Untying Our Tongues
While non-verbal signaling can be effective, nothing is faster and more clear than explaining exactly what you like.
Our research shows that women who gave specific details about what makes sex more pleasurable for them were eight times more likely to be happier in their relationships and six times more likely to be sexually satisfied.
But it can be tricky. We don’t always have practice being so frank with our language in bed and there often aren’t words for the specific things that feel good. Imagine sharing a recipe without having names for any of the ingredients!
With Clothes On
Even people who don’t like talking in bed find ways to explain what they like. Many women say that phone sex with their partner is the best way to figure out and say the things that turn them on the most. Others like to explain what they like with their clothes on, as a flirtation and foreplay.
Naming What Feels Good
Let’s say you’re exploring and you find something that feels really good. Many women find it extremely helpful to name it - and then share that name with their partner. That way, they can refer back to it and both understand what it is. And it becomes more concrete when you have a specific name instead of the all-too-common, “I like that one thing you did...”
Because, let’s face it, sometimes a woman doesn’t really want to say, “If you could please use your tongue to do alternating circles around my clit, that would be excellent.” But if there’s a mutually understood word that translates to different-sized circles around her clit, then it doesn’t feel as awkward.
“One night my partner was going down on me and for a moment, he pressed upward on the skin over my clit this certain way - and it made my clit feel totally different as he licked. It felt more amazing than anything we’d done before. So I said, ‘keep doing the push up like that’ and ever since we both know ‘the push up’ and because we have a word for it, we can go back to it and I can ask for it with a single word.”
Directional Feedback
Think about when someone asks you to scratch their back. It wouldn’t work if you just scratched different ways and asked the yes/no question, “Does that feel good?” over and over. And it also wouldn’t work if they continually said, “No,” “Uhh, no,” “Nope.” Or if they just said, “Yup,” at the first scratch, whether it really got to the itch or not.
The way to get that great, satisfying scratch is by giving and getting specific feedback like, “Lower, a little lower... yes, but harder. Yes!”
Many women say it’s the same thing in bed. Encouraging but specific feedback is what really helps partners increase the pleasure.
For partners, an easy way to get this kind of feedback is with directional questions like, “Higher like this or lower like this?” or “Faster like this or slow like this?” These kinds of questions are much easier to answer, too.