I've been married for almost seven years and want to tell my husband that I'm not having fun in bed anymore. How do I explain to him that I want our love life to be more interesting?
Best answer:
Answer by Miss Priss Just tell him. Suggest specific things you'd like to do - dress up? Toys? etc.
I think that men, if anything, LIKE to hear that their woman wants to do something a little adventurous. Just don't say something like "Well you suck, so you need to do better."
My boyfriend and I only recently began having sex, and it can be painful at times because his penis is rather on the large side, in both length and girth. The pressure against my cervix is painful, and I'm sometimes sore afterward.
What can we do to make it so that it doesn't hurt me? Are there any positions we should try?
Best answer:
Answer by Tara662 Do it with you on top. That way you can control the action and how far penetration goes.
Question by Irenie Leigh: Kids having sex at a very young age, who's responsibility is this?
I was watching "Maury" today, and there was an episode about out of control teenagers. These girls were 12,13,14 years old and all claimed to have slept with multiple partners (One of them even had a baby at 13 and didn't know who the father was)!
Honestly, at that age I think the parents are for the most part responsible, I know you can't keep an eye on your kid every minute, but if I had a child that age they would sure as hell not be in situations that could lead to having sex.
Question by Mary: I just saw flies have sex, but a Google search tells me they don't..?
There have been two flies flying around my computer for the past two days. The other day, they spiraled around each other buzzing and then one "mounted" the other one mid-air for like a second. I thought maybe it was fighting or mating, but wasn't sure.
So today, the same flies did it again, except, one fly landed on my desk and the other mounted it for like three seconds, and then they flew away. Are they having sex? Or fighting? They're ordinary house flies. An online search said that a female lays eggs and the male then finds the eggs and fertilizes them. So, they're not supposed to have sex.
Best answer:
Answer by John R Of course flies have sex. Where would little maggots come from?
Horny South Indian Actress getting hardcore Romance by a lover,Enjoy this very intimate love making scene where the guy slowly removes her clothes,squeezes her thighs,boobs and kisses her gently making her all wet,and moaning..
I really want to see this film. I am pratically 14 and very mature when it comes to sex scenes. But my aunt would like to know. Thank you all so much for your answers and have a good night!
Best answer:
Answer by PianoMuser⥠You don't really see any body parts. You just see Mila Kunis go down on Natalie Portman and eat her out. There were more graphic parts than that, violence-wise.
edit: ARRRGGGH I ALWAYS MIX THOSE TWO UP...IM SORRY!
Know better? Leave your own answer in the comments!
The male peafowl, or peacock, has long been known for and valued for its brilliant tail feathers. The bright spots on it are known as "eyes", and inspired the Greek myth that Hera placed the hundred eyes of her slain giant Argus on the tail of her favorite bird. Close-up of a male Indian Peafowl's plumage
Indian Peafowl has iridescent blue-green or green coloured plumage. The so-called "tail" of the peacock, also termed the "train," is not the tail quill feathers but highly elongated upper tail feather coverts. The train feathers have a series of eyes that are best seen when the train is fanned. The actual tail feathers are short and gray-colored and can be seen from behind when a peacock's train is fanned in a courtship display. During the molting season, the males shed their stunning train feathers and reveal the unassuming gray-colored tail which is normally hidden from view beneath the train. Both species have a crest atop the head.
The female (peahen) Indian Peafowl has a mixture of dull green, brown, and grey in her plumage. She lacks the long upper tail feather coverts of the male but has a crest. The female can also display her plumage to ward off female competition or danger to her young.
The Green Peafowl is very different in appearance to the Indian Peafowl. The male has green and gold plumage and has an erect crest. The wings are black with a sheen of blue.
Unlike the Indian Peafowl, the Green Peahen is very similar to the male, only having shorter upper tail feather coverts and slightly less iridescent in some regions. Like other peafowl, it is very difficult to distinguish a juvenile male from an adult female. Moreover, the sexes of the various Green Peafowl species are almost impossible to tell apart in the field during the months when the male has no train.
Many of the brilliant colours of the peacock plumage are due to an optical interference phenomenon (Bragg reflection) based on (nearly) periodic nanostructures found in the barbules (fiber-like components) of the feathers.
Different colours correspond to different length scales of the periodic structures. For brown feathers, a mixture of red and blue is required: one colour is created by the periodic structure, and the other is a created by a Fabry-Perot interference peak from reflections off the outermost and innermost boundaries of the periodic structure.[citation needed]
Such interference-based structural colour is especially important in producing the peacock's iridescent hues (which shimmer and change with viewing angle), since interference effects depend upon the angle of light, unlike chemical pigments.
The plumage of the peacock, and the peahen's preference for its exorbitance, is a classical example of sexual selection and especially the handicap principle. However, in recent years scientific research has shown that the size and brilliance of a male's plumage does not meaningfully correlate with his mating success nor his health, and that instead the key factor for attracting females is the vocalizations made prior to mating.
source: wiki
184_7422 are you photographing me
Image by Kate's Photo Diary
The Rainbow Lorikeet is unmistakable with its bright red beak and colourful plumage. Both sexes look alike, with a blue (mauve) head and belly, green wings, tail and back, and an orange/yellow breast. They are often seen in loud and fast-moving flocks, or in communal roosts at dusk. The Rainbow Lorikeet occurs in coastal regions across northern and eastern Australia, with a local population in Perth (Western Australia), initiated from aviary releases. The Rainbow Lorikeet mostly forages on the flowers of shrubs or trees to harvest nectar and pollen, but also eats fruits, seeds and some insects. The eggs of the Rainbow Lorikeet are laid on chewed, decayed wood, usually in a hollow limb of a eucalypt tree. Both sexes prepare the nest cavity and feed the young, but only the female incubates the eggs. The Rainbow Lorikeet has acclimatised well to urbanisation and is commonly encountered in well-treed suburbs. www.birdsinbackyards.net/finder/display.cfm?id=97
Meghan & Me
Image by swirlspice
There's a story about a ski trip we all went on a long time ago and Meghan (Maureen's little sister) came with us. The word "cleaning" became a euphemism for sex and even though this is only the second or third time most of us have ever hung out with Meghan, she will forever be associated with "cleaning."