NSFW Lesbosexy Sunday Wants To Be Pinned Down

Welcome to NSFW Sunday!

Let’s Talk About Sex
Do Tell, an extension of Subjectified: Nine Young Women Talk about Sex, is a new story-sharing Tumblr project that wants individuals to talk about their sexual experiences of all kinds:

“Why? Because we live in a sex-saturated culture with precious little honest and authentic discussion of sexuality. Because speaking our truths, with all their complications and imperfections and beauty, challenges a culture of shame that impacts us every day. Because our voices and our histories matter.”

How To Deal
At the Toast, Mallory has some particularly awesome advice on what happens if you suddenly start being attracted to people of new genders:

“I don’t know why it hasn’t happened earlier for you; I also don’t think being “well-adjusted sexually” is necessarily a fixed and universal thing, since having sex is an entirely distinct proposition with each new partner, so don’t feel worried that you weren’t so well-adjusted you didn’t adjust yourself into homosexuality at the age of nine. What has happened has happened; what is happening now is happening now, and it’s fine. Being a lesbian isn’t necessarily like joining the Jets; you’re not one all the way from your first cigarette to your last dying day. You’ll have particularly gay days; you may have particularly gay years or relationships or seasons or afternoons, and there’s nothing to be done about it. Date as many women as you find yourself interested in for as long as you like. Be honest, be kind, and be patient with yourself and with them in bed. You’ll figure out what works for you and I am sure you will find yourself with as many receptive, communicative, enthusiastic lesbian sex chums as you desire.”

Lingerie Advice
If you are into wearing lingerie but your activity partner is ambivalent about it at best, the Lingerie Lesbian has some advice:

“Honestly, if you want your partner to take an interest, it helps if you tell them. Lingerie sometimes has a weird aura around it, so if you want your partner to give you positive feedback or notice when you have something new, mention it! Straight up communication goes a long way. […]

When I talked to my girlfriend about this subject she referenced a ‘tightrope between enjoying and objectifying’ as an explanation of why she was originally hesitant to express appreciation for lingerie. Lingerie can have a excessively sexually adventurous connotation that can make a partner who is unfamiliar hesitant to engage.”

Femme Sex Week
If you missed Queer Fat Femme‘s Femme Sex Week, now’s a good time to catch up! In one post, femmes answer the question “what do you think about when you masturbate?“:

“All sorts of things! butch & femme & genderqueer daddies punishing me for being bad, humiliation, face riding, all manner of power dynamics (locker room scenes, the overwrought trope of teacher/student, once I even thought about my boo & I playing out some kind of kinky red riding hood scene in which they were the big bad wolf & I was “fleeing” from them.. hot!). Femme on femme action: glitter, messy lipstick everywhere, those beautiful glass octopussy dildos, big heart pillows, a canopy bed. Shower sex: with those suction handcuffs! sex in a big ass clawfoot tub full of bubbles & petals sometimes rocks my self-fucking world.”

Body Acceptance
Bare to Bush, an anonymous tumblr loosely about body acceptance, wrote about posed and unposed nude photos (and took some):

When we look at naked people on the internet (be it porn stars, ‘selfies’ taken by internet-famous bloggers, or professional freelance models), they are almost always in these poses that elongate the body, stretch out the muscles, show off the ribs, push the breasts forward and hide all of those squishy rolls that happen when we relax. I am not attacking them, so please don’t feel defensive if those are the kinds of photos you are a part of. They’re beautiful, I have no problem with them. I just feel called to point out that a body that looks so ‘sexy’ or ‘slender’ or ‘desirable’ in one picture, can look squishy, vulnerable and saggy in the next just by letting go of a pose. No one wants to post those pictures, those are the ones you delete before they’re even out of the camera. No one wants to say, ‘Hey! Here’s a selfie of how my tummy puffs out and look, can you see the stretch marks on my breasts!?’

I took both of those pictures this morning, minutes apart. They’re both me. They’re both completely unedited. They are simply meant to show the difference between a body that is carefully designed to be sexy and well-received, and a body that is just sitting there being a naked body on a bed in the morning.

She also wrote a follow-up post about the different ways breasts can look at different angles, which is maybe old news if you have breasts but also affirming to see in photos.

The Case For Good Sex Awards
A nominee for the Bad Sex Awards writes about why there should be Good Sex Awards:

“Sexual longings, sexual fears and sexual joy are all a huge part of our dealings with each other. […]

If there’s a value in novelists writing about sex then how are these awards helping? “Britain’s most dreaded literary prize,” the Huffington Post calls it. The danger is that the dread, the hurt inflicted, or merely the fear of the hurt, casts a chill shadow over writers as they consider whether or not to follow their characters into the bedroom. Mockery is a powerful weapon.

If the Literary Review cares about literature, and not just about having a good party, let its editors institute alongside the Bad Sex award a Good Sex award.”

All of the photographs on NSFW Sundays are taken from various tumblrs and do not belong to us. All are linked and credited to the best of our abilities in hopes of attracting more traffic to the tumblrs and photographers who have blessed us with this imagery. The inclusion of a photograph here should not be interpreted as an assertion of the model’s gender identity or sexual orientation. If there is a photo included here that belongs to you and you want it removed, please email bren [at] autostraddle dot com and it will be removed promptly, no questions asked.

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Ryan Yates

Ryan Yates was the NSFW Editor (2013–2018) and Literary Editor for Autostraddle.com, with bylines in Nylon, Refinery29, The Toast, Bitch, The Daily Beast, Jezebel, and elsewhere. They live in Los Angeles and also on twitter and instagram.

Ryan has written 1142 articles for us.

12 Comments

  1. …so, apparently Anonymous Tumblr Poster has, um, been taking pictures of my breasts when I’m not looking? Cos those look awfully familiar. Weird or affirming, YOU DECIDE.

  2. In the Bare to Bush, I think they forgot one thing that can effect how you look and are shaped to a certain extent, and that is the focal length on the camera. Wider focal lengths(like the ones on phones), while get more of the person into the frame, they distort(and that can vary a bit depending on camera itself too). I have seen fashion photography images taken with a Nokia phone, and the subjects looked a bit more narrow, while being a bit longer, like an equine like(though I feel that is offensive). Distortion could be the same on the body using the same camera, standing a similar distance away.

  3. Hot damn, number six.

    Also, I read the rest of Queer Fat Femme’s post, and holy cow did I identify with the blurb written by the person who was raised Catholic. Also the fanfiction one, minus the tentacles.

  4. Fact One: Lesbosexy and I have all the same wants.
    Fact Two: Lesbosexy and I have never been witnessed in the same room together.

    There’s only one logical conclusion here. I AM LESBOSEXY

Comments are closed.