Sperm On Face

Sperm On Face




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By Kelsey Patterson
- August 31, 2017 03:33 pm EDT

If you're prone to try any beauty product or hack that promises youthful, glowing skin, chances are you've heard of the semen facial.
And if this shocking beauty trend is new to you, it, unfortunately, is exactly what you imagine it to be.
The act of topically applying a man's semen to the face in order to reap the benefits of this supposed good-for-you body fluid has been a trend in recent years. Whether this bizarre trend stems from experts or a group of men who're trying to convince their partners to let them 'relieve themselves' on their bodies, Cosmopolitan asked Los Angeles-based dermatologist Dr. Will Kirby to share the real scientific scoop of this sticky practice.
We constantly preach the benefits of protein for your body—skin included—and it's true that semen contains protein! But Kirby's first truth is that there isn't enough protein content in semen to provide any benefits when smeared all over your face.
In fact, the dermatologist debunked the myth that any of semen's properties is good for your glow. "There is nothing in semen that has demonstrable skin benefits," he said. "Anyone who says otherwise is either misinformed or purposefully misleading you. Or is just a moron."
So not only would you be rubbing a guy's juice on your face with no positive effects, semen may actually cause harm when applied to the body.
Rather than gifting you a youthful glow, rubbing semen on your skin can leave it dry and irritated. "There have been many case reports where an individual developed an allergy to one or more of the proteins in semen, which result in allergic contact dermatitis that is manifested by temporary redness and mild swelling on the skin where it's applied," Kirby said.
And that's not the scariest part. Chlamydia and other STIs can be transmitted through this beauty-seeking practice, not just through sex.
"Many people—even monogamous couples—have undiagnosed sexually transmitted infections that could be spread to the mucous membranes, your lips, nostrils and eyes, via topical application of male ejaculator for those seeking aesthetic improvement," Kirby said.
Despite these serious cons, people are still touting the benefits of DIY semen facials, and some salons offer the sticky service to clients. Their logic is that semen builds babies, who come out of the womb with soft, pretty skin. The first part may be true, but experts can't concede to the latter.
"Yes, obviously, semen is a component of making a baby and you need a sperm and an egg to create a fetus," dermatologist Karyn Grossman, MD, told Refinery29 . "But the sperm itself has nothing to do with the skin of the newborn. The sperm is only a carrier of genetic material."
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After baby foreskins and “vampire” blood , this “secret” skin care ingredient was probably inevitable.
With over two decades in the beauty business, celebrity facialist Chelsee Lewis has tailored skin care treatments for celebs including Stella McCartney, Suki Waterhouse and even Goop beauty guru Gwyneth Paltrow to maintain their youthful visages over the years. Now, the UK-based esthetician is revealing some of her “quirky” beauty tricks.
One of her weirder facial suggestions: sperm.
Lewis tells the DailyMail semen is full of the compound spermine, an antioxidant which she claims helps reduce wrinkles, smooths skin and treats blemishes. Intercourse is good for your skin, too, by increasing blood flow and oxygen, and improving circulation to the skin’s surface — hence the post-coital glow.
Of course semen masks aren’t the only bizarre beauty treatment celebrities love right now. Last year PageSix reported that pals Cate Blanchett and Sandra Bullock are fans of the so-called “penis facial,” which involves a face mask featuring the foreskin of newborn Koreans. The “Epidermal Growth Factor (EGF)” supposedly boosts the skin’s collagen and elastin.
Recently, the most macabre of dermal remedies, the “vampire” facial, made headlines when two clients of a New Mexico spa contracted the HIV virus after trying the bloody beauty trick with strangers’ fluids. The way the procedure should work begins with drawing out the patient’s own blood, which the esthetician uses to formulate a bespoke cream.
Lewis also is a fan of another gory treatment: micro-needling. By creating microscopic punctures to the skin — which will leave your face a bit bloodied — the tiny wounds can help your skin look more plump by boosting collagen and elastin up to 400% . It’s also known to stimulate hair growth .


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The first time a man came on my face, I assumed he’d missed. 
‘It’s fine!’ I said blithely, as I rubbed my face on his sheets. ‘Don’t worry about it! You missed my eye!’
It was only when I spoke to my friends at school on Monday morning that I realised it hadn’t been an accident, he hadn’t pulled out of my mouth because he’d had a cramp or been trying to hold back. He had, in fact, wanted to come on my face.
‘That’s called a facial’ one of my more worldly friends told me, ‘It’s actually good for your skin.’
‘But why?’ I remember asking. Despite being a D cup and having been one of the first people in our year to have sex, the worldly friend wasn’t able to answer that question. And, as it turns out, not many other people I’ve spoken to have been able to either.
The rise of popularity in facials is often attributed to porn. But then, any change in human sexual behaviour that came around the same time as the internet is automatically attributed to porn.
Broadly speaking, the moment when fellatio became a central feature of sex was the 1972 film Deep Throat, a film which features a woman who had a clitoris in the back of her throat, therefore derives sexual pleasure from giving oral sex.
It’s a pretty rough film, and not at all in keeping with the kind of porn we’re used to seeing today, but it does feature an early example of a ‘money shot’ – when the male star finishes over the female star’s face. From then on, the ‘money shot’ became a central and extremely common aspect of porn.
The popularity of the facial was then cemented by the AIDS crisis. According to Charlie Glickman, speaking to Jezebel, ‘cum on me, not in me’ was a popular sex education slogan right in to the 1980’s.
You can kind of see why – semen was suddenly dangerous, something to be afraid of, and with HIV a very different diagnosis back then, people were scared. So if ejaculating over someone rather than inside them could keep you safe, it seemed like a great idea.
This created some issues in terms of porn production, though. Ejaculating on a woman’s or chest made it difficult for the camera to capture the co-star’s expression. By filming the ejaculation on her face the viewer got to see her reaction, as well as the ‘money shot’.
Forty years later, STI testing is faster and more reliable within the adult entertainment industry, but there’s no doubt that facials are common.
In the Metro.co.uk survey of 90 people, 89% of respondents said that they had experienced a facial.
The popularity of this sex act has left me asking the same question I was musing on ten years ago, the first time a man came over my face. Why?
Experts seem to share a consensus that part of the appeal of a facial is the humiliation. What they disagree about is whether that humiliation is a problem.
Dr Ruth Westheimer describes facials as humiliating in Sex for Dummies, and urges people not to consider them a normal part of intercourse.
Writer Dan Savage, however, takes a different stance, saying that the humiliation aspect of a facial is entirely real, but not a problem, writing: ‘Facials are degrading—and that’s why they’re so hot’. Savage seems to suggest that a little consensual humiliation isn’t going to do anyone any harm.
While the conflation of humiliation and pleasure might sound contrary, human beings are complicated creatures and a quick search for ‘humiliation fetish’ will lead you to 712,000, most of which are people confessing to having one.
Even so, humiliation can’t be the entire aim of the game, otherwise actresses wouldn’t adopt expressions of bliss during a facial in porn films, instead they’d be making faces which implied humiliation and unhappiness.
58% of people said that their sexual partner did not ask permission to come on their face 
It’s old fashioned and disrespectful to assume that no woman would want to have come on her face – that it’s the kind of hideous shame which women put up with in order to please a man. That kind of sentiment does women a disservice. Of course there are women who will be aroused by it, who will find it a raw and arousing experience. Alexa, 23* told Metro.co.uk that she loves facials, saying:
‘When a guy comes on my face I feel like it’s the mark of a job well done. I like that he finds looking at me so arousing, and I’m proud that he wants to look at me when he has his climax.’
Sophie, 31, shared Alexa’s sentiment, saying: ‘It makes me feel really sexy. Maybe it’s because of porn, but I just find it really hot. I like being the center of attention.’
Personally, I find Alexa and Sophie’s stances on facials tricky to comprehend (much as I respect them). As I’ve written before, I have a phobia of semen. It’s bad enough on my body, but on my face? Enough to make me properly sick.
Even aside from my phobia, I find the experience of having something which isn’t supposed to go in your eyes that close to your eyes a stressful one.
48% of respondents said they did not enjoy the experience of getting a facial
8% said they did not enjoy the first experience but did subsequently enjoy it
48% of women said they had always enjoyed the experience
I’m not alone in finding a facial deeply unpleasant. Katia, 27 told Metro.co.uk: ‘I find it disrespectful. It’s not arousing to lie there waiting for him to finish, and of course I don’t get any sexual pleasure from it – there are no pleasure receptors in my face. It’s boring, and it makes me feel stupid. And then I have to clean up.’
Katia’s point resonated with me. While, once again, I am not in the business of shaming other women for what they get off on, it does seem strange that such a central focus of porn films is an action which has literally no physical pleasure for women.
Our survey found that 25% of people who received a facial felt either disgusted, queasy or angry afterwards, that’s compared to 41% who said they were aroused or pleased by the experience. 
Similarly to when you see a woman in lesbian porn give a blow job to a dildo, the expressions of ecstasy on a woman’s face during a facial are a little confusing. Are men being hoodwinked into thinking that women really get pleasure from these things? Or when you’re lost in sex or porn, is it very difficult to care?
The thing about facials is that they’re not inherently wrong, or bad, or problematic. Just like any other sex act, as long as it takes place between two consenting adults, it’s a perfectly reasonable thing to do.
But, given that it’s only sexually gratifying for one partner physically, it must either be something that the receiver puts up with, or it must be tapping into the receiver’s psychology.
The fact that the adult film industry has managed to tap into our sexuality and mold it around what is safest and fits best with production values is both terrifying and enormously impressive.

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