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Tantric
Sexersize
By Debora Myers
Love
Making Magic III
By Debora Myers
The
Blow Job Tug O' War
By Maya Lambrou
Allowing
Yourself To Be Sexy Part II
By Melissa Balmer
Allowing Yourself To Be Sexy Part I
By Melissa Balmer
Sensuality and Joy
By Ladyfire Editor Debora Myers
The French Kiss
By Ladyfire Editor Debora Myers
Phone Sex
By Ladyfire Editor Debora Myers
Releasing the Wild-Woman Within
By Ladyfire Editor Debora Myers
Seeing is Believing
By Ladyfire Editor Debora Myers
The Mature Man's Sexuality
By Ladyfire Editor Debora Myers
The Open Flower
By Ladyfire Editor Debora Myers
Asking The Right Questions To Be A Better
Lover
by Melissa Balmer from Languidkiss.com
Prolong your Lovemaking: Making It Last
By Ladyfire Editor Debora Myers
Menses and Sexuality
By Ladyfire Editor Debora Myers
Married Couples Share Advice: On Keeping It Hot
By Ladyfire Editor Debora Myers
An Erotic Life
by Ladyfire Editor Debora Myers
The Kama Sutra
By Ladyfire Editor Debora Myers
Everything You Wanted To Know About Sex...
But Were Afraid To Ask...
By Paul Mauchline
Sex And The World
By Paul Mauchline
Sex.... Who Has Time!!!
By Paul Mauchline
How To Create The Perfect Quickie
by Debora Myers
Igniting His Passion
by Debora Myers
The Art of Sexual Intimacy
By Paul Machline
Where Has The Love Gone?
By Paul Mauchline
Honey, I Am Not In The Mood
By Paul Mauchline
Do You Show Up For the "Big O"?
By Leslie Lobell
Yoginis
by Debora Myers
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Asking
The Right Questions
To Be A Better Lover
By Melissa Balmer
I'm going to be very honest: I don't consider myself to be one of the
world's greatest lovers. However, I am on a journey of personal discovery
in this area. It is said, "We teach what we need to learn." So I'd like
to share with you some of the things I'm discovering along the way.
I believe the following are two of the most important questions we can
ask ourselves with regard to opening up to becoming a better lover,
as well as learning to enjoy ourselves more during lovemaking:
1) How can we learn to shut off our very busy brains and relax and enjoy
really being in the moment?
2) How can we learn to better communicate openly and honestly with our
lover about where we're at, what we're feeling, and what we'd like to
do?
From all of the research I've done, from talking to friends, and from
my own personal experience, it appears that both sexes are actually
just as shy when it comes to speaking up about what they'd like to do
in bed. Women, though, have a tougher time, in general, shutting off
their brains and relaxing into the moment. Women have brains that tend
to think about more than one thing at a time. Men are better at focusing
on one thing-which makes enjoying sex easier for them.
I believe this is an area where it would be a good idea for men to learn
to have compassion for their female lovers. (Don't worry men. Women
need to learn to have compassion for you, too. I'll get to that a little
later). I have two reasons why compassion is merited. First, men are
pretty sure of experiencing an orgasm from a sexual encounter, whereas
women are not. Second, women -- who tend to be more in tune with those
around us and with our surroundings -- are the far more judgmental of
the two sexes. This is a double-edged sword: the double-edged part is
that we often focus this judgment harshly on ourselves.
We've all heard that men are visual creatures. It's only recently that
I've really started to understand exactly what this means. It means
that if men see something they enjoy looking at, they can lose themselves
in the moment and just enjoy the visual stimulation. This is a very
difficult concept for women to grasp. So when our lovers turn their
eyes to us and start to stare, our reaction usually is to assume something
like, "He doesn't like this haircut!" If we happen to be naked, the
judgment becomes even harsher, such as, "He's ticking off all my flaws…
He's grossed out by my thighs!" In reality, according to everything
I've read and everything men have told me in person, his thoughts are
far more likely to be something like, "Wow, I'm so lucky! A live naked
woman right here in front of me!"
This, by the way, is also the reason that men have such a good sense
of humor about things like cup sizes that come off with the bra. I asked
several men whether or not they felt betrayed when this happens. Every
one of them responded, "Who cares? There's a woman getting naked with
me!"
I know men, I know: It can get tiresome to keep telling someone how
attracted you are to her, how much she turns you on, and have her continue
to act insecure. I've been guilty of this sort of behavior, myself,
in the past. My advice now to women is, "Snap out of it!" If your lover
pays you a compliment, you need to open your ears and your heart and
accept it graciously. It might have taken him a lot of courage to say
it! Let's face it, women can be pretty fierce in our disbelief, and
we often bite the hand that's trying to feed us the adoration and attention
we so desire.
Yes, I know ladies, I know: It's scary to open our ears and our hearts
and hear our lover's words when we look in the mirror and decide that
we fall short of what the media is currently touting as "Who's sexy
now!" The key here, though, is to remember that even those who we see
in photos looking fabulous often don't look quite that way in person.
(PhotoShop fixes every hair out of place, every blemish; it takes off
weight; it changes eye color…). Also, the "ideal" that the media chooses
doesn't necessarily reflect what most heterosexual men find sexy and
alluring, anyway. In the words of one of my straight guy pals, "The
media's all women and gay men. Of course they have a different idea
of what's sexy than straight guys do. We're just too lazy to object."
Of course women may be thinking, "What about Playboy?" To that all I
can say is that for every magazine like Playboy featuring a particular
sort of very thin, very young, woman as the epitome of sexy, we women
have three fashion magazines with almost impossibly thin and very young
women modeling face creams for faces that won't have wrinkles for years
yet, and modeling clothes that no young woman their age, unless a model
or an heiress can afford. Sadly, we do most of the harm to our self-image
ourselves.
Women we need to give ourselves a break! And we need to accept that
men are visual and they love visual stimulation… Love it, love it, love
it! We need to recognize that our lover chose us because we're whom
he finds desirable. He likes our "type." He would very much like to
see much more of us displayed in a sexy way for his adoring gaze. If
he doesn't get enough visual stimulation from us, it's possible he's
going to resort to getting it from other places. So yes, it's a bit
unnerving how men can stare: one almost feels like a science project.
But wouldn't you rather he was adoring you than a pinup in a magazine
or on a website? The more we can learn to relax and accept our lover's
gaze and attention, the more turned on we'll be… and the more turned
on we are, the more turned on he'll be. The more we accept that we're
sexy to him, the sexier we'll be to ourselves. Besides, who doesn't
want to be adored?
So men, we're starting to understand you. Now it's time for you to understand
a little more about us. Women are "aural" creatures: we like words.
That's why in general women prefer erotica to photos of naked people
for stimulation. We like to be hooked up in, and lost in, a story. That's
why porn movies often leave us cold, but something like "The English
Patient" makes us hot. Men, you really need to learn to be brave and
talk to us: you need to learn to tell us of your desires, what you'd
like to do, and what you'd like us to do… and you need to learn to do
it in a smart way. Why? Because it will pay off big time!
Why are some men great Casanova's who have women swooning for them?
Because they've learned how to talk to women! They know that women need
a lot of reassurance. They also know that women need to be coaxed into
opening up and sharing their thoughts, because we're very frightened
of rejection (aren't we all?), of being too much, of being called names.
Blame it not only on the whole very old and tired whore/Madonna syndrome
of categorization, but also on the fact that we've been told, forever,
what frail egos men have and that they hate to be told what to do. Maybe,
men, you do hate to be "told what to do," but wouldn't you love some
instructions on how to turn your lover on? Ask! And don't take her blushes
and stammering for an answer! But be sweet about it: let her know how
excited it would make you feel to know better how to turn her on. And
if you want to try something new, don't hit her over the head with it
all at once… Start dropping small hints, always with plenty of reassurance
that if she's brave and gives something new a try, you'll be there with
open happy arms to catch her.
Remember that being a great lover, like any other skill worth acquiring
in life, takes time and patience and practice. As we've seen, it takes
the compassion of understanding the differences in characteristics between
you and your partner and the ability to be open to learning to think
in new ways. Good luck!
With the creation
of the website magazine www.languidkiss.com
…where sensuality is an art" Melissa Balmer found a way to bring together
her passion for inspirational writing and celebrating personal sensuality
under one roof.
A rare combination of both artist and business person, Melissa has been
both a successful sales executive and gift designer before creating
Languid Kiss. Keeping in mind the old adage "the more personal the more
universal" Melissa decided the best way to reach out to others was not
only to share the words and art of those she felt truly celebrate and
educate about sensuality, but also to share her own personal quest to
discover her own sensuality and emotional healing through her candid
online journal.
Melissa is an accomplished speaker and former member of Toastmasters
Int. She enjoys speaking to young people on the importance of goal setting
to accomplish your dreams, and has worked with the Friends of NYA, to
help raise funds for the Neighborhood Youth Associations--a non profit
organizations in Venice and Mar Vista California dedicated to helping
"at risk" youth.
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