The Naked Truth: 6 Ways Sleeping Nude Can Transform Your Sex Life for the Better (4 minute read) 3. Your genitals will thank you for it

Article written by:  Tee Mugay; A freelance designer/artist and private pilot.

 

You have probably heard about the supposed health benefits of sleeping naked: improved circulation, better skin, and a heightened sense of well-being.

But did you know sleeping naked has other benefits that are sexual in nature?

What’s more, making sleeping naked a habit with your partner provides you with not only the benefits you get when sleeping solo, but it can even catapult your intimacy levels to heights you never thought possible.

How so, I hear you ask? Well, read on to find out.

1. Being nude together is just damn hot, period

Nothing beats the sexy feeling of cuddling up close with your partner fully nude.

The warmth radiating from each other’s bodies, the skin-to-skin contact; it all screams sensuality like nothing else. It’s definitely not the same as cuddling fully clothed.

Being nude distinctively implies sexuality. It’s a lot easier to get frisky when the artificial barrier of clothing is out of the way.

Plus, seeing your partner prance around the bedroom naked is visually alluring, much more than seeing them stubble around in ill-fitting pajamas.

2. It will elevate your connection

Besides making it easier and more likely for you to engage in sex, sleeping naked has been shown to improve bonding between couples.

Humans are naturally touchy-feely creatures. Touch is such a powerful tool that children who lack touch in their formative years grow up with significant negative consequences to their development and well-being.

Numerous studies, including this one published in the National Library of Medicine, show that skin-to-skin contact releases oxytocin, colloquially referred to as the “love hormone.”

Essentially, by not sleeping nude, you are probably doing yourself and your relationship a disservice.

3. Your genitals will thank you for it

This is not a direct sexual benefit, the benefits are more indirect, but it’s still important enough to include it as a benefit.

Genital health matters. There is no debating that.

For women, ditching restrictive bedwear for the buff means better airflow and less clothing friction to your neither regions. This, in turn, promotes natural lubrication, something needed for satisfying sex, as well as a reduced risk of yeast infection.

For men, the testicles require a cool temperature compared to the rest of your body to produce healthy sperm. Wearing underwear or clothing can not only increase the scrotum temperature leading to less than stellar sperm, but tight underwear can also figuratively “choke” your balls by compressing the delicate tissues and blood vessels around that area. This can lead to discomfort, pain, and even damage to the testicles over time.

Oh, and never mind that genitals that are left to breathe just smell better no matter your gender.

4. Boost your testosterone levels

Researchers from the University of Chicago found it took sleeping only 5 hours per day for one week to see testosterone levels fall 10 to 15 percent. Considering testosterone is responsible for maintaining libido, good mood, energy levels, and potent erections, any lowering beyond what happens naturally with age is never a good thing.

Sleeping in your birthday suit can offset some of these problems by helping your body reach optimum temperature allowing for longer quality sleep.

5. Reduces anxiety and helps you relax

Earlier, I briefly mentioned that mood is correlated with sleep, or lack of it.

And the same goes for stress and anxiety. Though to be fair, the scientific research on this particular issue is still limited and not conclusive.

But based on the countless conversations I have had, including my own experiences; sleeping naked next to your lover after hustling and bustling all day is the epitome of relaxation. It’s near impossible to feel anxious and stressed when engaging in some skinship with your partner.

6. Elevate self-esteem

It’s often said; the best type of love is the love you have for yourself.

I’m going to go a bit further and say that love should also include bodily love.

You see, if you want higher quality sex, and more frequent orgasms, particularly if you are a woman, you need to have confidence not only in yourself but in how you look and move, flaws and all.

One way of gaining this confidence is by getting comfortable with your body, no filters, no makeup, just you the way you are.

And the easiest way to get comfortable in your skin is to spend more time with it — literally.

There is no magic pill to having a better body image. It’s as simple as spending as much time seeing yourself naked.

Sleeping naked does take getting used to

I will admit sleeping naked does take some getting used to, especially if you have never done it before.

It certainly doesn’t help that nudity is not something readily promoted within popular culture, as it is anything sexual…chalk this one off to our hard-to-shake puritanical past.

That being said, just because sleeping nude feels alien doesn’t mean it’s not worth giving a try.

You can take baby steps, removing individual pieces of clothing and seeing how it feels. The more comfortable you get, the more you can remove. Before you know it, you will be sleeping in the buff and reaping all the benefits that come along with it.

Closing the Orgasm Gap: She Comes First!

Closing the Orgasm Gap! How to make a Woman
Happy in Bed! She comes First.

American women don’t cum as often as men. It’s a fact. I learned that first in Becoming Cliterate: Why Orgasm Equality Matters — And How to Get It by Laurie Mintz, PhD, who doesn’t mince words.

“In one recent survey of thousands of women and men, 64 percent of women versus 91 percent of men said they’d had an orgasm during their most recent sexual encounter,” she says on page 2.

Honestly, that number seemed high to me. Sixty percent of women are cumming during sex? Could that translate to six out of 10 times for me? Probably not. Math doesn’t work like that. But in any case, I don’t often cum, and I’ve been investigating why.

This doesn’t mean I don’t like sex. I very much like being stroked and petted, kissed, admired, loved, held, spanked (!), desired, penetrated and all the other physical and emotional interactions that can accompany sex. Still, the big O is rare for me, and I’d like to change that stat.

According to Mintz, I’m not unusual.

“In another recent survey of two thousand straight women: 57 percent said they orgasm most or every time they have sex with a partner, while 95 percent said their partner orgasms most or every time.”

The numbers are even worse when it comes to first-time hook-up sex when only 4 percent of women vs. 55 percent of men report they usually have an orgasm.

The primary reason for the orgasm gap is that we privilege the most common way cis men reach orgasm — penetration — and undervalue the most common way cis women reach orgasm — clitoral stimulation, Mintz says.

That male privilege is so baked into the way we view sex that we literally call vaginal or anal penetration “sex” and clitoral stimulation something else.

When I was a young woman in the 70s, clitoral stimulation was called “foreplay” and penetration was called “sex.” Foreplay was optional. What mattered was sex. Everything led up to the male ejaculation, and once that happened, sex was over.

I clearly remember talking to a cherished boyfriend about this. We were sitting beside a river in my hometown after having sex outdoors — one of my favorite activities. I was feeling blissful and satisfied. He’d cum in my vagina, and afterward I’d brought myself to orgasm with my hand. But he soon cast a pall on my pleasure by telling me that he didn’t approve of me giving myself a hand job.

“It makes me feel inadequate,” he said. And that was the end of that. I put my clitoral stimulation — and my orgasms — away. I surely didn’t want to make my partner feel inadequate. If I did, I’d be failing my job as a woman! Or at least that’s what I thought then, and probably still do, subconsciously. And judging by the number of women who report faking orgasm, so do the vast majority of women.

According to one (admittedly small) study, eighty percent of women fake orgasm during vaginal intercourse at least half the time, and 20 percent of women fake it 90 percent of the time.

The idea that women should be able to cum via penetration alone is still widespread — and not remotely true. In fact, 95% of women require clitoral stimulation to reach orgasm, according to Mintz.

Reading that stat brought to mind a recent sexual encounter. My partner was sitting up on the couch, and I was riding him — sitting on his lap, facing him—when, miracle of miracles, I came! Afterward, he was very curious about what was different this time that brought me over the finish. Was it him sweetly suckling my breasts? Cupping my ass cheeks? Pushing his magical cock deep inside? Nope. What brought me off was my ability to control the rhythm while rubbing my clit against his belly in this particular angle and position.

Thesis confirmed.

Considering the primacy of clitoral stimulation in female orgasm, Mintz makes an interesting suggestion. Try this thought experiment: How about we called clitoral stimulation “sex,” and vaginal penetration and male ejaculation “postplay?” That would change things up a bit.

Mintz is not saying she wants women to have more orgasms than men. She’d just like parity. And if women did cum as often as men, it seems to me that the myriad benefits to their health and well being would ripple out to all of humankind.

With that idea in mind — and a newfound credo that I should cum every time we have sex, too — I proposed a different sexual sequence to my husband. How about we take the time to stimulate my clit and bring me to orgasm in the beginning, before we move on to penetration?

He was happy with that idea, and the first time we tried it, we got great results, i.e., we both came. But the next time I gave the new sequence a go, with our mutual lover (we’re consensually non-monogamous), I felt anxious about taking too long and directed him to go ahead and put it in before I found my bliss.

“Don’t worry about me!” he said afterward. “I’ll tell you if I’m tired or bored.”

But I do worry about him and his pleasure, even more than I worry about my own. (Typical.) As it turns out, anxiety about taking too long to cum is not uncommon in women. And once again, it’s because we privilege the male experience. On average, it takes men 5–10 minutes to achieve orgasm, so that’s what we consider “normal,” yet women take about 20 minutes with a partner to get the same result. (But they can get themselves off in four.)

As that anecdote shows, it’s not ONLY lack of clitoral stimulation that creates the orgasm gap between cis men and cis women. Many other factors come into play, including “poor body image, slut shaming, the idea that women’s role is to please men, and poor sexual communication,” according to Mintz.

But the good news is all those are factors that can be changed. There’s no physical, biological, or irreversible reason that women aren’t having as many orgasms as men. It’s possible to reach orgasm parity if we want to. And I’m currently doing research toward that end.

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