4 Ways to Turn Yourself On (for Hotter Solo Sex)
Photo courtesy of Michael Donovan/The Licensing Project
You don’t go from 0 to 100 in 10 seconds with a partner. And when you’re solo, it’s no different: It takes time to get your engine running. We asked four sex experts for their best advice on how to get ready for a date with yourself (and your favorite toy).
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Where to Start
Kiana Reeves
Certified sexological bodyworker, birth doula, and chief content officer at Foria
“The first piece is recognizing what a deeply heightened state of arousal feels like and giving yourself the time to get there. In highly aroused states, which is where you experience the most pleasurable sensation and the most intense orgasms, your vulva will feel engorged and your clitoris will have a little bit of an erection; it’ll feel fuller and firmer and have more height to it.
“To activate deeply heightened arousal, you use your largest sex organ—your brain. Maybe you’re playing with fantasies that could be a little edgy for you, trusting that your mind will lead you to places that are important to explore. Making it a full-body experience naturally builds in the time factor: You’re going to spend more time touching yourself if you’re touching different parts of your body. Bringing in your breasts, your nipples, your thigh, your butt, your feet, your scalp…there are so many erogenous stones on the body. Lastly, find products or toys that work for you. Maybe it’s your hand one day; maybe it’s a vibrator that you really love another day. Maybe it’s an arousal oil—we have a phenomenal one at Foria.”
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Reeves’s pick:
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The Reiki Master’s Advice
Daydree Horner
Certified life coach and Reiki master teacher
“In order to unfold to your bliss like a butterfly, it’s best to release your cocoon of stress and anxiety. Start sitting or lying down; place your hands on your second chakra, which is your lower abdomen; and close your eyes. Take some nice, long, deep breaths. Gently give a push down, almost like you’re going to the bathroom. That’s going to create pressure. Take more long, deep breaths. That’s the most important step—more than music, scent, or any object: relaxation. Although the rabbit has always been good to me.”
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Connect to Your Turn-On Language
Shan Boodram
sexologist, intimacy expert, and host of Lovers and Friends with Shan Boodram
“Think about what turns you on with a partner, and don’t feel like you have to rewrite that script. My turn-on language is desire: feeling like I am sexy and desirable. Some people are more sensory. Some people are sapiosexuals, so they feel the potential for arousal when they have a mentally stimulating conversation with someone. Knowing that language, how do you find a similar way to create that dynamic with yourself? If I like when my partner compliments me or gives me affirmations, that’s what I do for myself before I even touch my body.”
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Get into Your Head
Laurie Watson, PhD, LMFT
Certified sex therapist, founder and director of Awakenings Counseling for Couples and Sexuality, and host of Foreplay Radio
“Women have to arouse their mind, or often their body just won’t respond. What I hear from my clients is that they respond most to building a fantasy—about their partner, a taboo act, a memory from the past, something that they’d like to try in the future—although women can be and are often aroused by sight. A few women that I talk to do watch porn. Or picture a hot body. Or read romantic novels, which you can tailor to your taste, from simple innuendo to very explicit.”
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