dykejedi:

I believe we need the whole “I want to kiss her and hold her hand under the moon uwu soft moon lesbian” thing, especially for young wlw, like it’s so important, but we also live in a world where girls who like girls are either hypersexualed and fetishized by men/porn or completely desexualized to the point where the world is convinced that older lesbians don’t have sex lives.

So here’s some positivity for all young wlw:

It’s okay to fantasize sexually about girls. It’s okay to get off thinking about girls. It’s okay to check girls out. It’s okay to have sex with girls, however many you want. It’s okay to want a girl to give you an orgasm, and it’s okay to want to give girls orgasms.

Wanting this doesn’t make your attraction any less soft or innocent because there is nothing dirty, bad, or perverse about being sexually attracted to other girls. You can make her a flower crown while the sun sets and count her freckles and then go home and go down on her for an hour. The two aren’t mutually exclusive. 

And if you’re an older woman who struggles with this too, it applies for you as well. 

Stuff that may happen on your period no one told you about.

emmersdrawberry:

So there was a lot of misinformation, and just a huge lack of the nitty gritty stuff, when I was in school and I see a lot of young kids on forums asking if something is normal or worrying about stuff and adults who have wondered their whole lives if other people feel the same on their periods. 

Here’s some stuff about periods people might not talk about;

  • It can smell. But using scented pads isn’t a great idea, the chemicals in the perfume cause irritation. But here’s the thing; vaginas smell. All of them. All the time. Right now. YOU notice the smell because it’s literally part of you, but other people don’t. If it’s a foul smell and very strong you should speak with a gynecologist, but the average day-to-day odor is normal and doesn’t mean you’re dirty. 
  • Diarrhea all day every day.
  •  Or, alternately, constipation all day every day. 
  • ALSO alternatively, a healthy mix of both sprinkled randomly across the days of your period like too much nutmeg where no one asked nutmeg to be. 
  • Your first period might not look like a period at first. It might look, well, brown, and lead you to other conclusions about what’s going on in your skivvies. Then it might not come again the next month and show up on a totally different week when it does. Mine came like A LOT. It was very heavy and I bled through a pair of jeans in the middle of school it was so heavy. I didn’t know what it was and thought I was bleeding from my butt because my liar teacher said a period would only be a ‘tablespoon’. Tablespoon of lies. 
  • At some point your probably going to stain the back of the toilet seat with blood. That doesn’t mean your bleeding too much, or that your dirty, but it’s a tid bit of information I wish I knew as a kid so I could have known to look for it when using public restrooms or at friend’s houses. 
  • Period farts. 
  • Having sex on your period isn’t gross or dirty or wrong. Put an old towel down on the bed and have at it.
  • The feelings you have on your period are entirely valid and not imagined or unimportant because of your period. Whether or not your feelings are heightened by PMS they are still your feelings and should be respected. 
  • The ‘average’ period is anywhere from 3-10 days with any variation in flow. You shouldn’t be concerned because your period isn’t the same as your friends is, only if it changes from what’s average for you. There isn’t such a thing as a ‘normal period’ you need to fit into.
  • If you wear a disposable pad there will be a point where it’s going to unstick at some corner and when you pull it off it’s going to pull some of your pubic hair with it. This is going to suck. I am very sorry. 
  • If you wear a tampon there is going to be a point you will squeeze it out of yourself when you use the bathroom. Just change your tampon each time you go. Please listen to me on this. 
  • Swamp butt.
  • You will get blood stained thighs at some point. It’s going to cake onto your skin and make a mess just everywhere. 
  • The cashier doesn’t care about you buying pads/tampons/etc, they just had a guy buy 4 pounds of carrots, a box of Xtra Large ribbed condoms and cherry scented lube. Your pads are not on their radar of things to care about.

Washing Your Junk:

  1. When you shower (if you want a bath i’d shower before hand or dont wash in the bath itself and shower after to get clean) remember you are not actually washing inside of your vagina, you’re washing the skin around it (labia, clitoris, all those good bits). Using a soft wash cloth with either very mild unscented soap or just warm water.  Seriously, stop putting washing products inside yourself; You do not need to wash the inside of your vagina and doing so can cause infections. Unless given products by your doctor there is no need to douche or use creams or wipes or other stuff like that. They’re lies sold to you to make you think you smell bad. 
  2.  You know how your parents said ‘wipe front to back’?Same with washing, you don’t want to drag butt germs all over your vagina. Don’t do it. 
  3. Some people find that trimming, or shaving, their pubic hair helps them control odor, or makes wearing sanitary products more comfortable, but it isn’t required and is personal preference with different individuals. There is no health benefit to shaving or trimming your pubic hair and it will not make you cleaner than if you didn’t shave. 
  4. Wearing light breathable cotton undies during your period will help eliminate odor and not give you swamp butt. Especially in the summer. 
  5. Washing after sex is a great idea and not just because it’s romantic. If you’ve ever had period sex before you will k n o w but if you have not I am going to just ask you to take my word for it and plan a shower afterwards. 

Feel free to tack on other stuff if you want. Tell me all your period secrets. 

do you have any tips on how to get through the shame and guilt felt for being sexually attracted to other girls and wanting to do sexual things with them? i have romantic attraction to girls too but i particularly feel guilty for being sexually attracted.

closetedlesbianopinions:

Hey sunshine,

I’ve found that constantly reminding myself that my attraction to girls is natural and wonderful and fine helps. If I repeated it over and over and over again, even if maybe I didn’t entirely believe it, I could start to accept it.

Unfortunately it’s a very normal feeling for lesbians to experience, but it’s entirely because of the homophobic messages society has sent us all our lives. There is nothing wrong or shameful about girls who have sex with girls. There is nothing wrong with us, and there is nothing wrong with you.

Please know you’re valid and loved, and your attraction to girls is beautiful.

-mod O

DEAR TEENAGERS AND YOUNG ADULTS BECOMING SEXUALLY ACTIVE FOR THE FIRST TIME:

latenightcornerstore:

1. DEMAND condom use
2. Hold your partners accountable for what happens in the bedroom. None of this “baby I can’t control myself around you” or “I just wanted you so bad” bullshit.
3. Coercion is real and it’s very scary and hard to identify in the moment. Establish a dialogue with your partner. Be clear on what you both want. Be clear on what you don’t want. Your boundaries should ALWAYS be respected.
4. Sex can be really emotionally and physically over-stimulating the first few times; don’t be afraid or ashamed to ask your partner to slow down, take a break, or even stop.
5. Focus less on pleasing your partner and more on exploring your partner. Everyone’s body is different and there are no “tricks” to better sex. Chances are, if you psych yourself out worrying over how well you’re “performing” then nobody’s going to have a good time.
6. Ask questions, offer suggestions. Despite what porn has probably taught you, talking during sex isn’t weird or taboo. Your partner isn’t a mind reader. They don’t know what feels good to you. [Pro-tip, a looot of people without clitorises aren’t fully aware of just HOW sensitive a clitoris is. They can be a little rough with them. Tell them to chill!!!!]
7. Your sex life is YOUR business. Don’t ever feel ashamed of how many or how few sexual partners/experiences you’re having. Do what you want, touch the people who want to touch you back, forget the rest.
8. DON’T FAKE YOUR ORGASMS!! Don’t fake your orgasms!! DON’TFAKEYOURORGAMS!! If your partner isn’t getting you there, let them know! Tell them how!!
9. There is more to sex than orgasms. Sex is a really cool way to establish intimacy and trust, to have a fun time, to relieve stress, to explore a person’s body and bring them pleasure. Don’t get me wrong, orgasms are really cool and good, but your sex life is going to be a lot better if it doesn’t revolve around them.
10. LEARN ABOUT YOUR BODY!! This goes for everyone, but ESPECIALLY if you are a person in possession of a vulva, you have been discouraged and even actively kept from vital knowledge about your anatomy! Do some google searches, buy a human sexuality textbook, masturbate.
11. Virginity is a useless concept. It’s completely okay if your virginity is something important to you and I’m not trying to belittle that idea. Just, for the record, in the grand scheme of things it’s not a big deal. Literally nothing about you changes just because you bumped uglies with someone else.

This has been a public service announcement from your friendly internet poet.

Why are sooo many straight girls (and also queer girls who love boys) fond of gay men relationships and is it right and healthy for them? no hate no secret intentions lol just pure curiosity

wsswatson:

I’m quite confused about this message honestly because ‘is it right
and healthy for them’ implies that you think I have some level of expertise on
human psychology (I don’t, I’m an English lit and creative writing undergrad)
and ‘no hate no secret intentions lol just pure curiosity’ implies you’re
including me in the category of ‘sooo many straight girls (and also queer
girls who love boys)’ who are ‘fond of gay men relationships’ which is… odd,
frankly, considering that there are really only two m/m relationships I
regularly blog about, but. Anyway.

Without going into
all of the issues I have with this message (the generalisation, the grouping of
straight and bi/pan girls/women into a shared category without acknowledging
how different their experiences are and the fact that this is apparently of
more concern than the aggressive hypersexualisation of gay and bi women by
men), I think there are several reasons why m/m relationships appeal to girls
and women.

  1. The vast majority of famous writers and directors are men, which
    reflects itself in the fact that their male characters tend to a) outnumber
    their female characters, b) play more significant roles in their narratives
    than their female characters, and c) be more multi-dimensional and realistic
    than their female characters. As such, they tend to naturally stand out and
    therefore matter more to the audience than the female characters and to have
    their most significant relationships with one another, hence attracting more fandom
    (and shipper) interest.
  2. Likewise, there is a gender imbalance in the celebrity world,
    particularly historically, and lots of famous celebrity groups (from writing
    cliques to bands) tend to be male dominated, and so I expect the average person
    could name gay and bi male celebrities and couples far more easily than gay and
    bi female celebrities and couples, and being drawn to celebrities is very
    common, as is taking an interest in a favourite celebrity’s love life.
  3. Due to the way men often view women, gay/bi men often write men in love
    far more realistically than straight/bi men (straight men particularly) write
    women in love, so women buy it in a way they might not buy m/f romance.
  4. Women are taught from birth that their bodies are disgusting and
    embarrassing, so being able to consume sexual material which doesn’t implicate
    bodies like theirs is often more comfortable for girls and women than sexual
    material which does.
  5. For bi women (and, in fact, gay women – I have lots of lesbian TJLC
    friends), m/m material provides an outlet to explore queerness without, again,
    implicating their own bodies or forcing them to see themselves in the
    characters they’re reading about, which can be really intimidating for a girl
    or woman only just beginning to come to terms with her own sexuality (I know
    this was the case for me).
  6. I can’t comment on this from experience because I don’t watch porn at
    all, but from what I’ve read, the porn industry tends to be far more violent
    towards women than men, so for LGBT women who want to consume LGBT-based porn,
    gay male porn allows them to do so without the exposure to violence against
    their own gender and/or bodies.
  7. I have also personally seen a lot of women I’ve met through johnlock go
    from identifying as straight to identifying as bi, and did the same myself.
    Instead of branding straight girls who ship m/m ships as obsessed fangirls or
    whatever, please try to consider that part of the appeal may well be being able
    to explore their own sexuality in a way that’s less intimidating to them than
    various alternatives.

lovethatdiscourse:

But really tho, the split-attraction model is literally homophobic.

Part of my coming out as gay involved realizing that I experienced my sexuality in more ways than just sexual urges. Nothing wrong with sex or having a sex drive, and nothing wrong with not experiencing sexual attraction. But again, one of the most important breakthroughs in my overcoming internalized homophobia was literally uniting my sexual attraction with the rest of sexuality.

Yes, that’s just my own narrative, my own lived experience, and it’s not prescriptive.

However. The whole reason I had to do that, the whole reason that existed as a thing to overcome, is that splitting attraction into categories of “sexual” and “romantic” is literally how straight people oppress lgbp people: our experiences are separated from “normal” sexuality by isolating us as these sex-crazed freaks who can’t experience full sexuality, and are predatory by nature.

It works by saying “well, these people are deviant because they experience sexual desire differently from the rest of us, and that’s threatening.” And once that differentness is established, we are further othered and demonized by saying “and as to the full range of human romance and sexuality, they are stunted and cannot share with each other what we have, which is natural, and fully functional and more human.”

And so, a theory that splits attraction into categories, and proceeds to lump gayness into the “purely sexual” one, blatantly and explicitly separating it from “the rest” of human sexuality, is EXACTLY how straight people oppress lgbp folks on the daily.

And that’s just one of the horrible implications of the split-attraction model. It also erases gay and lesbian people as those who experience exclusively sga, and it’s unfair to asexual folks who really do experience degrees of more or less attraction. And it erases bi and pan people by letting folks who are not actually bi or pan identify as being attracted to multiple genders because their attractions are “split.”

mythicallor:

here are some things that can impact your desire to have sex with people

  • you don’t feel ready to have sex
  • you have self-esteem problems that relate to your body
  • you experience gender dysphoria
  • you’re not in a situation where having sex is feasible
  • you don’t feel comfortable having sex with people you don’t know well
  • abuse or trauma has affected your relationship with your sexuality

there’s a reason why “you look at someone and you want to have sex with them” is a bad definition of sexual attraction, and why telling young questioning people that can be really damaging. the idea that “I don’t have a desire to have sex with strangers, therefore I must be asexual” erases complicating factors, like those stated above, as well as other differences, like race and gender.

I’m not saying that real asexuals don’t exist, I’m just saying that human sexuality is complicated and that it’s important to allow people, especially young people, to question before slapping on a label.