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Nadia Bokody: Sex act women don’t like men doing

When it comes to sex, preferences can vary – except when it comes to this one bedroom behaviour men are often guilty of.

Nadia Bokody: 'Toxic relationship habit most women have'

There’s a faded streak of pink lip-gloss above my bedhead.

It got there via a night of awkward sex, during which I face-planted the wall against my bed.

It was one of many uncomfortable, cringe-inducing sexual encounters with men whom I didn’t have the heart to inform were working in the wrong permit zone.

I was also painfully aware that, every time I faked my way through a night with a dude treating my body like a DJ booth, I was participating in my own sexual disappointment, while undoubtedly facilitating the future let-downs of women who would come (or, more accurately: not come) after me.

Journalist and sex expert Nadia Bokody. Picture: Instagram/NadiaBokody
Journalist and sex expert Nadia Bokody. Picture: Instagram/NadiaBokody

I began writing this column in no small part, to confront that; to say things I hadn’t felt confident enough to articulate in bed. Things I knew other women couldn’t find the words to say, either.

But even now, a decade into voicing what we’ve traditionally been taught to leave unsaid, we’re barely breaking ground. Silence and performative pleasure still permeate our bedrooms.

Perhaps because we’re yet to fully normalise women assertively asking for what we want without being branded difficult or unpalatable.

A tweet that went viral this past week is testament to that. In it, a guy asks: “Ladies: what are the sexual acts you think men should stop during sex? Honest feedback.”

The answers are not particularly revolutionary – from requesting gentler clitoral stimulation (or, as one woman put it: “don’t sandpaper it. You’re not a carpenter”) to putting an end to rushed foreplay.

The now-viral tweet asked women, ‘What are the sexual acts you think men should stop doing?’ Picture: iStock.
The now-viral tweet asked women, ‘What are the sexual acts you think men should stop doing?’ Picture: iStock.

Many of the responses call for a ban on guys replicating sex acts commonly seen in porn, too – like slapping, choking and spitting: “You’re supposed to just grab [my breasts] not slap,” insists one female Twitter user – highlighting the dissonance between what men are shown on screen, and authentic female pleasure.

In short, there’s nothing eye-opening about the content of the thread. What’s startling, is the fact women seem to feel safer anonymously sharing basic sexual needs on the internet, than they do at home with their own partners.

It’s even more unnerving women are participating in sex acts they not only don’t enjoy, but that include physical discomfort, distress or pain.

Many of the Twitter response allude to this, sharing “it hurts when …” and “please be gentler when …”.

Women can often find themselves participating in sex acts that they don’t enjoy, or even find painful, writes Nadia. Picture: Instagram/Nadia Bokody.
Women can often find themselves participating in sex acts that they don’t enjoy, or even find painful, writes Nadia. Picture: Instagram/Nadia Bokody.

A 2019 survey by research group Savanta ComRes confirms just how pervasive this issue is. It found more than a third of women have experienced unwanted slapping, choking, gagging or spitting during consensual sex.

I’ve noticed this topic coming up in the conversations I’m having with my peers more in the past few years, too.

A friend recently remarked over drinks, “Guys are so into choking right now.”

When I pressed her on how she’d come to this deduction, she answered, “The last three men I’ve slept with have all tried to choke me without asking, the first time we had sex.”

To be clear, I don’t take issue with women participating in erotic asphyxiation. I’ve been known to consensually partake in it myself when the mood strikes.

What troubles me about the dialogue women are having around sex today, is the lack of communication there appears to be when it comes to fundamental concerns like consent and comfort.

Though I regularly hear it from male readers, it’s crude to suggest the solution to this issue lies in women simply speaking up in bed. (As one man comically offered, “My wife never bloody shuts up! So why is she all of a sudden mute in bed??)

We need to instead ask ourselves why women don’t feel safe enough to be doing that in the first place.

More so, we need men to be proactive in creating spaces for women to vocalise the things that are being left unsaid around pleasure, comfort and consent.

One man who added to the thread perhaps said it best when he tweeted: “There’s no manual to satisfying a woman. Just ask her how she likes it and do it how she likes it.”

Follow Nadia Bokody on Instagram and YouTube for more sex, relationship and mental health content.

Originally published as Nadia Bokody: Sex act women don’t like men doing

Original URL: https://www.goldcoastbulletin.com.au/lifestyle/nadia-bokody-sex-act-women-dont-like-men-doing/news-story/8ccd876989ce7930b4e946a0769febb2