Ladies Taboo

Ladies Taboo




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© Copyright Anna-Thea, Certified Divine Feminine Educator. All Rights Reserved. Powered by Launch & Sell .

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Sexual energy is one of the most powerful energies on the planet. It is sexual energy that creates a whole other human being. Why is it then such a taboo subject? And more importantly, why is female sexuality taboo?
In writing this article I looked up the definition of taboo . It is defined as “proscribed by society as improper or unacceptable .” I love it (well not really)…. sex is unacceptable yet we are suffering from TMP – Too Many People on the planet! Overpopulation is a problem. Too many people are starving. The population is currently is 7.2 billion and rapidly growing . We have quantity instead of quality.
My intention is not to sound negative or pessimistic about humanity. My intention is to show the irony and answer the question why is female sexuality taboo.
How did we get 7.5 billion people on the planet?
Why, on earth, is female sexuality taboo? Women are the ones that birth the babies. They must be having sex…. Or am I missing something?
The only problem I see is the quantity vs quality thing again. Women are obviously having sex and lots of it. But is it quality? Or are women just our planets birthing machines? Sounds crude, doesn’t it? Maybe that is why female sexuality is taboo.
For me, sexuality for the sake of ONLY pregnancy is “unacceptable”, part of the definition of taboo. Makes sense to me then, why female sexuality taboo?
The number one reason, I believe, why female sexuality is taboo is because it is so darn powerful!!! Women don’t realize what they are holding in their womb and between their legs. There is a great need for more sex education for women .
It isn’t their fault. Women need lots of sex education and intimacy education to free ourselves from the taboo around female sexuality. Women, you hold the key. Allowing your sexuality to be taboo keeps all of us unconscious. I believe the evolution of our species is directly related to the empowerment and even disclosure of women’s sexuality.
Our species is evolving. We are still in the dark ages regarding sexuality. Many women don’t know deeper aspects of their female anatomy . The reason why female sexuality is taboo is that we simply haven’t evolved far enough, as yet. We don’t fully understand the sacredness of female sexuality. We have not grasped the power and responsibility that female sexuality holds.
Empowering women is the path to this much-needed wisdom. Our over-populated planet would greater benefit by educating women about their vaginas.
Recently I went and saw Eve Ensler’s production Vagina Monoluges in my local community. It was fun to see familiar faces on the stage as they talked about the vagina.
The monologues are from interviews of women about their vagina. One monologue shared women’s answers to the question, “If your vagina could talk what would she say?” Before they began sharing the various answers, all 12 or more lady performers, got quiet, put their hands up and together answer the question by saying, “SLOW DOWN.”
What is going on behind closed doors in the bedrooms across the US and most likely the planet that is having women unequivocally desire a slower approach? Are women’s needs being met? Are they getting pregnant more than they are experiencing pleasure? What is more important at this point for healing the planet? More pleasure or more pregnancies?
Are your sexual needs being met in the bedroom? Have you had to deal with aggressive, fast and furious and even rough lovers? And if so, have you found a positive way to deal with it? Or are you one of those women who is often stuck in sexual servitude or sex as a duty or job instead of something you fully embrace and enjoy?
Why is female sexuality taboo? I believe we as women have not established our own sexual authority. We are missing out on more pleasure because of it. Our patriarchal society makes feminine sexual expression difficult. In our fast-paced society, we have no time to SLOW DOWN.
Feminine sexuality is slow, soft, caring, sharing, expansive, respectful, hearted-centered, mutually satisfying. It is subtle, liberating, unbinding and healing. Individual souls, both men, and women, will awaken when feminine sexuality is expressed. Feminine Sexuality doesn’t cause jealousy, boredom, competition or the like.
We will free ourselves from feminine sexuality being taboo when women start claiming their sexuality as sacred. When women hold a healthy boundary and only engage in sex acts that include honesty, respect, love and honoring (mostly of self), then female sexuality will no longer be taboo.
Unfortunately, they hold the mysteries from themselves. It is up to each woman to create her own rite of passage regarding her sexuality. She has to claim her sexual sovereignty and authority. She needs to own her body, love her body and be authentic in the way she navigates her sexual energy.
How can she do that? Education about the spiritual side of her sexuality is key.
Has she had good role models for that. Probably not. In order for female sexuality to no longer be taboo a woman needs to learn a whole new way of being with her sexuality. What does that look like? Does anyone know? I believe we are slowly formulating that and I want to be part of the pioneers who help the process.
To answer the question “Why is female sexuality taboo?” we must understand we are in the process of evolving our species. And that there is a great need to educate women about their bodies and female anatomy.
As we evolve we will understand, both men and women, the power and sacredness of our sexuality. We will stop treating it as something hidden, nasty or taboo. We will openly celebrate our sexuality and dance with it, together, in a whole new way.
I’m Anna-Thea, an author and Certifed Divine Feminine Educator. If you’d like to learn more about the sacredness of your female sexuality make ure you check out my course “ Sex Ed You Didn’t Learn from Your Mother .”
No worries about asking. I wish i could help though. i am really not sure. I do know that the wordpress theme that I am using is called Tribe. And it’s part of the blog so Tribe I guess would be the answer. Hope that helps. Warmly, Anna-Thea
Awesome post…I’m writing a short fat loss blueprint. And most fitness books I’ve read shy away from the topic of sex. Or the books briefly touch on sex. I agree 100%. Sex isn’t taboo. Sex releases feel good hormones and relieves pain. After reading your blog post, I plan on including sex in my book. And I’ll try to sound politically correct as possible.
Awesome! Love your comment. Glad you liked my article. And yes, I want to encourage you to include sex, especially good quality sex ed or conscious perspectives in your book. Best wishes to you! Thanks for commenting. Warmly, Anna-Thea


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If you're going to make it sleazy, you better make it sexy.
Haven't you heard? It's the Summer of Sleaze. While sleazecore might be taking over the fashion world, it's hardly been a new thing when it comes to cinema. What's more sleazy than an erotic film, one that pushes the boundaries of desire and sexual taboos? These movies run the gamut from cult classics to smutty art house films. If you're going to make it sleazy, you better make it sexy.
John Waters has always tested his audiences' tolerance for bad taste. His 2004 sex farce stars Tracy Ullman as a uptight, prim and proper Baltimore woman whose inhibitions run wild after she suffers from a concussion and becomes a sex addict.
Mickey Rourke and Kim Basinger star in the movie Fifty Shades of Gray wishes it could be. A wealthy business man named John Gray seduces a young gallery assistant, Elizabeth. Their relationship becomes more complex as she finds herself succumbing to his demands, slowly allowing him to cross an ever-moving line.
Mickey Rourke was undeniably the sleazy sex god of the '80s, and he stars in this film by erotica master Zalman King as a wealthy businessman who seduces an innocent young lawyer (Carré Otis) amid the exotic carnival of Rio.
Coinciding with the pop performer's Erotica phase, Body of Evidence stars Madonna as a woman who is charged with the murder of her lover—who died from erotic asphyxiation. Willem Dafoe plays her lawyer, who cannot help but become entangled by her sadomasochistic charms.
Vincent Gallo's follow-up to Buffalo '66 caused a stir at Sundance following its negative reviews (and the actor-director's borderline violent response to Roger Ebert's initial review). But its infamy will forever live on thanks to the scene in which Chloe Sevigny gives her co-star an actual blowjob on camera.
Director Just Jaeckin's shocking film stirred up audiences on both sides of the Atlantic when it was released in 1974, becoming perhaps the first mainstream softcore film to hit theaters (with an X-rating attached in the States). Sylvia Kristel stars as the titular character, the bored wife of a diplomat who has a serious of trysts while her husband is away.
Bruce Willis plays a damaged former psychologist who finds himself attracted to a mysterious woman, who fulfills his most erotic desires. While the relationship becomes manipulative, it also becomes dangerous—as the former doctor is stalked by his patient's murderer who will stop at nothing to kill him before he discovers their identity.
Famed critic Roger Ebert wrote a single screenplay in his career: this sequel-parody hybrid to Valley of the Dolls , directed by legendary sexploitation director Russ Meyer. Full of sex, drugs, and rock and roll, Beyond the Valley of the Dolls is an undisputed camp classic and an unbelievable far-out trip that descends into total madness by its final reel.
Make no mistake: The lead character in this two-part, four-hour art film is very horny as the title would suggest. But it's a Lars Von Trier movie, and thus potentially less sexy than you think.
Matthew is an American studying in Paris during the tumultuous spring of 1968. There he meets a French brother and sister duo who share a love of cinema and debauchery. The three begin a complex friendship that borders on taboo when the three push the boundaries of desire.
Gaspar Noé is no stranger to provocation, but his arthouse sexual drama took full advantage of the technological marvels of 3-D. While, uh, objects won't be flying out of your normal TV or laptop screen when you stream this one online, the titillation remains intact.
Paul Thomas Anderson's ensemble-driven film offers a comic—and at times dark—look at the heyday of the American porn industry in the late '70s and early '80s. Its infamous for its final scene (featuring Mark Wahlberg's prosthetic penis), but it also nails the sleazy style of the era.
Director Catherine Breillat has been labeled a "porno auteuriste;" the term is most applicable with her 1999 drama in which a French teacher, frustrated with her boyfriend's disregard for intimacy and affection, searches elsewhere to fulfill her insatiable desires.
A Englishman named Matt and an American woman named Lisa form a relationship based on two common interests: seeing rock shows and fucking. Michael Winterbottom's film is part-concert montage, part boundary-pushing sex film—with its actors actually having intercourse on film.
Lawrence Kasden might very well have directed the last great American noir film with this '80s Double Indemnity of sorts featuring William Hurt as a pretty dim lawyer and Kathleen Turner as the requisite femme fatale. While its complex plot harkens to the old-fashioned films of the genre, Body Heat ups the ante with hot and heavy love scenes that would've made Barbara Stanwyck blush.
Brian De Palma pays homage to Alfred Hitchcock's Rear Window and Vertigo with this sexy, voyeuristic thriller. A down-on-his-luck actor discovers that his girlfriend is cheating on him and accepts a fellow actor's invitation to housesit in his luxe modern home in the Hollywood Hills. Soon he becomes entranced with his neighbor: a woman who strips in front of her window every night. But his growing obsession leads him down some dark and twisted paths, and soon he's suspected of murder.
Meg Ryan sheds her America's Sweetheart status for this psychological thriller from Oscar-winning writer-director Jane Campion. Ryan plays a New York City schoolteacher named Frannie who embarks on a sexual awakening with a cop (Mark Ruffalo), who's attempting to solve the murder of a young woman whose body turned up outside Frannie's apartment.
Wild Things is notorious for two things: Kevin Bacon's exposed penis and a threesome between Denise Richards, Neve Campbell, and Matt Dillon. The latter is mostly an excuse to feature then-unknown Richards topless. Despite its mainstream soft-core nature, the movie is an otherwise overwrought, trashy neo-noir.
A serial killer is stalking and murdering gay men in New York City, and Al Pacino's detective must go undercover in the dark underbelly of the S&M scene to find him. William Friedkin's thriller was controversial upon its release, but it's become a cult classic that also serves as a striking time capsule of pre-AIDS queer life.
One of the biggest movie disasters of the '90s turned into a beloved camp classic. Saved by the Bell alum Elizabeth Berkley delivers a downright insane performance as Nomi Malone, a determined drifter who arrives in Las Vegas and goes from stripper to top-billing showgirl. Two decades after its release, it's still a movie you have to see to believe.

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