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7 Tips to Enhance Your Sexuality in the New Year

Monday Jan 2, 2012 – by

With the rush of the New Year comes new promises, goals, and changes to fulfill. It’s easy to chart your career, financial, and relationship aspirations. But many people struggle to find ways to enhance their sexual and sensual selves. As sexuality is bigger than sex, it’s important to create powerful, all-encompassing affirmations to catalyze your growth. Below are seven mantras for enhancing your sexuality in the New Year. Read, digest, meditate, and then, create your own!

Pleasure is a sensual and sexual indulgence. You should find pleasure in all that you do for “you.” From the way you massage oils onto your legs after a warm bath to the vulnerability you gift your lover during good sex, pleasure is a personal and shared activity, made to bring out your senses and remind you of your beauty. Use this affirmation as the crux of your mantras in 2012.

Orgasms are accessible and yours to experience. There’s nothing exclusive about these rippling sensations that come with an open mind, relaxed body, and entitlement to pleasure. Orgasms arrive with various levels of depth and power. The more you open yourself up, the more you explore pleasure in all that you do, and the more your lover is invested in nurturing you, the more orgasms will become a frequent experience. Make them a priority in the New Year.

Lovemaking and sex have two different purposes; enjoy both. One isn’t better than the other, but they are different experiences. When you’re making love, you tend to share some level of connection that is deeper than physical touch. You make love when you stare into the eyes of your lover and see more than physical beauty. You make love when you share the same glass of water as second nature and without much thought. You make love when you actually care intensely about pleasuring each other beyond more than just the physical, and invest in creating pleasure as a multifaceted experience. On the flipside, sex is a concentrated effort on physical pleasure, and nothing else matters in that moment. It’s when you just want to make your lover’s toes curl and share the experience of physical touch on multiple levels. It’s when emotions can take a backseat, and carnal desires take over your body. Both lovemaking and sex are vessels of pleasure. Explore the benefits of both, and choose which activity to share with your lover(s) accordingly.

Shame is your enemy, and silence will stifle your growth. There’s no reason to feel guilty about natural desires, and if you haven’t already, this is the year to throw shame out of your life. Refuse to ignore your curiosities, urges, and intuition. Talk to your lovers, friends, and family about sex, sensuality, and sexuality. Use these relationships as a classroom for your growth. The more you open up, the more people will respond with wisdom, guidance, and affirmation. You need community to grow. You cannot become your best sexual and sensual self without the support of others.

Exploration won’t kill you; try something new. There are so many people that try to tame their curiosities instead of confronting them with an open spirit. This year, promise yourself that you will research new techniques for improving your sex life, date people outside of your norm, and explore pleasure as a personal priority. Don’t be scared to try out that new position in the bedroom, explore your bi-curiosity, or invest in a good sex toy. You are the master of your boundaries, but you’ll never know if what you already like can be enhanced until you try something new. Set your boundaries as closed or open as you like for 2012. But make sure you’re the one that’s setting your limits, not societal pressures or religious dogma.

Vulnerability makes you stronger, sexier, and bolder. It’s okay that you don’t have it all figured out or know it all when it comes to sexuality. It’s beautiful if you can admit that you struggle with certain conversations, feelings, body hang-ups, and histories. Be vulnerable with yourself, your lovers, and your loved ones. It will only help your growth this year, and you’d be surprised how transformation and humility work hand in hand.

Sexual health is a priority; don’t be reckless. Taking risks can feel exhilarating except when it comes to sexual health. Make it a priority to get tested, use protection, and find ways to enjoy safe pleasure. At the end of the day, you only get one body, and how you allow it to be susceptible will influence how long it stays healthy. Love your body through protecting it. And only gift its vulnerability to those who deserve it.

 

Have a Happy New Year and share how you plan to enhance your sexuality in 2012!

 

23 Comments – Add Yours

  1. avatar bill says:

    Women be very careful who you listening to! I did a credential research of the author and I cannot find any expertise or education background in women studies, psychology,sexual health and sociology. Please take caution in non-qualified individuals(i.e. Steve Harvey) giving advice about topics that can and will give you wrong advice that not affect you, but other members of you family. Sex is very sensitive topic! It is very special part of the human body. Please know that it is spiritual event as well as physical. Sex is beautiful and it should be shared with individual who commit to your values.

    • avatar Srenda says:

      Why does she need credentials to give out this advice? She says, “Read, digest, meditate, then create your own.” There’s tons of advice on the internet from so called “qualified” and “unqualified” people. We can read this advice, take them in and make decisions for ourselves about how we want to enhance our sexuality. Nobody is an expert in this area.

    • avatar African Mami says:

      I rather like homegirl advice, from time to time. It’s FREE of charge and relatable. I would not go to a clinical psychologist or whatever their names be, to talk about sex and sexuality and for them to use terminology that would have at WTF is you on about?!

    • avatar Lo says:

      And Bill, how are you “qualified” to give the advice you’ve just dispensed?

    • avatar Kai says:

      Lol Bill, you should also be careful about privileging credentials over everything else. Let’s not forget the impact the eugenics movement had on black people’s subjugation, and the amount of BS so called academics and scientists put out that “legitimized” white supremacy.

    • Bill, I certainly appreciate the concern that you have for my readers. And usually, I’m all for people expressing their opinions and critiquing my work. However, the information that you’re conveying is false, and it’s clear that you actually did not do a credential check on my background. If you type my name into google, the first thing that comes up is my website. If you click my website and then read my biography, you would see that I did graduate from New York University with a degree in Social and Cultural Analysis with a double concentration in Gender & Sexuality Studies and Africana Studies. While I certainly don’t claim myself to be an expert, I have been trained in discourse surrounding sexuality, and I continue to train, read, etc. on a daily basis. I doubt that Clutch would’ve given me a platform for the last year and a half if I was giving detrimental advice to young black women, along with the numerous other publications and organizations that support my work. Please feel free to research me again, and actually learn about my background before returning to critique my work. And just to make it easier for you, I will actually provide a link to my website since you managed to mysteriously overlook it. http://arielleloren.com

      Arielle Loren

  2. avatar Perverted Alchemist says:

    “Sexual health is a priority; don’t be reckless. Taking risks can feel exhilarating except when it comes to sexual health. Make it a priority to get tested, use protection, and find ways to enjoy safe pleasure. At the end of the day, you only get one body, and how you allow it to be susceptible will influence how long it stays healthy. Love your body through protecting it. And only gift its vulnerability to those who deserve it.”

    This needs to be heard loud and clear!!!!!!

  3. avatar jamesfrmphilly says:

    black people have too much sex. sex and sexiness can be used as a distraction to take you off focus on the real things in life. no one has ever died from lack of sex.

    we do however die from violence in our communities, drugs, poverty and lack of education. if you do not have a degree and a decent job you should not be thinking about sex, you should be working on getting your life together.

    • avatar Nicole Clark says:

      Black people do not have more sex compared to other races. Sexuality is fluid and is more than just unintended pregnancies and sexually transmitted diseases. Sexuality is present throughout the life cycle, and telling people to stop because you think they’re are bigger problems in the world is ridiculous. The fact that the black community feels that sexuality is too taboo to discuss is part of the bigger problem.

      Interesting how the comments to this article that are telling people to watch out for who’s giving you information about sexuality or that there at bigger problems out there are coming from men.

    • avatar apple says:

      shit why can’t we do nothing!?? why we always got to be shamed for doing everything.. boy please

    • avatar jamesfrmphilly says:

      no one has ever died from not having sex……think about it, if you can think

    • avatar apple says:

      i’m a virgin so actually i can think of it. but im just saying just because your skin color doesn’t mean you shouldn’t be able to do what you want with your body

    • avatar mluv says:

      im black and i don’t have sex. so out the window goes your mindless statement.

    • avatar jamesfrmphilly says:

      i’m sayin that black folk in general should take the energy that we put on sex and apply it to making our community better. sex can be used as a distraction. i don’t understand why this is even controversial. if you list the top things that are a problem in the black community lack of sex will not be among them. nor will under population. give it a rest sisters.

    • avatar Nicole says:

      @ jamesfrmphilly, how do you know no one has ever died from lack of sex and what has that got to do with this article or the price of tea in China, for that matter?

      @ Nicole, you’re right, it is interesting to note the people taking issue with this article are men. Sadly, it is a pattern with certain men and throughout history, the agenda is to diminish any idea of sexuality in women. For some men, a woman confident in her own skin, who owns her sexuality, and doesn’t live in shame and fear, is the biggest threat on the planet.

    • avatar Srenda says:

      @jamesfrmphilly actually, you need to give it a rest. How are you going to come on a womens website and dictate what we should be discussing? I mean, really? Are we even a part of your generation?

      There’s a range of thought-provoking topics on this website. Sex is just one of them. People are going to have sex. Telling people to focus on getting their lives together isn’t going to stop them from having sex. It’s only going to irritate them. Talking about unwanted pregnancies, STD’s, poverty, sexual assault, sex abuse are important discussions to have in the context of the black community and sexuality, but the way you are going about it is judgemental, ageist, narrowminded and paternalistic.

      And since you don’t think we can think (being the dirty, nasty, horny black jezebels that we are) what is exactly is your point about no one ever died from not having sex? What does that have to do with the article? No sex=no AIDS? – Okay risk is greatly reduced, yes, got that. Sex isn’t necessary to survive but having a job, is. Okay? But what about the black people who are not only surviving but thriving? Why do you assume everyone has got the same things going on? And why can’t poor black people benefit from this, too? Do we just need to focus on pulling ourselves up by our bootstraps not have sex not have babies, or just have mediocre to bad sex, not be “sexy” and work, work, work? Puhlease.

      In an effort to quit derailing threads about this stuff, jamesfrmphilly, here’s a question for you? Putting all socioeconomic factors aside for a moment, what, (in all of your wisdom) kind of advice do you have for people who want to enhance their sexuality? I’m serious. Like on a practical, physical, emotional, spiritual level, what do you think?

      Now, adding the socioeconomic factors back in, what kind of general advice would you give to sexually active black people about enhancing sexuality, responsibly? Also on a physical, emotional, spiritual level.

      Or more importantly, what do you think about the points that the author, Arielle Loren, took the time to make?

    • avatar jamesfrmphilly says:

      @srenda — “Telling people to focus on getting their lives together isn’t going to stop them from having sex. It’s only going to irritate them”

      you are correct. i do seem to have some angry sisters on my hands. my bad.
      when i was young i would have felt the same way. now that i am older and see what
      time i wasted on sex when i could have accomplished more in life i try to pass it back to the young ones. bad idea. it is not possible to warn young people. too hard headed.

      as for improving sex experience in the current environment, i would point out that the primary sexual organ is between your ears. oops, there i go asking young sisters to think again. i can smell the burning oil and hear the pitchforks.

      i’m out.

    • avatar Srenda says:

      @jamesfrmphilly I respect much of what you just said right here. I think it was more the paternalistic tone that you had originally made me kinda shut down but on further reflection I can see see what you mean more now. There is a huge focus on sex in our society. We are oversaturated with it and it can be a huge distraction, who am I kidding? It is out of balance so figuring out ways to balance everything, having finiancial security a good education, stopping the violence in our communities, etc. as well as loving, intimate relationships is definitely a worthwhile discussion. I think that when young people have a goal for their lives or are nurturing a real passion from early on,(sports, the arts) could help, because then they are putting lots of that creative energy there that they might spend in sexual pursuits or at least balancing them out. And then of course, what is taught in the home. I know groing up in a religious household kept me in line to some extent but it also made me a liar about things I was doing, too.

      And I wholeheartedly agree that the primary sex organ is between the ears, for sure. I think there is a lot young people can learn from our elders about enhancing sexuality in responsible, balanced ways that meet us we’re we are at in this day and age where we are exposed to lots of pornographic images and messages and pressures and it is not so easy all the time to just shut off our desires and do the most sensible things. Of course that comes with age. So we are listening. And I say this as someone not super young but old enough to recognize the truth in what you are saying but young enough to always keep my mind open about these things. See, now, I put my pitchfork away, jamesfrmphilly. Happy New Year!

  4. avatar Rian Nichole says:

    Fine time to post an article about sexuality! The new year is a wonderful time to explore self love and this topic of sexuality is honestly about loving self. This was beautifully stated in the idea of taking time to “massage oils onto your legs after a warm bath”. I reflect on the times when I have taken time to enjoy messaging my feet and legs after a nice shower and it truly exhilarating experience of self-love!!! Keep loving yourself Ladies through the exploration of sexUality :)

  5. avatar Michelle says:

    Love this! If you get down safely and conscientiously, there’s no need for the shame police to get involved. Excellent read. :)

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  7. avatar Lisa says:

    I respect a lot of things the author said, but I don’t understand why the author would encourage bi-curious sex.

  8. avatar Adrienne says:

    I don’t know about talking to my family about sex. Unless by ‘family’ you mean my husband. I’m sure my mom would rather not hear about my sex life!

  9. avatar chanela says:

    “I doubt that Clutch would’ve given me a platform for the last year and a half if I was giving detrimental advice to young black women” really??? oh okay.lol

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