I Love Your Sex

I Love Your Sex




🔞 ALL INFORMATION CLICK HERE 👈🏻👈🏻👈🏻

































I Love Your Sex
If playback doesn't begin shortly, try restarting your device.
An error occurred while retrieving sharing information. Please try again later.
0:00 / 4:56 • Watch full video Live
Watch ads now so you can enjoy fewer interruptions


This website no longer supports Internet Explorer, which is now an outdated browser. For the best experience and your security, please visit
us using a different browser.



Social Links for Danica Daniel





View Author Archive





Get author RSS feed





captions settings , opens captions settings dialog captions off , selected
Error Code: MEDIA_ERR_SRC_NOT_SUPPORTED
No compatible source was found for this media.
Session ID: 2022-11-19:6e5fec72b722b08aff17f4a7 Player Element ID: nyp-brightcove-player-1
Text Color White Black Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Transparent Window Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Transparent Semi-Transparent Opaque
Font Size 50% 75% 100% 125% 150% 175% 200% 300% 400% Text Edge Style None Raised Depressed Uniform Dropshadow Font Family Proportional Sans-Serif Monospace Sans-Serif Proportional Serif Monospace Serif Casual Script Small Caps
Reset restore all settings to the default values Done

Filed under




bella thorne



doja cat



Music



porn



porn stars



rappers



11/9/21



This story has been shared 176,167 times.
176,167


This story has been shared 123,404 times.
123,404


This story has been shared 94,338 times.
94,338






Facebook





Twitter





Instagram





LinkedIn





Email





YouTube





Thanks for contacting us. We've received your submission.
Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window.
This is a modal window. This modal can be closed by pressing the Escape key or activating the close button.
This is a modal window. This modal can be closed by pressing the Escape key or activating the close button.
That’s the million-dollar question that millionaire Bella Thorne poses in the racy music video for her erotic, new single “In You.”
Directed and written by the 24-year-old “Dirty Sexy Money” actress, the NSFW music video finds Thorne in a fantastically sexy but tumultuous love triangle with Oscar-winning rapper/producer Juicy J and Thorne’s porn-star muse, 25-year-old Abella Danger .
“It’s very sexual content,” Thorne exclusively told The Post of the video in which she competes for Danger’s affection against the 46-year-old Three 6 Mafia OG.
And Thorne is up for the challenge.
“All the way through, you’re like, ‘Damn.’ Within the first 30 seconds, there’s a shot of me and I put my face between her legs and I come up and my face looks so wet,” she said of the suggestive sequence. “It’s just gnarly to look at.”
The singer — who has released several singles throughout the years, most notably “Watch Me,” “B*tch, I’m Bella Thorne,” “Shake It,” “Lonely,” and “Phantom” — is no stranger to placing herself in sexually explicit and compromising positions. Thorne made headlines in August 2020 when she joined OnlyFans , the subscription app known for its X-rated content. Thorne quickly broke a record earning $1 million her first day on the platform.
Although Thorne rose to fame as a squeaky-clean, PG-rated teen on the small screen opposite Zendaya in the Disney series “Shake It Up” from 2010 to 2013, she makes no apologies for now feeling comfortable in her own skin. In fact, she flaunts that sexual liberation in her latest video.
‘I just love sex. The word ‘sex’ has such a negative connotation and it doesn’t really make any sense since we all pretty much do it.’
“I just love sex,” said Thorne. “And I think that the word ‘sex’ has such a negative connotation, and it doesn’t really make any sense since we all pretty much do it.”
Thorne sat down with The Post to discuss the recent release of her video on YouTube, pushing the needle forward as a female director, freeing Britney Spears and her girl crush Doja Cat .
Juicy J is amazing to work with. He played me this beat. I immediately came up with the melody of the chorus and then we just started writing the whole rest of the song. When you watch him record, you’re like, “Yup, you are a genius.” You already know he’s a genius, but when you see him do his stuff, it’s really magical.
There are so many people. I love Oliver Tree, YG is one of my biggest. I love Doja Cat. Jesus. Oh, Jesus Christ. It’s like, how can she be so fine and so talented at the same time? It’s insane. I have a huge girl crush on Doja Cat. If Doja Cat slid into my DMs, my world would be made.
‘I want to show realism because that’s where the beauty is in sex.’
Oh, so much fun. When Juicy J stepped on set, he’s like, “What the f–k?” He’s looking around like, “This really is crazy. Exactly what you told me, is exactly what’s happening in the video. You completely brought it to life.” It was amazing to work with Juicy J because he has great comedic timing and that was definitely needed for some parts of the video.
Yeah, it’s very sexual content and, hopefully, YouTube is not going to dick me over. But it’s very sexual and it’s just too hot. It’s so sexy all the way through. Within the first 30 seconds, there’s a shot of me and I put my face between Abella’s legs and I come up and I put all this gloss all over my face. I look so wet and disgusting. I hope it becomes a meme. It’s just gnarly to look at.
It’s taken me a little while [but] I’ve always definitely been very confident. I was always the friend making dirty jokes. Everything I say has a kind of a sexual innuendo. And I just love sex. The word “sex” has such a negative connotation and it doesn’t really make any sense since we all pretty much do it. So I want to use this word. I want to say this word. Say it, say it again [and] say it again until people start to feel not weird about it. And especially as a woman, people feel very weird when women use this type of naughty language. And that’s really unfair. A guy can make a d–k joke, but if a girl makes a p—y joke, then everyone’s like gasp !
 ‘With enough voices that stand together, we can actually change things. We just need the whole world to do it.’
That’s a very good question. I love skin, sex, body, everything about the body. The even, like, not-so-pretty parts, like your elbow and the back of your knee. The whole body should really be glorified. And definitely with everything I do as far as directing, there’s pretty much skin showing or there’s some type of intimacy between two people. That will forever be a thing of mine. I will definitely be a director beating down people with the word “sex” in a way to make it normal. I just want it to be the best version of what it really is, the truthful side of the body. I want to show the realism because that’s where the beauty is in sex.
‘I just wanted to write some honest s–t.’
I just wanted to write some honest s–t, and I felt like people didn’t know me. They always have a preconceived notion about me when I meet them, and that really bugs me. It’s really rare that I meet someone who hasn’t already looked me up on Google and any time I do meet someone, it’s really nice because they get to meet me and judge me for me, not from media, tabloids or Twitter creatures.
I feel triumphant. When the world is so bad and negative and so many things are happening in the world, it just makes me so happy because, with enough voices that stand together, we can actually change things. We just need the whole world to do it.


Therapists
:
Login
|
Sign Up


On This Page



The Power of Sex




The Power of Love




Talking About Sex




Facing Sexual Challenges






What it looks like to have a healthy relationship.




Healthy relationships can lower stress and help you cope better with trauma.




Does increased romantic conflict and relationship distress cause infidelity or follow infidelity?




It may seem ridiculous to thank your partner for doing things you expect. But gratitude is just about the easiest thing you can do to improve your relationship.



Connected Topics


Sexual Orientation


Flirting


Mating


Marriage


Infidelity


Polyamory


Shyness


Sex


Jealousy





Diagnosis


Hypersexuality (Sex Addiction)


Sexual Desire Disorder





Test Yourself


Commitment Readiness


Love Diagnostics


Romantic Personality


Romantic Space





Are you a Therapist?
Get Listed Today



Get Help

Find a Therapist


Find a Treatment Center


Find a Psychiatrist


Find a Support Group


Find Teletherapy





Members
Login
Sign Up




United States



Austin, TX
Brooklyn, NY
Chicago, IL
Denver, CO
Houston, TX
Los Angeles, CA
New York, NY
Portland, OR
San Diego, CA
San Francisco, CA
Seattle, WA
Washington, DC





Our conversations are sprinkled with slips, pauses, lies, and clues to our inner world. Here’s what we reveal when we speak, whether we mean to or not.

Sexual connection is a vital aspect of most romantic relationships, but it’s not always as central as people may think. Partners have sex for self-interested reasons—it feels good and can boost self-esteem; and for relationship-focused reasons—it enhances closeness and pleases someone they love. Over the long term, most couples will face sexual challenges, as bodies change with age and individuals’ desire for sex waxes and wanes (and generally declines). Research consistently shows that most couples struggle to talk about sex honestly, but that when they do, it brings them closer together.
Love also brings people together, but it takes more than love to stay together. Many of us know couples that broke up despite believing that they were in love with each other, because of one partner’s infidelity or because of distance or circumstance. But even in long-term stable relationships, partners who feel that they are in love may grow apart, if one believes that they are not emotionally safe in the relationship, or that it lacks passion or intimacy.
Sex is an important aspect of many relationships and while research finds that while regular sex does help to cement a couple's emotional bond, that boost doesn't derive from the physical act as much as from what it expresses—openness, transparency, positive communication, and a commitment to foster and maintain erotic energy. What happens after sex is also vital: Research on sexual "afterglow," including cuddling and pillow talk, finds that the feeling of enhanced sexual satisfaction following a sexual encounter can leave partners feeling better about each other for weeks or even months. While many partners worry about why they may not have sex as often as they once did, or whether they need to learn new techniques, a decline in a couple's sex life is more commonly a reflection of other problems in the relationship, rather than the cause.
Experts who research sex in relationships report that those partners who find their sex lives most fulfilling say that the keys to a great sex life are being able to stay in the moment, communicate with each other honestly about their sexual wants—and have empathy for their partner’s, be vulnerable, and remain open to trying new things together.
Married couples report having sex an average of 58 times per year, although couples in their 20s report much more frequent encounters—about 111 per year, with that number dropping about 20 percent per decade as couples age. (Researchers tend to be suspicious of such results, since they are based on self-reports.) Many experts suggest that neither very frequent nor very rare sex is necessarily a problem for couples as long as they find their relationships satisfying and believe they are having enough sex .
Would more sex make you happier ? Probably not. In experiments, when couples were asked to double their normal frequency of sex, most did not follow through, and those who were able to did not report greater sexual satisfaction. In other words, for most couples, when it comes to sex, quality is more important that quantity.
The warm, fuzzy feeling many couples experience after sex is known as “ sexual afterglow ,” and research suggests that it may be vital to a relationship: Partners who experienced a feeling of sexual satisfaction longer—as long as 48 hours after sex—reported greater relationship satisfaction overall. (Research also finds it to be a myth that men tend to fall asleep quickly after sex.)
A range of research on sexual satisfaction in heterosexual relationships finds that, at every stage—desire, kissing, and orgasm— the woman’s satisfaction is more predictive of overall relationship satisfaction for both partners than the man’s—and a decline in a woman's sexual desire is more predictive of relationship troubles than a decline in a man's.
It can, but couples should understand the role sex plays in a relationship: Research suggests that a high-quality sexual connection, especially early in a relationship, lays a foundation for long-term sustainability. Studies find, in fact, that even as sexual satisfaction begins to decline in many relationships, overall satisfaction remains high. But when partners’ levels of desire start to diverge widely, it’s crucial that the concern be addressed.
For many, if not most, people, primal, passionate sex is an essential element of a healthy sex life. But many partners in long-term relationships find themselves moving away from passionate sex, either because they don’t want to put in the effort or because they talk themselves out of it. Some experts suggest that, to restore their passion, people talk about it openly, allow themselves to express their primal selves, and learn to tolerate sexual intensity.
Loving relationships can literally be a matter of life and death: Having a supportive relationship is more predictive of warding off mortality than quitting smoking or exercising, while a toxic relationship is more damaging than no relationship at all. But love is always reciprocal, and can only survive if both partners are willing to be open and honest with each other, express gratitude, share their thoughts and feelings, and ask for support rather than trying to go it alone. Individuals often believe they are sparing their partner by keeping their troubles from them, but people can be deeply hurt when they discover that the person they love most has not confided in them or sought out their support.
Romantic love could be seen as an evolutionary adaptation—a force that increases the chance of passing one’s genes on to future generations. It has also been described as a force that enables partners to stay together over the long term. Some identify it as a blind force that brings people together, even without strong romantic feelings, through what’s known as the “mere repeated exposure” affect. And others, citing different definitions and approaches to love at different times and in different cultures, describe it as merely a sociocultural construct.
Love has been defined by some as having three elements—intimacy, commitment, and passion. But many couples worry that their passion is declining over the years, making their connection less secure. Research, however, finds that a decrease in passion is less of a problem than a couple’s belief that once it decreases it can’t be restored; partners who understand that it waxes and wanes are more likely to rekindle it, and stay together.
Saying “I love you” for the first time is seen by many as a more significant step in a relationship than having sex for the first time. The statement implies a level of commitment, exclusivity, and intimacy that one partner may not be sure the other feels yet. Contrary to a common stereotype, though, men are much more likely to say those three words first , and more likely to report having felt love first in a relationship.
Even couples that are generally successful at addressing other issues get stuck when it comes to talking about sex. Many people assume that great sex should not require conversation, but that often leads to years of stale or unsatisfying encounters. Research finds that people avoid talking about uncomfortable topics because they imagine that what they say might threaten a relationship, especially if it's about sexual fantasies or interest in "unconventional" sex; that expressing concern about their sex life will hurt their partner's feelings; or because they're reluctant to reveal too much about themselves for fear of feeling shame or being shamed. But research also shows that partners willing to discuss intimacy with each other are generally happier with their relationships because they discover that their sexual concerns are usually not, after all, a sign that their relationship is in trouble.
It’s easier when partners understand that in actuality, most types of “unconventional” sex are pretty common . Surveys find that most couples have in fact engaged in what would generally be considered kinky sex play, or at least had fantasies about it. Couples who understand this, and worry less about violating norms, are more able to talk about their desires, and more likely to maintain satisfying connections.
Many people imagine that their fantasies may be extreme or improper, or that they’d be unwelcome by their
Milf Stockings Sex Hd
Porn Film Fr
Panty White Xxx

Report Page