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Authors: Ian Kerner

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17
 

O
RAL SEX
in America, especially cunnilingus, has come a long, long way.

Back in the 1920s, oral sex (also known as the “genital kiss”) was thought to be an activity best left to the marital bed, and was largely deemed a special gesture, a bonus expression of intimacy, but not necessarily a regular part of a couple’s sexual practices. It was definitely not a casual activity, and was usually thought to be something that occurred after a couple was already having intercourse in a committed relationship.

So much for the
Roaring
Twenties. Sounds more like the Boring Twenties.

Attitudes began to ease a bit in the 1940s and 1950s, with studies showing that oral sex was becoming more prevalent and better known as a technique that was especially satisfying for women. Even so, in a 1953
Kinsey Report,
only 3 percent of younger women who
were still virgins reported ever receiving cunnilingus. The rate was substantially higher among married women.

During the sexual revolution of the 1960s and 1970s, oral sex evolved into an acceptable practice for
all
couples, whether or not they were married. It became particularly popular on college campuses, and maybe that’s why to this day, according to the authors of
Sex in America: A Definitive Survey,
“Twice as many women who went to college have given or received oral sex as compared to those who did not finish high school and twice as many of those better-educated women had or received oral sex the last time they had sex.”

Whereas men’s rates of receiving oral sex peaked and leveled out in the 1960s, it appears that women spent the remainder of the twentieth century catching up, with rates steadily rising year after year. Today, cunnilingus is considered to be an important part of the arousal process, with enlightened and sexually confident women insisting on quid pro quo—giving according to how they receive. “If there has been any basic change in the script for sex between men and women, it is the increase in the incidence and frequency of fellatio and cunnilingus.” (
Sex in America
)

From the conservative to the liberal, women of all stripes enjoy cunnilingus. In examining contemporary sexual mores, the authors of the 1994
Sex in America Survey
(based on the
National Health and Social Life Survey
) grouped their participants into three different categories: traditional, relational, and recreational.

The traditionalists were those people who maintained that their religious beliefs
always
guided their sexual behavior and believed that homosexuality was wrong; they also believed in restrictions on abortion and did not condone premarital sex, teenage sex, or extramarital sex.

Relationalists believed that sex did not have to be reserved for marriage, but that it should be part of a loving relationship. They condoned premarital sex, but did not condone infidelity or sex without love.

Finally, the recreationalists did not believe that sex need have anything to do with love, and they also opposed laws that prohibited the sale of pornography.

Based on these categories, 83.6 percent of those women with a recreational attitude had experienced oral sex in the last year, followed by 73.9 percent of women who were relational, and 55.9 percent of women with traditional views.

If we look at the numbers in terms of age, 74.7 percent of women from eighteen to twenty-four received oral sex, compared with 73.7 percent of women aged thirty to thirty-four. Women and men aged eighteen to thirty-nine were most likely to include cunnilingus in their sex lives, with 22.3 percent to 24.2 percent reporting having done it during their last sexual experience. Conversely, for women aged forty to forty-four, the rate fell to 12.6 percent. So it would appear that the younger you are the more likely you are to have experienced cunnilingus, and the more likely you are to have experienced it earlier in your lifetime.

As Nancy Friday wrote of cunnilingus in her 1991 book
Women on Top,
“Women have finally come of age. Having discovered it, they can’t get enough.”

Nor, it seems, can men, for that matter. Happily, this adoption of cunnilingus as a regular part of sexual activity is not just a function of young women becoming more confident and assertive in their demand for a level playing field, but is also indicative of a shift in male attitudes.

As men become more sensitive to the importance of the female orgasm, and recognize the unreliability of genital intercourse in achieving one, they increasingly incorporate cunnilingus into their repertoire of sexual techniques. As
Glamour
magazine noted in their 1997 feature “Good News About Your Sex Life,” “A majority of men say they enjoy performing oral sex,” and numerous studies report that men describe giving oral sex as very appealing.

If you think it all sounds too good to be true, you’re right…

18
 

I
F YOU GIVE
or receive cunnilingus casually, in an unsafe, unprotected environment, you are willfully placing yourself in a high-risk category for the transmission and/or contraction of an STD, including: AIDS, gonorrhea, syphilis, genital herpes, chlamydia, genital warts, and hepatitis. (Men also need to worry about nongonococcal urethritis, whereas women should be more than a little concerned about pelvic inflammatory disease.) Of these diseases, gonorrhea, syphilis, chlamydia, nongonococcal urethritis, and pelvic inflammatory disease are caused by the transmission of bacteria and can be cured with antibiotics if caught early enough; the rest are viral and without cure, although in some cases the symptoms are treatable. These STDs are highly contagious and can be transmitted from vulva to mouth and vice versa.

These days AIDS seems to garner most of the attention, but according to the
Sex in America Survey,
“The people who are most
likely to be infected with sexually transmitted diseases are not the same group who are at risk for AIDS—they are a much larger group.”

That’s not to say there isn’t any risk of contracting or transmitting AIDS via cunnilingus. Vaginal secretions of women who are HIV positive have been found to contain small amounts of HIV (with the amounts rising when she is menstruating), and HIV positive men can also transmit the virus via cuts in the mouth.

But unprotected cunnilingus places you at greater risk for a far wider array of STDs. Of those participants surveyed in the NSHLS survey, one in six said they had had an STD at some point in their lives, with a significant percentage reporting having had one in the last year. “To put the numbers in perspective, nearly as many said they had had a venereal disease in the last year as said they had been pregnant in the last year.” (
Sex in America Survey
)

Based on the numbers, it appears that women are more likely to have had at least one STD at some point in their lives. They were twice as likely as men to have had genital warts, and more than twice as likely to be infected with genital herpes. Overall, 18 percent of women and 16 percent of men have contracted one of the nine sexually transmitted diseases covered in the survey, with chlamydia and genital warts taking the top spots, displacing the formerly more common gonorrhea. The authors of
Sex in America
emphasize that the higher rate of STDs in women is by no means an indication of higher promiscuity, but rather that “it is at least twice as easy for a man to infect a woman with virtually any sexually transmitted disease, including AIDS, than it is for a woman to infect a man.”

Fortunately, it’s possible to pinpoint the attitudes and practices that increase the likelihood of being at risk for an STD versus those that don’t. “Although we find that large numbers of Americans have had a sexually transmitted disease at least once in their lives, there is nothing random about where the diseases strike…the people who are most likely to be infected share one key characteristic: They have many sex partners.”

If a man has two to four sexual partners in his lifetime, his chances of contracting an STD are about 3 percent. As the number of partners increases, so does the risk. With more than twenty partners, his risk is about 28 percent. The same rough pattern is true of women, with the spectrum of percentages increasing from 5 to 35 percent.

It should therefore come as no surprise that the more partners a person has had, the more likely that he or she has engaged with those partners outside of a monogamous relationship, and that his or her partner falls into a similar pattern of promiscuity, thereby greatly increasing the risk of having come into contact with an STD.

As it turns out, promiscuity triggers a domino effect of risky behaviors: “The more partners an individual has, the more likely he or she is to have sex with people who themselves have many partners, the more likely he or she is to have sex with virtual strangers, the more likely she or he is to have been under the influence of drugs or alcohol during some sexual encounters, and while it is more likely that a condom was used, the rate of increased use of a condom does not seem great enough to offset the higher risks of infection.” (
Sex in America Survey
)

Now you know the facts.

19
 

C
UNNILINGUS MAY BE
a casual activity, but that doesn’t mean you should treat it casually. Make sure that it’s part of your safe-sex routine. If you’re engaging a new partner, communicate openly and candidly. Be prepared to discuss your current sex partners, sexual history, risky behaviors, STD status, recent activities, and your approach to protection. Be aware that some STDs are asymptomatic and may flourish undetected; so if you find yourself caught up in the heat of the moment, think before engaging in unprotected cunnilingus. Regardless of the reward, even the smallest act is not without risk.

If you’re uncertain or nervous, don’t take the risk. It’s not worth it, and if you don’t want to avoid oral sex altogether, then at least take precautions through the use of barriers such as dental dams (a thin strip of latex that is placed over the vulva as you apply cunnilingus), latex gloves, or finger cots (individual plastic sheaths that
workers in restaurants use to protect themselves from cuts). All of these safe-sex accessories can typically be found in drugstores, and can also be ordered from specialty stores such as Good Vibrations or the Blowfish catalog. In a pinch, even a sheet of Saran Wrap will do; just make sure you’re using the nonmicrowavable kind, as the microwavable sort isn’t impervious to bacteria.

If all this talk of protection sounds like a bummer, there is a silver lining: you can definitely have oral sex that is HOT and safe! Later, we will specifically discuss techniques and routines that incorporate safe-sex equipment into the process and do not diminish it. The first step is to know what you need in terms of protection, and then know how to use it.

During sexual activity, a condom is usually not far from reach, and may typically be introduced by either partner. While condoms are generally accepted and prevalent in their use, the same cannot be said of dental dams and the accessories that make for a safe session of cunnilingus. Whereas a request to use a condom is SOP (Standard Operating Procedure) and these days doesn’t make one think twice, the introduction of a dental dam is often attention grabbing and may be perceived as signaling the possibility of risk, as opposed to just playing it safe. Perhaps this is because condoms serve the double function of preventing both unwanted pregnancy and unwanted STDs, whereas dental dams only prevent the latter. In short, condoms often embody positive attributes (attentiveness and concern for safety), whereas a dental dam may evoke the negative perception of risk. Rare is the guy who’s been carrying a dental dam around in his wallet for years, waiting for the opportunity to put it into use, and equally rare is the woman who’s going to insist he use one.

 

T
he truth is that women don’t want a guy to use a dental dam because it diminishes the pleasure. So if you want to use one, you have to be proactive about it.” (Nick, 27)

 
 

But for all our talk of precaution and protection, there is no substitute for the unfettered merging of our bodies. Like the linking together of two power cables to create a single flow of electricity, your tongue against her vulva is the conjoining of thousands of nerve endings, the firing of neurons, the buzzing of receptors, the ultimate melding of body and soul in a pulse-pounding current. Such joys are ultimately experienced in a trusting, committed relationship. As Sally Tisdale wrote:

 

In the depth of sexual passion the skin of the other has the quality of treasure; the mundane secretions our bodies make are honey, manna, light. To be cut off from each other’s fluid is a terrible thing; our fluids are meant to mingle, we long for this mingling that is both so outrageous and pure.

 

When approaching safe sex, keep in mind what Dr. Comfort had to say in
The New Joy of Sex,
“There is no occasion for panic, or for losing out on the joy of sex—simply informed caution.”

BOOK: She Comes First
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