When it comes to our bodies and feeling good in them, it's usually better to listen and respond to what they are telling us than to tell them what to do.
lube
- Sam Wall
- Jenna Gaarde
- Claire P
The super-basics on what lubricant is and why people use it.
- Heather Corinna
You are not being unreasonable. I don’t think his response and behavior about the lube is fine. I don’t think it’s okay for him to tell you that not having sex isn’t a big deal for you, or to tell you how important sex is to your relationship for both of you. I don’t think it’s fine for him to be...
- Heather Corinna
I'm always so sad to hear anyone who has the idea that needing -- or just plain wanting! -- lubricant is some kind of problem, means something is wrong with someone, or that that need is unusual. I also always find myself struggling to understand those feelings, even though I have heard many women...
- Heather Corinna
An easy way to both normalize safer sex, and make sure that the young person or people in your home have access to basic safer sex and contraception they may need is to have some of those basics in your home, somewhere where everyone can easily find and see them.
- Heather Corinna
- Isabella Rotman
Everything you'll probably ever need to know about safer sex barriers, like which to use, how to use them, how to get more comfortable with them, and how surprisingly cute they are.
- Heather Corinna
You know, one of the neatest, most interesting things about sex from my perspective, is that what people do and don't enjoy is so diverse. One person's least favorite sexual activity is another person's favorite. I think that's really cool. All of our bodies, sexualities and situations are so...
- Jenna Gaarde
Everyone is different when it comes to hormonal/menstrual cycles, and there certainly are people who experience more intense effects of physical and psychological changes throughout their cycle than others. Experiencing changes in your mood, how your body responds to different kinds of touch, and...
- Heather Corinna
Virginity isn't a term used in sexual health or defined medically, anatomically or by any one sexual activity. It's a word some people use to determine when they or others have or have not had sex, based in either personal or cultural ideas or experiences of what they consider sex to be. I can't...
- Heather Corinna
I asked my hands-down favorite writer about sex and disability, Cory Silverberg, to answer this one for you. Here's what Cory had to say: It already sounds like you have a good sense of what's happening with your body since the spinal cord injury and one of the great things about having incredible...