Advice

Bases and homeruns

Anonymous
Question

My boyfriend recently started kissing my breasts and sucking on them. How far is that? Is that considered "sex", first base, second, third, or fourth. By the way, what do they all stand for?

You know, if you went out⁠ on the street and asked 100 people what the “bases” were, I bet you’d get a TON of different answers. One of the issues with the old “baseball” analogy to describe sexual⁠ activities is that it is a culturally defined and influenced set of ideas. So different people define it very differently, which really makes it a not so useful term. So how about throwing that idea out all together, eh? The better question to ask is whether you feel comfortable with what is happening sexually in your relationship⁠ and whether you want to be engaging in those activities. If you are comfortable and wanting what is happening, then why worry about “how far” something is?

As to whether it is “sex⁠,” again that’s a term that lots of people define differently (unfortunately). Our general feeling around here is that a) anything with “sex” in the title (oral sex⁠, manual sex⁠, etc.) is “sex,” and b) activities that you undertake for the purpose of sexual pleasure is “sex.” Not all “sex” is exactly the same, of course, nor do they all have exactly the same pregnancy⁠ and STI risks. (While the activity that you describe does not really have STI or pregnancy risks, other types of sex do carry risks and necessitate letting your health care provider know that you are “sexually active⁠” and seeking sexual health care on a regular basis.) But again, as long as you and your partner⁠ are comfortable with and wanting what you are doing sexually and you are taking appropriate precautions to keep yourselves safe, why worry about exactly what term to apply?

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    • Heather Corinna

    You tried to do something sexual you thought was super-sexy but the other person thought was weird, silly or downright gross. Something one partner of yours thought was the hottest thing ever turned out to be something that, when you tried it with another person, bored the pants not even off of them, but right back onto them. Your biggest turn-on is someone else’s buzzkill.

    In any of these situations or many others like them, you might feel like you were bad in bed or someone else might think that about you. Here’s the biggest thing to know about that, before I say anything else at all: When sex is consensual, we all have the right to be our own idea or someone else’s idea of who or what is “bad” in bed. Sometimes; anytime. That’s because we’re human.