What Is Penetration Mean Sexually

What Is Penetration Mean Sexually




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What Is Penetration Mean Sexually
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Home > Blog > What Is the Legal Definition of Sexual Penetration?
A good number of sex crimes listed in the Texas Penal Code require penetration to occur before they are considered an offense. Therefore, it’s important for anyone who is accused of one of these crimes to know what the law says about penetration.
According to Black’s Law Dictionary , penetration is defined as “the insertion of the male part into the female parts to however slight an extent; and by which insertion the offense is complete without proof of emission.”
The Texas Penal Code also makes sexual intercourse an element of certain crimes. Sexual intercourse is defined under Texas law as being a penetration of the female sex organ by the male sex organ.
These two definitions would make it appear as though the only criminal acts possible would occur whenever there is a penetration of the vagina by a penis. However, that’s not the case, as Section 22.011 of the Texas Penal Code also defines sexual assault as happening whenever a person intentionally or knowingly:
From this extended definition, it’s easy to see that penetration may occur vaginally, orally or anally. As such, penetration can occur between male/female, male/male, female/male or female/female.
A number of crimes include the element of “deviate sexual intercourse”, which involves “any contact between the genitals of one person and the mouth or anus of another person.” This means that penetration does not actually have to occur before certain crimes are committed.
Upon determining that penetration occurred, an individual could be charged with one of the following crimes, depending upon the nature of the incident:
These acts are typically charged as felonies, and can involve punishments that include:
Individuals who are found guilty may also face the revocation of a professional license, or be permanently barred from practicing certain occupations. After serving jail time, there may be serious restrictions imposed on where a person may live or work, in addition to the social stigma associated with being a registered sex offender.
When both parties are adults, penetration is only a crime when there is a lack of consent. As such, it might be necessary for defendants to show consent occurred in order to have charges reduced. A few things are normally looked at to determine consent, including:
Penetration can lead to a number of different charges, all of which may have devastating consequences. If you are accused of one of these crimes, contact experienced sex crimes attorney Brett Podolsky at 713.227.0087 as soon as possible.
Brett A. Podolsky
917 Franklin St. Ste 510,
Houston,TX77002


Medically Reviewed by Michael W. Smith, MD on November 16, 2020
For some, penetration during sex is even more enjoyable when it’s very deep. Not only can it feel good physically, but it may also be emotionally satisfying as it brings bodies very close together.
Deep penetration can be either vaginal or anal and usually involves penetration with a penis or dildo. Following a few safety precautions can help minimize discomfort. 
Deep penetration is sometimes also called cervical penetration. This is because deep penetration into a vagina can sometimes feel like the cervix is being penetrated. However, cervical penetration is not possible. Outside of childbirth, the cervix remains very small .
Some people believe that deep penetration is dangerous. With enough lubrication and patience most people can enjoy deep penetration without pain or injury . 
If deep penetration sounds appealing to you, there are a few ways to explore it safely. If you would like to be penetrated, you may consider exploring your body on your own before trying this with a partner. It’s possible to try deep penetration on your own with a dildo or sex toy and a water-based lubricant . 
While trying deep penetration on yourself, take as much time as you need. Your body may need time to adjust or stretch to accommodate the toy. Taking things too quickly can cause pain or even injury. Deep penetration should not hurt; if it does, slow down, use more lube, or try a smaller toy. 
When trying deep penetration with a partner, communication will help both of you have a good experience. You may need to slow things down, or try several positions to find one that is comfortable for both people and allows for deep penetration.
Penetration shouldn’t be painful. If it is, you may need to use more lubrication, spend more time stretching, choose a different position, or simply stop. Deep penetration can lead to bruising and even internal tears if you ignore pain. 
Only use a dildo or sex toy that’s designed for penetration. Don’t use other objects as they may get stuck or cause pain or injury.
Pay close attention to your partner’s signals. Always listen and be prepared to stop if you notice pain or discomfort.
In some cases, particularly deep penetration of the vagina can lead to mild spotting or bleeding . This is generally the result of hitting the cervix, and occurs for the same reason that spotting may occur after a pap smear . It typically resolves itself in a few hours, and is nothing to worry about. You may also have bleeding after anal penetration due to the sensitivity of the tissues in the area. However, if discomfort or bleeding continues for more than a day or two after anal or vaginal deep penetration, call your doctor.
American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists: “When Sex Is Painful.”
The Arousal Project: “How to Have a Cervical Orgasm.”
Dictionary.com: “Sexual intercourse.”
Go Ask Alice (Columbia): “Possible to penetrate the cervix during sex?”
Jo’s Cervical Cancer Trust: “Bleeding after a smear test: is it normal and why does it happen?”
Mayo Clinic: “Painful intercourse (dyspareunia).”
Scarleteen: “Let's Get Metaphysical: The Etiquette of Entry.”
Bespoke Surgical: “Bleeding After Anal Sex is Not Normal.”
© 2005 - 2022 WebMD LLC. All rights reserved.
WebMD does not provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment.




Whatever the gender of a person or their sexual partner is, no one ever has to have any kind of sex or have sex any given way if it doesn't work for them or it doesn't feel good, physically, emotionally or both. Young woman grimacing via Shutterstock



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Jul 15, 2013, 5:01pm Heather Corinna

Whatever the gender of a person or their sexual partner is, no one ever has to have any kind of sex or have sex any given way if it doesn't work for them or it doesn't feel good, physically, emotionally, or both.
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Okay so I’m pretty sure I’m lesbian and the reason for this is that when I read something naughty straight stuff makes me sick. When I read lesbian erotica I like it…until they start penetrating each other, but everything else excites me and I know I want to have sex . If you are having sex with a girl does there have to be penetration? Is it unusual to not want it? I mean just the thought of it makes me sick.
I think one of the coolest things about sex is that it’s a lot like our taste in music.
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When it comes to music, we get to like what we like, and listen only to what we want to listen to when we get a choice. Obviously, in the grocery store or at a club what we hear is not going to be up to us, but that’s not how it goes with sex: Consensual sex always involves having a choice, just like listening to music in our own space does. With music, we also get to try listening to something to see how we feel about it, and if we don’t like it, we can turn it off or switch to another station or song. We can try listening to music other people like too to see if we also like it, and it’s OK whether we do or we don’t.
Sometimes we’ll find we like different music at different times or in different situations. I love listening to Aimee Mann when I’m feeling low, but it’s not at all what I like to listen to when I want to get happy. When I’m high energy or want to get revved up, it’s great to listen to the beloved punk of my youth, but if I want to chill out or my head hurts, that music is like torture. We might have music we love to listen to any time, and music we know we never like, but we’ll also tend to have plenty of music that we like or want sometimes, but don’t at other times.
While sex can be more loaded than music, I’d say that has more to do with what people choose to load it with, or sign on to, than what it’s really supposed to be like when we’re all coming to it in a healthy way. Because really, all those things up there that are true of what music a person likes, doesn’t like, listens to, or chooses not to are just as true of sex and the way we not only can, but ideally should, approach it ourselves and with others.
Sex itself should always be a choice, not an obligation or requirement, and that also goes for how we choose to have sex, and for what kinds of sex we choose to have. And just like there’s no “right” taste in music, only what taste each person has (in general, or at any given time), the same is true about sex.
Whatever the gender of a person or their sexual partner is, no one ever has to have any kind of sex or have sex any given way if it doesn’t work for them or it doesn’t feel good, physically, emotionally, or both. So, for a woman with partners who are also women, no one has to engage in any kind of sex where anything—a body part, a toy, whatever—is inside the vagina if that isn’t what they want, but the same is also true of a woman with partners who are men and also for men with any kind of partners they have.
If and when someone doesn’t want those kinds of sex, but their partner does, no always should trump yes; if someone doesn’t want to do something sexually, that needs to be put before what someone does want to do.
Now, a person who wants something a potential or current sexual partner doesn’t can certainly make a decision to choose a different partner who does want what they do instead of staying with or a partner who doesn’t. Everyone should have the right to choose sexual partnerships that are a good fit for their own sexuality and the sexual lives they want, and that’s the healthy way for any of us to pursue our preferences, not doing what we don’t want to or pressing or forcing someone else to do what they don’t want to. Just like someone who doesn’t want to have a given kind of sex has a right not to, someone who does want a kind of sex has a right to seek it out with people who do.
Is it unusual not to want vaginal entry ever? That’s a tricky question to answer accurately, especially when it’s coming from someone young who it sounds like hasn’t even engaged in any kind of partnered sex at all yet, but is only trying to figure out what they do and don’t want based on erotica or porn—based on fantasy, not reality.
But in general, most folks with vaginas will tend to at least want to see what vaginal entry feels like—even just out of curiosity, alone—and while it doesn’t turn out to be everyone’s favorite thing, and some people find out they certainly don’t want to do that anymore and choose not to, it is something many people enjoy and find they want. From that standpoint, not wanting to do that in any way at all, throughout a whole lifetime, would be unusual.
I want to qualify that with a few things, though.
First of all, trying something a few times and in a few different situations throughout life (not just at one time of life or with one person) and not liking it is a very different thing than never wanting to try at all. And not having an interest in trying something is also a very different thing from having a strong feeling of aversion: something like feeling utterly sick at even the thought.
Also, not everyone with a vagina is comfortable with gender roles often ascribed to people with vaginas, including when it comes to sex. What some people can feel averse to, or just want to avoid, when it comes to intercourse , are some of those assumed or ascribed roles, like being subservient or submissive, like being a “hole” for someone else to fill, or like being “the girl,” in a relationship or sexual interaction, period. None of those things are how it has to be with sex that involves vaginal entry, but those are pervasive ideas, and plenty of people don’t feel comfortable with them; some feel very uncomfortable with even the possibility of them being a part of any sex they have.
Our world has also set up vaginal intercourse , specifically, as the “default” sexual activity—as the one kind of sex the majority of people will tend to think of or figure went on when someone says “I had sex.” That certainly isn’t the only kind of sex people have—even straight people—it’s just one of many ways to be sexual with someone else, but that’s not how it’s presented a lot of the time. When something is framed like that, as the thing to do, people will tend to learn, covertly and overtly, that that’s what sex is and that’s what they should want. Strong messages that people should want something tend to pack quite a punch, especially for people—as many are—who are very concerned with normalcy. So, with a message like that around intercourse or other kinds of vaginal entry, it’s tough for us to really say how many people who do that do so because it’s what they uniquely want, and how many people do it or want it because they’ve learned they’re supposed to.
Look, if the “default” sex in our world was, say, putting peanuts up our noses, way more people would be doing that or wanting that than people who are doing that or want to now. When anything is set up as a norm, or as the definitive Thing to Be Doing, then a lot of people are going to want that thing, probably more than would want to do it if it wasn’t.
Most importantly, I think, concern with what’s “normal,” “typical,” or “usual” when it comes to human sexuality is a lot less useful and helpful than it can seem. Even calling anything one of those words accurately is always iffy. I say this a lot, but if we know anything at all about human sexuality by now, we know that what’s most normal isn’t everyone being the same, but diversity. When it comes to the sexualities and sexual lives of the billions of people there are in the world, we know that what people do and don’t do, like, and don’t like is much, much more diverse than it’s usually assumed to be or presented as. What’s normal is diversity, not everyone doing the same thing, or doing the same things the same ways.
What we also know by now is that when people go about their sex lives in a way where they’re focused more or only on what they think they’re supposed to do or want than focused on what they actually want it usually doesn’t lead to the healthiest, happiest, most satisfying and enriching sexual lives. Sexual expression is a very personal, individual expression, just like art or the way we talk. What sex is really, ideally, supposed to be about is who we uniquely are sexually, and when sex includes partners, who we each are ourselves and who we are, again, uniquely, together. That’s the way of approaching sex that people tend to most enjoy and find benefits them and their lives most, not trying to be “normal.” That’s also what tends to make sex be anything but a total bore.
That all said, I do want to talk a little about aversion. Aversion is a word for a feeling we have, about anything, which is an extreme dislike or disinclination. Aversion is a different feeling than apathy or disinterest. And because we like or want to do one thing doesn’t have to mean we feel an aversion to something else, and also isn’t usually because we feel an aversion to something else.
Aversion usually is something we want to resolve or at least have some understanding of. Not because we have to want, like, or do anything we feel an aversion to; we don’t. In other words, what I’m not saying is that someone has to “fix” themselves to make themselves like, want, or do what they feel an aversion to. Rather, we usually want to resolve it because feelings of aversion are very uncomfortable, cause people distress, and usually come from somewhere: from something we usually do need to work out or at least identify.
For example, often feelings of aversion come from some kind of trauma . With and around sex, having experienced sexual abuse , assault, or shaming are common causes of sexual aversion. For instance, some people who were raised with strong messages about how their genitals or sex are sinful or evil or gross or off-limits experience sexual aversion as a result (either on the whole, or just around certain activities). Some people who have been sexually abused or assaulted find they feel aversion to the idea or experience of consensual sexual activities which were the activities involved—without consent —when they were abused or assaulted. You can probably understand why that might happen for anyone with those experiences.
To give you a personal example of aversion from trauma, my dominant hand was smashed and partially severed as a child in an accident. If and when I find myself in situations where I could seriously injure my hand—like when cooking and using knives that feel too big for me to
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