my partner. Yes, I knew that intellectually, but having someone else state it so plainly and openly helped me come to terms with that aspect of my life.

I don’t ever want to hold myself up as a sexpert because I don’t have the answers about my own life, let alone anyone else’s. I struggle with aspects of my sexuality, which is ever changing. When I wrote about my experience with playing “mommy” as part of an age play interaction with a guy I’d met on OkCupid, I worried that I’d be insulting age players because I had no real clue what I was doing.

Even in my chosen field of erotica writing, which I do feel comfortable teaching classes on, I don’t know everything. I do my best to respond to questions students ask, and connect them with those who do have far more knowledge about, say, erotic science fiction, or self-publishing, than I do.

One of my strengths, I believe, as a writer, is that I do share my truths, even when they’re challenging ones, or sad ones, or when I don’t come off especially well. Yes, I’ve read a boyfriend’s email. I’ve cheated. I’ve cyber-stalked. I’ve been passive-aggressive. I am not the world’s best orgasm haver.

But here’s why I love what I do: I don’t have to be an expert in order to get people to think about sex in new, and hopefully helpful, ways. Please note that I didn’t say to “change their minds” or get them to agree with me; I don’t want to bludgeon people with my words so that they simply parrot mine back to me. I’d rather work to create a space where people offer up something genuine of themselves (note: this doesn’t mean dick pics), where sex isn’t treated solely as a private matter but something that affects every aspect of our lives and culture.

I was incredibly moved to see that erotica author Oleander Plume was so moved by Sex & Cupcakes that she got her 19-year-old daughter Quinn to read it and posted a dialogue the two had about sex, one so detailed and honest I wish I’d been able to have those conversations with my mother when I was 19! I learned so much from what they had to say, especially Quinn, though the fact that her sex education was so dismal and focused on abstinence is a sad commentary on where sex ed is going:

I hate that it’s okay for men to brag about their sexual conquests, but women looked down on for doing the same, then we’re hammered with articles about “what’s your number (of sex partners)” and “how many is too many?” Sex Ed teaches us not to have sex, but then every media ad has a half-naked woman or something over-sexualized. The mixed signals are confusing to teens, especially the younger ones.

One of the reasons I want to remove myself from the sexpert title is because I want to encourage each of us to be experts about our own sexuality, and, if they so desire, in turn, share that information, as Oleander and Quinn are doing, with the world. No, not everyone wants to share their sex lives, but for those who do, their stories are fascinating not because they know everything there is to know about a given sexual topic, but because they are individuals.

I’ve always said that when sex and erotica writing got boring to me, I’d quit and find something new. But they are each still exciting because I uncover different approaches, experiences, fetishes, that I’d never considered before. So many of the things we take for granted — for example, that bigger is better, especially when it comes to cocks and boobs, that thin is in, the more sex and orgasms, the better — are not shared by everyone. Your celebrity crush object, even if it’s, say, Brad Pitt, might leave another person cold. Those less noticed, less splashy, sometimes sensationalized corners of the sex world are the ones that continue to fascinate me. So while I want to encourage the sexperts of the world to keep on doing what they’re doing and creating more space in our culture for factual, judgment free information about sex, I also want to applaud anyone who’s brave enough to share their sexual thoughts, fantasies, dreams and questions, whether it’s with one other person or millions of them.

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People Talked about Their Weirdest Fetishes and Things Got Super-Awkward 0 500

When it comes to anything related to the bedroom, or indeed, any display of physical intimacy, I have a perennially British attitude. Namely I believe wholeheartedly that nakedness is shameful, that sex is a humiliating chore, and that anything discussion about what we actually enjoy when it comes to sex is completely off limits. Kinks and fetishes are embarrassing burdens that we have to keep secret and bear with us to the grave … at least, that’s how I pretend to be. But when it comes down to it, I’m just as nosy about my own and other people’s sexuality as the next guy; I’m just better at hiding it.

Which is precisely why I find threads like this next one so interesting. A recent discussion on Reddit asked users what their secret kinks were, and the anonymous answers were pretty dang intriguing. It’s always sweet to get some dirt on what people are into, but some of these erotic proclivities were just, well … weird. Scroll down to check out some of the best answers below:

 

1. Alien dildos 

“I stumbled upon a website that sold alien and monster inspired dildos. I never realised that was a fetish until I saw them. They were so interesting and grotesque. With weird lumps, tentacles, and shapes. I like to imagine having sex with an alien just so I could get a piece of whatever

2. Stardust movie 

“Breast expansion. The start/end size doesn’t matter, the attractiveness of the woman doesn’t matter. Just the act of them getting bigger revs my engine like nothing else. Discovered it completely by accident cause my girlfriend wanted to show me Stardust, one of her favourite movies. There is a brief, second long shot where some witch uses magic to make herself younger, and her breasts briefly inflate. Holy shot I have never been turned on so fast.”

. 3Action figure weirdness 

“I saw this video the other day where I a milf put an action figure in the toilet and pissed on it. How would I even go about telling my wife I wanna buy GI Joe so I can watch her urinate on him?”

4. Hold it in 

“I think it is super hot when a girl badly needs to pee but has to wait. So, not really a traditional watersports fetish. The way they get fidgety and distracted and eventually almost frantic? Unfortunately, it’s sort of rare to see in real life, save for some nights at the bar when the women’s bathroom line is long.”

5. Anonymous

“I have an anonymous sex fetish. Like being at a masquerade party and locking eyes with the same man all night. I signal him to the bathroom & he comes in and f*cks me from behind.”

 

Stay tune with us….Other tune will published tomorrow.

Here are some of the sex blogs that Google plans to wipe from the internet — and all the reasons why they shouldn’t 0 532

This week, sexual expression has taken a serious hit after Google abruptly decided to banish adult content from one of the globe’s most popular hosting platforms, Blogger. From next month, all blogs containing “sexually explicit” imagery on the Google-owned site will effectively disappear from view when engineers limit entry to an invitation-only system. That means so-called ‘adult’ blogs will no longer appear in searches, and will be virtually impossible to find.

Google has defended the move by arguing there will be a few exceptions to the rule, and that no information is actually being deleted – just hidden from public view. Yet to many it appears that this is nothing but a blanket ban that is passing unfair judgment on sexual honesty. It’s also a little prudish and preachy, shouldn’t adult users be able to make up their own minds on what they want to click on?

Let’s think about it: what exactly does “explicit” mean? This ban lets Google decide that for us. There are millions of mini-sites on Blogger, covering pretty much every topic under the sun. And whilst there’s probably some outrageous pornographic material on the site that very well may merit some degree of viewer restriction, there are also thousands of fascinating, informative and entertaining blogs that are about to vanish from the public domain just because users have chosen to illustrate a single post with some form of sexual content. Do those blogs truly deserve to be dismissed as smut, and rendered invisible Google categorises LGBT diaries and erotic book reviewers as adult. This is not about illegal content, but simply content Google doesn’t like.

Take the phenomenally successful sex diary site, Girl with a One Track Mind. In 2004, author Zoe Margolis joined Blogger anonymously, to chronicle the ins and outs of her dating and sex life. Her blog was born from a desire to counter what she perceived to be a sexist double-standard in the media, that chastised women for expressing their sexual desires. It was a huge hit, in part because of the blunt and refreshingly honest account of female sexuality it offered. A certain degree of anatomical detail ensured the site was tossed into Blogger’s ‘adult’ category. But now, her blog could end up being swept under Google’s new PC rug just because it tackles real sex head on.

Award-winning sex columnist Violet Blue reckons her 14-year-old Blogger site will take quite a beating, too. Her unforgivably erotic blog doesn’t just cover topics about pornography, but a wide variety of little-known bedroom facts some may find crucial – for example, consumer warnings about unsafe sex toys. Once Google’s new explicit content policy cloaks her explicitly-illustrated blog under a veil of privacy, some 500 links to her site will be killed off in an instant, concealing vital resources for those in search of serious answers.

It’s difficult to justify that sort of censorship. It’s safe to assume this shift in moral policy was created to minimise Google’s chances of exposing its younger users to explicit materials. The company has been moving in that direction for the past year or so, banning porn from its ad networks and ensuring that users are unable to monetise adult-oriented blogs. Fair enough, you might think.

 

But let’s not forget: Google is now practically synonymous with the web. You don’t ‘search for it’, you Google it. So, for many, trolling for porn on a lonely Tuesday night probably starts on Google. That’s not because it’s a specially-crafted porn oasis, but simply because it’s the most popular search engine online. Yet for all that debauchery, the company’s brand value hasn’t been tarnished a smidge. So, if there’s no damage being caused by showcasing explicit materials, what’s the point of censoring them on a single platform like Blogger?

Pornography is just one of infinite forms of sexual expression. So, Google doesn’t want to be associated with porn – we get it. Yet Blogger was built around the idea that information should be freely accessible in order to stimulate healthy debate. What happened to that?

Millions of users have spent the better part of a decade working to construct an extensive community on Blogger that offers a digital, sex-positive network of support. It shouldn’t matter whether it’s art, advice or strange pornography that most of us don’t quite get. This is a sexual cull that goes against everything Blogger, Google, and the internet stands for.

Google may like to tote itself as a champion of technological progress – but there’s nothing progressive about censorship. If anything, the company has just pushed us backwards.

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