The husband is directed to place himself in a sitting (slightly reclining, if desired) position, with his back against a comfortable placement of pillows at the headboard of the bed. With the husband's legs adequately separated to allow his wife to sit between them, she should recline with her back against his chest, pillowing her head on his shoulder.
Length of torsos should determine the reclining angle that permits her head to rest comfortably. Her legs are then separated and extended across those of her husband.
This coital position provides a degree of warm security for the woman ("back-protected" phenomenon) and allows freedom of access for the man to encourage creative exploration of his wife's entire body in the sensate-focus concept.
This coital position provides a degree of warm security for the woman ("back-protected" phenomenon) and allows freedom of access for the man to encourage creative exploration of his wife's entire body in the sensate-focus concept.
This and other forms of nonverbal communication allow sharing of her particular desires as they occur as manifestations of her sexual value system, and constitute a secure way by which her marital partner can identify and fulfill these desires by meaningful interaction. This means of direct physical communication also provides the woman with freedom to request specifics of genital play without the distraction of forced verbal request or a detailed explanation.
Any spontaneous form of expression of a man's own sexual tensions is one of the most interactive contributions that he can make to his wife. It is a viable component of sexual "give to get" in any circumstance of physical sharing. This principle applies equally to the marital couple carrying out the simplest sensate-focus exercise in the therapy program as it does to a marital couple that has never known sexual dysfunction.
The husband must not presume his wife's desire for a particular stimulative approach, nor must he introduce his own choice of stimuli. The husband's assumption of expertise has no place in the initial learning phase of a marital couple seeking to reverse the life's non orgasmic condition.
The trial and error hazard this poses is not worth the small possibility of accidental pleasure that might be achieved.
In truth, error in some facet of this controlled manipulative form of physical communication has already been established, or the marital couple members probably would not consider themselves in need of professional support.
Only after both marital partners have established the fact of the wife's sexual effectiveness with controlled genital play and have developed dependable physical signal systems should trial-and-error stimulative techniques be crone a naturally occurring dimension of pleasure.
It is well to mention that even those partners with an established, effective sexual relationship may find it both appropriate and advisable to check out their physical signal systems by verbal communication from time to time.
An additional value derived from the non demand position and its accompanying sensate exercises is its contribution to removal of the potential spectator's role. This role can become as much a pitfall for the non orgasmic woman as it is for the impotent male. Already considered in descriptions of female-oriented patterns of sexual dissimulation, the spectator role is dissipated when sexual involvement of husband and wife becomes mutually encompassing for both partners.
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