April 2011

You are currently browsing the monthly archive for April 2011.

Day two at The Festival on the Art of Lust and I had the privilege to talk to the patron saint of “Ethical Sluthood” Janet Hardy, who together with Dossie Easton has written “The Ethical Slut: A Practical Guide to Polyamory, Open Relationships & Other Adventures”.

She has authored a huge range of books about all kinds of sex, kinky sex and even sex disasters. She has written on a wide range of sexuality topics but I wanted to ask her about what we can learn about safe good sex from the world of kink and also multiple consensual partnerships or “poli-land” as she calls it.

So she starts with a bit of myth busting.

“One of biggest myths is that if sex is good, we shouldn’t talk about it, that somehow talking about it spoils the fun. That we should get swept away on a wave of passion. That if someone loves me they should know what I want. In fact negotiation can be foreplay. You can use it as a way to get turned on”.

“Putting the words to our desires is scary” but as she points out it’s all a matter of re-framing. And that’s why we love about what she says about safer sex. Who says a condom can’t be sexy if you put it on right. As she points out.

“It’s about asking how do you want me to put on that condom, not what shall we do about condoms. At some point you have to open your mouth. I would love people to get that negotiated sex is foreplay – and use it as a way to get turned on”

She recounts her own personal experience of talking about what she and her partner wanted to do to each other, and they got so turned on they had to run upstairs and just get to it quickly, before carrying on the original negotiation. After all  what is the different between “talking dirty” and “negotiating”.

I asked Janet her opinions of what different sexual communities, particularly non heterosexual communities have to offer in terms of god safe sex wisdoms.

“The numbers of different ways to get off that are not intercourse. Especially in relationships where there is not a dick around” was one that she came back with. We also talked about the fact that armpit sex, mammary sex or thigh sex is very popular where there is little access to family planning or virginity taboos. But she says

“Its a shame that they are strategies of last resort and not more popular as an enjoyable first choice”

She adds “For men to learn how to eroticize things that are not their dick is an awfully good idea, they don’t always take to it right away but they learn to love it because it opens up a range of it of possibilities”.

By which we think she means all over body pleasure and learning all those new erogenous zones that you did not know you had.

We next move onto one of our favourite topics – how to make sex education sexier and more appealing. Janet feels that it’s easy for health educators to put a “foot wrong” if they don’t listen to their audience. This will then loose the impact of their message. “Met people where they are” is the term she uses. If a sex educator goes to talk to a group of people who are into BDSM but don’t recognize the value that community places on consent – then the audience will be lost.

Janet gives an example of how she and Dossie, her partner and co-writer of many books, showed a group of health educators how two people might negotiated a BDSM scene. The room fell silent and someone piped up  “I wish everyone did that”. The open negotiation of all elements of what they hoped who happen during the sex was a great transferable lesson, they hoped would happen for the non BDSM or “straight” world.

She also had some wise words on what we can learn from people in non monogamous relationships. Having multiple partners means talking explicitly and agreeing with all partners about what is safe and who needs to wear condoms all the time and which partnerships don’t need to. But beyond that people who are negotiating to be with or love more than one person at once are really going to hone their communication skills – because they are trying to keep a many relationships happy, healthy and fruitful against the expectation of society. Whereas people in monogamous relationships may not have the same challenges or will accept these norms without discussion.

Janet talks great wisdom and good sense about topics that look initially a challenge, but are in fact simpler than they seem. Like making safe sex sexy. She lifts the fog and we love her for that.

The Ethical Slut 2nd Edition has just been released. Buy it. It is fantastic.

 

 

Tags: , , ,

Always dutiful, your faithful Pleasure Project reporter is here in Sydney attending the “Festival on the Art of Lust”.

Its a celebration of creative sexuality with artists exploring lust and sexuality. Just to add to your envy , it’s being held in a dance centre overlooking a bay in Sydney. So as I attend workshops intended to improve our sexual skills I can  gaze at the boats  zipping across the bay and glimpse the sun on the opera house.

Although good safe sex is not a focus of the conference my personal mission to talk to artists can help us deliver sex education that is sexy, appealing and accessible.

So I have to admit I started the day by being too shy to attend naked yoga. Aimed at getting you comfortable with your body. Just too much too quick for this intrepid reporter.

But I did go to two workshops both aimed at how to negotiate the type of sex or play  you want. This I hoped to be able to expand to increase safer sex.

So the day started with a workshop where half of us were blindfold and half not – the blindfolded people were encouraged to shout, push, avoid the touch they did not like. We explored through a series of gradually more daring exercises how to say no or how to accept the touch we liked. We focused on saying no in different ways. Shouting it, hitting back or escaping from it. It felt strange to touch strangers and sometimes have them tell you in no uncertain terms to leave them alone – but also respond positively. We could always use a safe word to make people leave us alone.

It’s rare that we have the opportunity to practise reacting to touch and fighting back. I imagine that women who have to deal with fairly constant sexual harassment, in many parts of the world, on public transport or other public spaces, might enjoy the chance to sharpen their reactions and the loudness of their “nos”.

There was also a workshop about “playfighting” – the kind of roll about puppy like play that we stop  as we grow up. It was surprising great fun. Again learning to let go and fight in a fun way.  We started with only our hands fighting and ended up rolling around with complete strangers giggling as we wrestled each other to the ground. And some of these Australian men are quite large and quite strong.

So all in all , it was a much more physical day than I expected, and not at all like a sexual health conference.

More from the frontline of lust, in your service, tomorrow.

 

 

Tags: , , ,

orgasm 1

orgasm photos

A friend well into her thirties recently asked me  what an orgasm felt like. She had never had one. To be honest I struggled with the words to describe it beyond the cliches of waves, hills and galloping white horses………but now in Delhi there is an exhibition that could just help.

“Orgasm”  is an exhibition to try and capture the essence of them by photographer Sunil Mane at Gallery Nvya. The exhibition is in a rather quiet staid Delhi mall and when I was there was surprisingly completely quiet. Maybe everyone in Delhi knows what orgasms look like.

The curators statement highlights the “brewing storm, the anticipation, the reaching out” that the photographer has attempted to capture with his pictures. It’s certainly an ambitious one.  Here are a couple of my favourites ….. although to be honest without the exhibition title I would probably not have guessed the subject matter. But I really liked the bold attempt and the use of photography to capture such an abstract concept. We do not after all get enough orgasm education.

When I went there I asked Paril the Gallery Manager how reaction had been to the images, she said that lots more people came (ho hum) than to usual exhibitions and the older people were fine, but  young people were more shocked. Bucking the myth that older people are more prudish when it comes to enjoying sexual pleasures. Or maybe with the grace of time more of them had had orgasms and were less worried about it….

I was most fascinated by the metal spoon, magnet and oil in the gallery that the photographer had used to make the  oil dance  then photograph with a huge magnifying lens. What that says about my orgasms I don’t know…….

 

Tags: ,

This month, we’re featuring guest blogger Denise Harrison, founder and CEO of SuzyKnew.

In Junior High School, I used to write hot, steamy love stories and circulate them around my friends. The stories centered around one woman – actually a friend from school – who would fall in and out of love while having numerous wild adventures. They were titillating and a little racy for the late 1970’s. They were fairly popular as well. Friends and other students would impatiently wait for the next edition to come out and would constantly ask me when I would write another story.

Fast forward 30 years later after an MBA, time at a big pharmaceutical company and 12 years working in global sexual and reproductive health all over the world, I find myself writing stories about love and sex again. In the NGO world of HIV/AIDS, family planning and reproductive health, I am frustrated and concerned about how relatively little effect many programs have in light of how much money is being spent. Also, these programs tend to be very critical of and reluctant to use tried and true marketing approaches from the commercial world and are rarely managed by people with real world experience in selling sex and love. Their main customer is the donor – not the man or woman on the street with HIV/AIDS or who needs birth control. On the commercial side, my experience is that the sole pursuit of profit prevented many from truly connecting with their customer and providing needed education and information was secondary. All information and education had to eventually lead to a sale. And ultimately, success is only measured in dollars. Read the rest of this entry »

good. safe. sex. riiThe Pleasure Project is  featured in an Indian national paper – the Indian Express today – in a piece about art and social activism to promote safer sex. We are proud to be featured alongside  a Delhi art show that depicts the joy of female orgasms  and new sexy condom campaigns in India.

In the article the three worlds of advertising, art and public health are seen as coming together to “loosen corset strings” of straight laced Indian morality to bring “discussions of safe sex, pleasure and adventure into the foreground”.

Our sexy posters and postcards are a highlight. In the words of the writer Georgina Maddox.

“The message is unmissable: safe, yet pleasurable sex”

The Sex Talk Dilemma

Tags: , , , ,

Young people are getting angry about the fact that they can vote, pay taxes, enter the military . . . and yet they are not seen as responsible enough to use contraception or practice safer sex. And despite some grown ups being in  denial – they do have sex.

This great video made by some students in the USA is campaigning against Government cuts to sexual health services provided Planned Parenthood Federation.

Here it is….

I have sex