Sexual Technique Terms Help Optimize Sexual Pleasure
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Four Ways to Achieve Heightened Sexual Pleasure
The study’s authors included Devon J. Hensel, PhD, an associate research professor at Indiana University School of Medicine in Indianapolis, and Christiana von Hippel, ScD, a former OMGYES research scientist and now a senior user experience researcher for Meta (Facebook’s parent company) in the San Francisco Bay area.
After analyzing the results from an international qualitative study, Drs. Hensel, von Hippel, and their research team found a recurring pattern of four specific techniques that never really had words to describe them before. The team then looked more closely at these four techniques using a cross-sectional, online, national probability survey of 3,017 American women ages 18 to 93.
“We took this deeper dive into the patterns to find out the percentage of women who used each technique during vaginal penetration and then looked at how those specific techniques impacted their pleasure,” says von Hippel. In other words, they looked at the specific sexual moves and methods that seemed to make vaginal sex more pleasurable.
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The researchers gave terms for each of these sexual methods to help women identify and communicate what feels best to them:
- Angling Rotating, raising, or lowering pelvis and hips during penetration to adjust where inside the vagina the sex toy or penis rubs. (87 percent of respondents used this method)
- Pairing A woman or her partner stimulates her clitoris with a finger or sex toy simultaneously with penetration. (69 percent)
- Rocking The base of a penis or sex toy rubs against the clitoris constantly during penetration by staying all the way inside the vagina rather than thrusting in and out. Usually used when the woman is on top. One of the respondents explained its allure: “We had to ’unlearn’ the fast-pumping motions we had seen in porn. And we’re both much happier with our new ways.” (76 percent)
- Shallowing Penetrative touch just inside the entrance of the vagina. Another respondent said: “I think this area is really underrated. I can have really amazing sex with penetration just going in an inch and never further.” (84 percent)
Using Language for Sexual Techniques Is Powerful
“I think naming pleasure and pleasure techniques are specifically empowering and usable, so women can feel comfortable and confident using them with partners,” says von Hippel. “They are also important for when women discuss their sex lives with friends, such as ‘I like this, why don’t you try that?’ To be able to specifically describe what they like and to be able to ask for it is incredibly empowering and helps women to feel like their voices are heard. There is also a normalizing effect as well when they realize that what they like is a pattern that’s shared by lots of women.”
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Von Hippel adds that having language that better defines what they like during sex also allows women to be flexible and describe what they want at the moment. “What you enjoy can change in the middle of a sexual experience, and it can change over your life. Having this large menu or repertoire of words and techniques that you can pull from is great, because then it’s also not a question of ‘I am a woman who likes x.’ It might be ‘I am a woman who loves pairing in this context, and shallowing in this context, and angling at this age.’ Women can feel confident to communicate and mix and match.”
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