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Declan Galbraight

 http://www.last.fm/music/Declan+Galbraith/+images/3173338

Declan Galbraith (born December 19, 1991, in Hoo St Werburgh, Kent, England) is an English singer of Scottish and Irish origin.

He has been hailed as a ‘‘once in a lifetime’’ phenomenal talent and a rising media star.

The control and range of his voice, as well as his ability to interpret and adapt material of differing genres, are the cornerstones of his unique talent.

Declan Galbraith and his family live in the UK, in Hoo, a village near Rochester, Kent.

The presence for Declan’s unique style and distinctive voice can be traced back to his early childhood. He would often accompany his grandfather’s perforances at local folk concerts. Declan would sit for hours just watching and listening. Declan claims he can remember singing at two years old. It wasn’t long before his family and friends realized he had a very special gift.

At the age of eight, he started entering local talent competitions and won sixteen titles in just fourteen months. He was spotted by one of the major recording companies at one of these talent competitions and before long he was signed as a recording artist.

His first recording was a version of ‘Walking in the Air’,which was released on a special Christmas Hits album which also featured Westlife, Elton John and Elvis Presley among many others.

In a short period of time, Declan had become a well-known celebrity and has appeared in numerous television programs, newspapers and radio shows all over the UK and Ireland.

MERCURY IN SAGITTARIUS

The Sun is given the most credit when it comes to the zodiac. It is the information people give out when someone else asks “what’s your sign?” But the other planets of the zodiac have importance that shouldn’t be thrown away. Mercury influences how a person thinks and how that is portrayed to the outside world. Learning, communication and expression are all housed here. It also dictates whether a person moves through life with a strong sense of direction or a tendency to detour.

Those who have their Mercury in Sagittarius have versatile, independent and impulsive minds. They express themselves through direct- sometimes argumentative- means. They love to socialize and communicate because it gives them an opportunity to make their opinion known. And they will make sure that opinion is known. It can be hard for them to tolerate opinions that differ from their own. Compromise is not something this person will consider. If they are required to work in a team environment, it is best that they are given their own tasks to work on since anyone that is forced to cooperate with them will be steamrolled.

They are also likely to express their opinions bluntly. Those opinions are not often well developed or based on fact. Impatience drives this person to rush to judgment and their lack of editing makes this come out in words. It isn’t that they want to hurt anyone’s feelings. The thought really doesn’t have time to occur to them before they speak. But they are interesting and charismatic with a naturally compelling oration capability. They might be prone to exaggeration but it is just their way of improving a story. This ability to instruct, inform and inspire through speech- combined with their love of learning- make teaching an excellent career path for these people. But they best serve areas where there’s room for creativity. It is hard to have an opinion on math and science, after all.

Their power of concentration is weak and they have a tendency of flitting between subjects without collecting all of the details along the way. They are also forgetful so even though they tend to study a wide range of materials during their life, not much of it will stick. There really isn’t any subject that they wouldn’t enjoy studying but philosophy, languages, psychology, religion and foreign affairs will rank high on the list. It is likely that they will remain dedicated to education for their entire life.

If life is a path with winding roads, obstacles and a distant finish line those with their Mercury in Sagittarius would be walking along with a bullhorn. They might not be the first one around the obstacles, but everyone else on the path will be aware of their presence. If they are particularly charismatic, they might even have followers lagging behind them taking notes. They might not be revolutionary in getting around the obstacles but they’ll make it around and learn something in the process- about the obstacle and everything else nearby.
 

VENUS IN SAGITTARIUS

In an astrological chart, the planet Venus is associated with how a person expresses their self in their relationships- especially in love, attraction and marriage. It describes how beauty is appreciated and interpreted by the person and also how they relate to others. The sign of the Venus is often the same as the Sun since they can never be more than forty five degrees from each other. In the cases when the signs are identical, the behavior the person has towards people in general translates into their romantic life. If the signs are different, there is a disparity between how they treat people in general and how they treat people they are romantically involved with.

People born with their Venus in Sagittarius are affectionate, friendly and demonstrative.(I am not demonstrative). They are carefree and somewhat undependable when it comes to relationships. Sociable, humorous and flirtatious they tend not to take things too seriously. Partners who have white picket fence dreams in mind had better avoid this sign. Independent, it is hard for them to be tied to a relationship that might hamper their freedom. If they are to be in a relationship, it has to start slow and build up over time. Even then, there’s a chance this person will be uncomfortable once the turn has been made into more serious territory. They may grow nervous and turn an eye towards the door once they begin to feel restricted. Even if they seem happy, they may be drawing up exit strategies in the back of their mind.

Idealistic and honest, they would not cheat on a partner they had pledged fidelity to. That isn’t saying that they won’t just up and leave. They will never promise to stay forever- even if they somehow do manage to make a lifelong partnership. Their ideas and beliefs are extremely important to them. If a relationship is going to even stand a slight chance of lasting, they will need a partner that shares their views on the issues of the world- or at least someone that is willing to convert to those beliefs. Sagittarius is not known for making great personal sacrifices or compromises. If a partner expects them to change, they had better not hold their breath.

These people make much better friends than lovers. They are cheerful and easy to be around and to feel affection for. If a partner can approach the relationship like a deep friendship and allow the person with their Venus in Sagittarius room to express their freedom, a good partnership can be formed. It will take a secure partner to know and understand that when this person goes roaming out on their own it is not because they don’t feel anything for what they have at home. There’s just a whole wide world to see and they are afraid they might miss some of it during their short time on this planet. If a partner understands enough, they might even be invited to go along on many of the adventures.
 

MOON IN TAURUS

Unlike Aries, its predecessor in the zodiac wheel, emotional spontaneity is not something found in a Taurean Moon Sign. Commitment in relationships is pledged only after much thought, analyzing, and assurance of reciprocation. The key to Taurean emotional security is always to be on firm ground. Although the charging bull image is often lent to describe the temper of the Taurus astrological Sun Sign it isn’t true. Taurus moons emotionally express themselves with calculating exactness rather than wild abandonment that the charging bull image conjures up.

Taurean Moon signs are quite sensual at all levels: physical, emotional, and intellectual. Creature comforts are critical for their survival. Next to Cancer, a Taurean’s home is their emotional center. As lunar fixed Earth sign personalities, Taureans require tangible proof of affection from those with whom they form relationships. Material comforts and the advantages of wealth are important to them, and they can become overly concerned with social status. At times the negative side of this is “nose in the air” thought or behavior that is an illusion.

You can’t really call Taurus Moons homebodies. (but i can also spend time at home). In fact, they tend to spend a lot of time and attention on social or economic pursuits outside of the home instead of routine household or family chores. You find the physical home playing a major part when the Taurus Moon uses it to entertain key people for social and economic goals.


Taurus Moon personalities do not want to be rushed or forced into commitments. However, once they do make an emotional commitment to an idea, project, or relationship, they are dogged in their pursuit. Tenacity is an accurate adjective for Taurean Moons. It is difficult for them to accept when things go wrong, and it may take the fixed sign moon even longer to make the necessary adjustments to rectify the situation.


People who break promises or fail to keep their word must be prepared to endure the consequences. Betrayal and breach of trust is not something ANY Taurean-influenced personality withstands. Taureans are slow to anger and slow to forgive. Taureans never forget. Some of them remember personal insults and disappointments for years, wasting precious time bearing grudges that should have been long forgotten.

Their calm and quiet temperament has a stabilizing influence on others, but it can also give them an aura of self-containment that makes them appear proud or unapproachable.


Famous Taurean Moon women: Ann-Margaret, Lisa Bonet, Rita Mae Brown, Carol Burnett, Rosalynn Carter, Connie Chung, Geena Davis, Frances Farmer, Imelda Marcos, Meryl Streep, Mother Teresa, Sigourney Weaver and Natalie Wood.


Famous Taurean Moon men: Ed Asner, Prince Charles, King Chulalonghorn, Bill Clinton, Michael J. Fox, James Hoffa, Carl Jung, Jerry Lewis, Bob Mackie, Karl Marx, Jim Morrison, Vincent Price, Ronald Reagan, Dennis Rodman, Peter Sellers, William Shatner and Mike Wallace.

 

Astrology

 
ascendant in gemini(rising sign)
Geminis are original and creative thinkers and tend to dominate their circles intellectually. They also have the power to visualize their ideas and express them scientifically. Since they tend to identify themselves with their ideas, their most dynamic form of expression is intellectual.
 
2nd house in cancer
These natives acquire money through their adaptability and their receptiveness to the people around them. They instinctively know what others need for growth and nourishment, and by responding to these needs they are often able to make money. Thus, their emotional and financial affairs are interrelated. Generally, they have something tucked away as a nest egg. They are emotionally tied to this and protect it at all costs.
 
3rd house in leo
These natives express power through creative thinking and invest their ideas with great energy. Thus, they think in large and dramatic terms. Their mental ingenuity is often expressed in art. Their journeys are likely to have a pleasurable or creative purpose; they tend to travel to see those whom they love or with whom they are romantically involved.(Yeah, it is true)

 
4th house in virgo
 
These natives prefer to and often do situate their professions and workshops in the home. They render service to their families and are fastidious and discerning in the home. Like the Moon, they move around constantly and, if possible, combine visits with financial gain.
 
5th house in libra
 
Partnership is the channel for their creative power. These people are attracted to people of refinement, grace, and balance. They derive great aesthetic pleasure from listening to music and enjoy intellectual discussion in social interchange. They have artistic ability of which other people are usually unaware; their artistic creativity is as much mental as emotional.
 
6th house in scorpio
 
These natives have to regenerate themselves through the areas of work and service. Only by making their ideas effective in a practical way can they transform themselves and get a new start in life. This Sixth House placement of the highly emotional Scorpio indicates that the expression or repression of desires strongly influences the natives’ health. So there is a necessity to use the mind in such a way as to improve the health.
 
7th house in sagittarius
 
These native tend to emphasize ethical, religious, and philosophical values when choosing personal affiliations. They are usually lucky in marriage and have good relations with the public.
Sagittarius
The Sagittarius influence in the seventh house suggests a reluctance to be hemmed in by marriage or other formal partnership entrapments. This hesitancy to be tied down is a result of concern for growth. When you do marry it’s likely to be somewhat later than most. You’ll require a good deal of freedom and flexibility. Fortunately, you’ll often attract a mate who also shares this need for liberty. Marriage does usually come because of your need for companionship, more than a need for sex and mothering, or security. With Jupiter ruling the marriage house, this becomes another area of the chart that is blessed with good fortune. There is a freedom seeking quality to your quest from marriage. You are attracted to a partner that is very independent and free-wheeling.
(now i understand why i prefer late marriage, and i do not want responsibilty in life! okay)
 
8th house in capricorn
 
These natives have to earn their fair share in any sort of partnership or they deprive themselves of fulfillment. If they are lucky enough to get an inheritance, there is generally delay and the inheritance is often tied up in litigation. However, they protect themselves by buying insurance.
 
9th house in aquarius
 
There is a tendency to be progressive, unusual, and freethinking in matters of religion, philosophy, and higher education. These natives like to associate with people involved in these fields. They are curious about foreign cultures and seek out the unusual through travel and study. Since inspiration comes in sudden flashes, they go on long journeys suddenly, without much preparation.
 
10th house in pisces
 
These natives tend to be ‘other-worldly’ and visionary, and not always practical with regard to work and public reputation. They are elusive and hard to pin down in professional matters. Peculiar conditions are sometimes associated with their jobs and reputations, and there is always an element of mystery in their professional activity.
 
11th house in aries
 
There is a constant effort to make new friends. These natives are continually moving in a new group, leaving old friends behind and rejoining them at a later time. They tend to organize group endeavors. They are energetic in expressing their hopes and wishes and often try new and unusual methods of obtaining them.
 
12th house in taurus
 
These natives are likely to he affected by conditions from the past that do not change easily. There is a tendency to he more persistent on the unconscious level than on the conscious level. Their self-undoing comes from their unconscious materialistic desires.
 
(wala, na addict na naman ako sa astrology)

FRIEND FOREVER

Source: http://www.best-quotes-poems.com/alwaysfriends.html

Always Friends

I accept you in confidence,
I listen and admire your wisdom.
We are one when we are together,
You and I will always be friends.

When you are angry,
I am there to sooth your aggression.
When you are sad,
I am there to cheer you up.

We understand each others thoughts,
Words with us aren’t needed.
We have a trust that is very rare,
You and I will always be friends.

What we enjoy doing together comes natural,
We accept life and move ahead.
I am your shadow and you mine,
We are inseparable if only in mind.

MULTI LINGUAL: i LOVE yOU

"I Love You" in Different Languages

Afrikaans : Ek is lief vir jou
Ek het jou lief
Albanian : Te dua
Amharic : Afekrishalehou
Arabic : Ana Behibak (to a male)
Ana Behibek (to a female)
Basc : Nere Maitea
Bavarian : I mog di narrisch gern
Bengali : Ami tomAy bhAlobAshi
Berber : Lakh tirikh
Bicol : Namumutan ta ka
Bulgarian : Obicham te
Cambodian : kh_nhaum soro_lahn nhee_ah
Bon sro lanh oon
Cantonese : Ngo oi ney
Catalan : T’estim (mallorcan)
T’estime (valencian)
T’estimo (catalonian)
T’estim molt (I love you a lot)
Chinese : Wo ie ni (Manderin, Cantonese)
Croatian : Volim te (most common), or
Ja te volim (less common)
Czech : miluji te
Danish : Jeg elsker dig
Dutch : Ik hou van jou
Estonian : Mina armastan sind
Esperanto : Mi amas vin
Persian (Farsi) : Tora dust midaram
Flemish : Ik zie oe geerne
Finnish : Mina" rakastan sinua
French : Je t’aime
Friesian : Ik bin fereale op dy
Ik ha^ld fan dy (Most commonly used phrase) (the ^ is above the a)
Gaelic : Ta gra agam ort
German : Ich liebe Dich
I mog Di ganz arg! (Suebian: South German dialekt.)
Greek : S’ ayapo
Gujarati
(a dialect of India)
"Tane Prem Karoo Choo"
Hausa : Ina sonki
Hebrew : aNEE oHEIVET oTKHA (female to male)
aNEE oHEIV otAKH (male to female)
Ani ohev at (man to woman)
Ani ohevet atah (woman to man)
Hindi: Mein Tumse Pyar Karta Hoon
Hokkien : Wa ai lu
Hopi : Nu’ umi unangwa’ta
Hungarian : Szeretlek te’ged
Icelandic : ?g elska ßig
Indonesian : Saya cinta padamu
Saya Cinta Kamu
Aku tjinta padamu
Saja kasih saudari
Italian : Ti amo
Irish : taim i’ ngra leat
Japanese : Kimi o ai shiteru
Kazakh : Men seny jaksy kuremyn
Kiswahili : Nakupenda
Korean : Tangsinul sarang ha yo
Kurdish : Ez te hezdikhem
Latin : Te amo
Vos amo
Lao : Khoi huk chau
Latvian : Es Tev milu
Lingala : Nalingi yo
Lithuanian: Ash miliu tave
Luo : Aheri
Madrid lingo : Me molas, tronca
Malay/Indonesian : Saya cintakan awak(awak=kamu=you)
Aku sayang engkau (engkau=kamu=you)
Malay : Saya cintamu
Saya sayangmu
Maltese: Inhobbok!
(Added by Christine )
Mandarin : Wo ai ni
Mohawk : Konoronhkwa
Navajo : Ayor anosh’ni
Ndebele : Niyakutanda
Norwegian : Jeg elsker deg (Bokmaal)
Eg elskar deg (Nynorsk)
Pakistani : Muje se mu habbat hai
Persian : Tora dost daram
Pilipino : Mahal Kita
Iniibig Kita
Polish : Ja Cie Kocham or Kocham Cie (Pronounced Yacha kocham)
Portuguese : Eu te amo
Romanian : Te iu besc
Russian : Ya lyublyu tebya
Ya vas lyublyu
Scot Gaelic : Tha gra\dh agam ort
Serbian : Volim te (most common), or
Ja te volim" (less common)
Shona : Ndinokuda
Sioux : Techihhila
Slovak : lubim ta
Slovene : ljubim te (??????)
Spanish : Te amo
Swahili : Nakupenda
Swedish : Jag a"lskar dig
Swiss-German : Ch’ha di ga"rn
Tagalog : Mahal kita
Taiwanese : Gwa ai lee
Tamil Naan Unnai Kadhalikiren (Entry by krishna connexions@theoffice.net)
Thai : Phom Rak Khun
Ch’an Rak Khun
Tunisian : Ha eh bak
Turkish : Seni seviyorum!
Urdu : Mujhe tumse muhabbat hai (Entry by Magsemail@aol.com)
Vietnamese : Anh ye^u em (man to woman)
Em ye^u anh (woman to man)
Toi yeu em
Vlaams : Ik hou van jou
Welsh : ‘Rwy’n dy garu di.
Yr wyf i yn dy garu di (chwi)
Yiddish : Ikh hob dikh lib
Zazi : Ezhele hezdege (sp?)
Zuni : Tom ho’ ichema

Magical Cups & Bloody Brides: Virginity in Context

http://www.scarleteen.com/article/politics/magical_cups_bloody_brides_virginity_in_context

Am I still a virgin if I had oral sex, or if someone fingered me?
I haven’t had intercourse, so my hymen is still not broken, right?
Can my partner tell if I’m a virgin?
If I am a virgin, will I bleed a lot when I have sex?

A good 25% of all the questions we get at Scarleteen are about issues of virginity.

Most teens — even though some talk to parents, and many have sex ed at school — get most of their sexual education from their peers and friends. While talking to your friends is no doubt easier than to a parent or teacher, it also leaves a lot of room for misinformation, especially about something like virginity, about which there are infinite myths that have been floating in the aether for centuries.

What IS virginity, and what does it mean? What is the standard definition?

By the most standard modern-day definition, when people talk about a "virgin," they’re talking about someone who has not had sexual intercourse of the penis-and-vagina variety. Interestingly, the word virgin, however, from the Greek and Latin words for man and woman and really means "androgyne" or a person who is whole unto themselves, or "chaste maiden." In ancient times, the virgin huntress icon Diana was a goddess because of her independence, not her subservience or the state of her hymen — she was on her own by choice, and not owned by any man, nor did she wish to be. However, the more common meaning and implication of the term came to change around the 13th century and derived a sexual, sexist and moralistic meaning.

With that change, the word now implied that staying a virgin until marriage guaranteed that a woman would uphold the family honor by passing from father to husband as an object that was owned — her virginity, her own body, was a thing of value that would be owned by her father, until such time as ownership of her virginity, body and sexuality would be transferred to her husband. Some of the reason for this was to establish a higher "bride price," at a time when marriage was utilized to gain land and a dowry (and a virginal bride was more of a bargaining chip than a real partner in the true sense of the word). Another was that at that time, given the lack of birth control, having strict controls on virginity helped to see to it that there were fewer illegitimate (born outside of marriage) children born.

As may be obvious, none of this has a lot of bearing in our modern world. In fact, when you think about it, it’s downright insulting. But it also excludes a whole lot of people from the picture.

The concept of a virgin as someone who hasn’t had penis-in-vagina intercourse leaves a lot of people out in the cold. Defining sex by male-to-female intercourse would make a lesbian who has had over one hundred female partners, but no male partners, a virgin. The standard definition of virginity also denotes that a woman is not a fully sexual being until she has made love with a man. Very little of this is positive or empowering to you, and it leaves a lot of loopholes.

Okay, but if I still buy into virginity, how do I know if I am one? How do — or did — people tell if someone was a virgin?

For starters, we have more loopholes with this definition now than we did before. In the Middle Ages, you wouldn’t have been able to get around this by saying "I had oral sex, but not intercourse." Rumor traveled fast, and your neighbors (and potential in-laws) would have found out about your liaisons, and what you did and didn’t do would have had little relevance: you had been with a man in the Biblical sense, and therefore, were unchaste. Your value — as a woman and object — would be lesser.

There were also ridiculous tests done in the past: they may have conducted a urine test, under the notion that a virgin’s urine should always be clear and never cloudy. They may have even looked at which way a woman’s breasts point, and a virgin’s breasts were supposed to point up. In old lore, women may have been given a magic cup to drink from, and those women who attempted to drink from it and were not chaste or faithful to their husbands spilled the wine. Of course, all of these things are fallacy. The color of urine has nothing to do with virginity, and everything to do with health, diet, and hormonal changes. Breast size and shape varies according to body type, shape and muscle and fat tone, and whether or not you spill your wine has to do with if you’re a klutz or not — or how much wine you’ve been drinking!

All that you can truly tell from all these silly tests is that it’s always been pretty darned hard to tell if a woman has had sexual intercourse or not. One of the biggest myths about being able to tell if a woman’s a virgin that is still commonly accepted is the idea that you can tell if a woman has had intercourse by whether or not her hymen is torn.

The hymen is a thin membrane that was likely around the vaginal opening when you were born. Most women are born with hymens, but the hymen doesn’t usually completely cover the opening to the vagina. It isn’t like a tarp or a blanket, or even the foil seal over the mouth of a brand new bottle of aspirin. The hymen is about as thick as a piece of plastic wrap in most cases — just a little thin piece of skin, basically. What’s more, even in women who have never had any sexual contact with anyone at all, not even masturbation, the hymen always has small holes in it. Why? Because women menstruate, and because they have normal vaginal fluids, and both menstrual blood and vaginal fluids need to have some way out of the vagina!

Normal hymens may look any number of ways, from looking like a thin film to looking like a spindly spiderweb. The hymen is not (usually) an impenetrable shield. Even a so-called "intact" hymen doesn’t fully block the vaginal opening. It stretches too, and even after being stretched, small folds of it remain around the vaginal opening for the rest of your life.

Your hymen can be stretched or abraded during intercourse or manual sex (including with female partners), with or without any bleeding. In addition, using tampons, general physical activity, masturbation (especially if you’ve ever put your finger(s) in your vagina), and any number of everyday activities can stretch or slightly wear away your hymen, and that’s absolutely normal, healthy and okay. Most hymens start to slowly wear away over time even just from the hormones in the body.

Essentially, a broken or unbroken hymen is no more reliable a test of virginity than upturned breasts or the color of your urine.

Okay, but can my partner feel the difference if I’m a virgin? Won’t he be able to tell because I bleed?

No and no.

No one can feel the difference. Period. Over time, the feel of the inside of your vagina may change due to certain body changes, especially childbirth, but the degree of tightness, resilience, springiness, and strength of the vaginal walls depends less on wear and tear to the vagina and more on your own skin and muscle tone and general health.

As far as bleeding, some women bleed during their first intercourse. Some do not. According to sexpert Alice at Columbia University, "It is possible, and common, for a woman to be a virgin and not have pain or blood during her first intercourse." Again, this comes down to whether or not your hymen has been stretched or to what degree it has worn away before intercourse, which, if you’re in your teens, it most likely has to some degree.

We can blame much of the myth of the "bloody first time" on the whole issue or virginity, and the pressure put on women to be virgins. In some countries, this "bloodletting" becomes a matter of public display, where the sheets of the marriage bed are shown to the entire neighborhood to prove the worthiness of the wife. That’s a lot of pressure, and through history, many women who had not had sex with others, but simply did not bleed (mainly in the case of lower-class women who did not have the luxury of sitting all day like upper-class women, and thus, whose hymens had already at least partially eroded due to normal physical work and activity), have hidden their shame and embarrassment by faking that blood with animal blood, or by cutting themselves. Often their mothers (who knew better from their own experience) would advise new brides to keep blood nearby for just this occasion.

Well, crud. How do I know if I’m a virgin then? Now I don’t know WHAT to think!

Suffice it to say, virginity established by heterosexual intercourse (and by such things as intact hymens and bleeding) is a definition that really doesn’t work in our modern world, now that we know a lot more about female anatomy than we used to, and never has worked all that well in the past, to boot. Most of us working in the sex field don’t use that term at all. It’s just too faulty and too arbitrary.

What it means to be a virgin really can only be defined by you, and it has to do with how you define sex. For myself, I was raped before I had sexual intercourse I consented to. I didn’t consider myself "devirginized" by that attack, and it wasn’t a sexual experience for me, and I didn’t participate in it. Years later, when I took a partner willingly, and we performed mutual oral sex and petting, I felt I had had my first real, major sexual experience. Some time later, I had intercourse, but I did not consider myself to be a virgin before that time. To me, sex doesn’t mean intercourse, and it never has. It means that I (with or without a partner) am pleasuring myself, or being pleasured in a way that makes me feel sexual. That may or may not involve orgasm.

If your parents, other adults or teachers tell you to "stay a virgin," I can basically guarantee you what they DON’T mean is to have every sort of sex except intercourse. Most adults don’t define virginity by your hymen or intercourse, as most of us know better. Women are especially less prone to use this definition, because overall, as shown in many sexuality studies, almost two-thirds of women do not experience orgasm from only intercourse (and according to two studies, The Hite Report and Women and Sex, over 80% didn’t during first intercourse), but do instead by other kinds of sex (oral sex, masturbation, or mutual masturbation).

When adults talk about sex, they usually aren’t talking about a single act, or something as simple as a penis entering your vagina. What they are talking about is an entire part of your life, in which you are sexually active (of any involved sort, like oral sex, heavy petting or intercourse), and emotionally and intellectually involved in that act. In fact, the transitive definition of sex, from the Latin "sexus" truly means "sexually motivated phenomena or behavior." In other words, if you’re doing something because you want to get off, or make yourself feel good in a way that relates to your sexuality, it’s sex. There is a difference between "sex" and "sexual intercourse" which is why we have separate terms, and while "sex" is very broad, and can include many things, "sexual intercourse" pertains only to one.

Where does all this leave me?

Where it should. Only YOU can define your sexual life. Someone else can’t do it for you, and you shouldn’t allow anyone else to do so, ever. Virginity shouldn’t be something you use to devalue or judge others, or by which you should be judged or devalued. Even if we are treated as such, none of us are objects to be owned; we are whole people who own ourselves as well as our own sexual identity and value. Virginity shouldn’t be a symbol of status (unless, that is, you still have a bride price, in which case, you have bigger problems than figuring out what virginity is), or a lack thereof. Sex isn’t something that should be used as a bargaining chip for anything, or used to manipulate. If it is, you aren’t doing it right, and boy, are you missing out.

Your sexuality is something you will have with you all of your life. It is yours by birth, and it starts developing before you are even born. No one can give it to you, or take it away. How much or how little value you give it is solely up to you. If you can have sex responsibly and safely and feel good about it, it makes you no less or more of a good person or a person of value that someone who feels good about being sexually inactive, abstinent, or celibate. If you feel best being sexually inactive, and like to define yourself as a virgin by whatever definition you have, that’s great, too.

But that value has to lie with you — not with current or potential partners, or with your family or friends. If the only value your sexuality has to you is what others think of it, you may very well find that your sexual life will be very empty, and you’ll be apt to let others make choices for you, or influence your choices, in an arena where to be healthy, you need to be making them yourself.

Much of the misinformation, myth and practice surrounding female virginity has been cultivated in times when women could not make their own choices. But those times are past for many women, unless you choose to perpetuate them. Ultimately, it is in your hands, and those of other women right now, to take the initiative to "own" yourself and your sexuality. Whatever way you choose to do so, so long as it feels right to you physically, emotionally and intellectually, and you make your choices responsibly and thoughtfully is the right way. If you do so on your own, and own your own sexuality, by what "virgin" is really supposed to mean, well…you’re being the best kind of virgin there is, the kind who is autonomous, and, like the Greek goddess Diana, cannot be owned by anyone and is pure at heart… and that’s the place where you CAN tell.

Sex hurts her, but I don’t want it to!

raiderfanty asks:

Ok, me and my girlfriend just now started to have sex and it’s like still hurting her after like the 3rd time we couldn’t really do it too long that time because it hurt her. And I’m worried if I’m not doing something right because I don’t want to hurt her I want it to be enjoyable for her. What Do I Do!

Heather replies:

I’m going to presume that you’re male because it sounds like you are, but my apologies if I’m incorrect in that assumption.

I’m also going to presume that you’re talking about genital or vaginal intercourse.

We outline a lot of this here — From OW! to WOW! Demystifying Painful Intercourse — but let me draw from and expand upon the section in that for male partners.

How can you help out with this? Pretty easily. If you’re concerned about your partner’s pleasure as much as yours to read something like this, you’re already halfway there. Whoohoo!

• Make clear to your female partner, from the onset of your sexual partnership, that she should always feel free to let you know when she’s feeling any pain or discomfort, even if you appear to be enjoying yourself, and that you have exactly zero problem halting or changing the action for her so that she, too, feels good. And when she’s hurting from sex, that’s exactly what you should do: stop with what you’re doing, give her a minute. Then if she wants to keep having sex, step away from intercourse and take some more time with receptive sexual activities for her that don’t start and end with her vagina. That’s things like stimulating her clitoris with your fingers or your mouth, maybe mutually masturbating together, maybe making out: whatever makes her feel good that isn’t about entering her vagina with fingers or a penis. When she’s starting to feel really good from those things — maybe even after she reaches orgasm from one of them — then ask again if she wants to try intercourse. If she does, then you can try again and see if it feels better for her. Chances are good that it will. Often when intercourse hurts it’s because a woman just isn’t aroused enough — remember that intercourse alone doesn’t often stimulate our most sensitive parts.

You can also make clear that you only want to be having sex together at times she wants sex, too.

• Ask questions during sex. We’re not talking about anything complicated: "How does this feel?" and "Is that comfortable for you?" and "Need more lube?" and "What position feels best for you?" and "Want me to go deeper/faster or not?"

And on that note, do be sure you ARE using lubricant as needed for her with intercourse.

• Don’t bang away with your penis or fingers if your partner’s vagina appears to be putting up resistance or she’s clearly not enjoying herself. Instead, go back a step or two: if inserting your penis is problematic or is causing your partner discomfort, go back to her clitoris for a while, maybe lube up a single finger and massage her vaginal opening until the vagina itself almost seems to "suck" that finger in readily. Think baby steps. Think about the sort of care, for instance, your testicles or your anus need.

It’s usually best to be very gradual with vaginal intercourse, especially when it’s new. Go i only a little bit at a time, being sure that you and/or your girlfriend are also doing other things to keep her feeling good, like rubbing her clitoris while you do that. When she ASKS for you to go deeper — which she will if it feels good — that’s when you go deeper.

• Let your partner initiate sex just as much as you do.

Make sure that intercourse is really what she wants, and that it’s also something she wants as much for herself as she does to please you, or because it’s what she thinks she’s supposed to be doing. Not everyone likes intercourse all that much, and even when we do, it’s not always the kind of sex we want to be having on a given day.

• Don’t rush. Period. It’s understandable to want to hurry due to short or unpredictable erection times, or because it just feels so intense, but other sex when erections don’t hang around, or additional sexual activity for your partner with hands or mouths if you reach orgasm yourself quickly is always, always better than pain for your partner.

• Remember that her vaginal canal not only isn’t where all her sexuality and pleasure lies, but that for most women, it’s secondary. Paying attention to her whole body and her whole vulva — not just her vagina — is the real deal (and, in fact, equally encouraging your partner to pay attention to YOUR whole body and the whole of YOUR genitals –the penis, but also the testes, perineum and anus, pressure points around the pelvis — also will enhance YOUR sex life and the level of your pleasure, too!).

I’d also suggest just sitting down and having an honest chat about this: tell her that you don’t like she’s been hurting, and that you want to try and figure out what you both can do to avoid pain on her part. Make sure she DOES want intercourse, and isn’t so nervous or sure she’s going to experience pain (if we anticipate pain, we’re way more likely to experience it). You might want to suggest you two take a break from intercourse and focus on other activities for a while so that she can basically reclaim sex as a pleasurable experience, and so you two can learn more about what she enjoys most together so you can better incorporate those things into the times you have intercourse. And above all else, remind her that you two never have to do anything either of you just haven’t really liked or which hurts: obviously, you don’t want to hurt her, but it can never hurt to remind her of that, and to reinforce with her that you’re most pleased when you are both feeling good, so she shouldn’t ever feel obligated to do something that isn’t working out for her, period, or right now.

In the case that she’s feeling pain with ANY vaginal or vulval contact, even after doing some or all of what I’m suggesting here, have her be sure to also talk to her healthcare provider. There are certain conditions where for vaginal or vulval pain to get better, a person may need medical treatment.

Here are a few more links to help you out:

SOURCE: http://www.scarleteen.com/article/advice/sex_hurts_her_but_i_dont_want_it_to

Dealing With Rape

I recently received a letter asking me what else sex was, besides vaginal penetration. We need to remember that all vaginal penetration — nor all genital or "sexual" contact — is not sex.

If you have been raped, you have not "had sex," or initiated or included yourself in a sexual act. Were the public sentiment and the way some people use sex different, one would not even include rape in a volume discussing sex — besides talking about it for survivors so far as dealing with the impact it can have on our sex lives — because it is NOT sex, most certainly not for the person being raped. Partnered sex is not so simple as to be one physical act determined by one person: it is a subtle, shared alchemy that happens when we are both willingly aroused, physically and emotionally, and is not contained within something so small as an act of penetration and release. Sex is not what one person does TO another: but something which everyone involved does, actively and gladly, together.

Were our thoughts, as a whole people, more broad and wider in scope on sexuality, we would understand that an act of rape, legally defined as "a sexual act committed against a woman’s will," is only a sexual act for the perpetrator, and even in that, has far more to do with other factors, such as power, dominance, control, anger and emotional imbalance, than it does with sex at all.

William Blake, in the late 1700’s, wrote a piece entitled Visions of the Daughters of Albion. At the time, the premise of this piece was revolutionary: Oothoon, a woman in love with Theotormon, is raped by another, Bromion, and despite Theotormon’s feelings she is "spoiled," she boldly asserts otherwise. Oothoon — and Blake — states clearly that she is incapable of being spoiled, ruined or sullied by the action of others upon her, in which she had no part or engagement with. Thankfully, others have also finally begun to realize this is so.

How do you know if you have been raped?
At ANY point, during any act in which your body is violated for someone else’s sexual gratification — be it via genital or oral penetration, or more ambiguous acts such as being made to feel another’s body against your wishes, et cetera — if you have made clear, even as simply as saying no once or pushing the other person away, even as simply as NOT actively participating and NOT saying yes, that you do not wish to be sexually engaged or used, and have been forced, through physical force, coercion or threat to do otherwise, you have been raped.

Rape is when one person wants and pursues a sexual act on, to or inside another person who does not want to participate, and who does not fully and freely consent to take part in that act. Someone giving consent to sex is someone giving a clear, active and enthusiastic yes, and who is clearly, actively and enthusiastically participating throughout. Partnered sex is about two people equally sharing something sexually, but rape, while it involves and effects both people, is only really about what one person, the rapist, desires and chooses to do to that other person against their will.

Unwanted sexual touch or sexual use of someone through force or coercion is rape. To coerce someone sexually is to get them to engage in or be part of a sexual activity they do not want through guilt-trips or nagging, threats, bribes, intimidation or some other kind of emotional pressure or force. Where on the body is unwanted touch rape? Touching someone’s vulva or vagina, breasts, buttocks, anus, penis, testicles, mouth, or other parts of the body without permission, when that touch is intentional and sexual on your part, or is considered sexual by most people, are all rape or sexual assault (in some areas, those terms mean the same thing, but in others, they differ based on the activity or situation). It is also rape to make someone else touch YOU when they don’t want to, or to force or coerce someone into doing something sexual with someone else.

If you have NOT gladly and freely consented to and participated in sexual activity — if you have not in some way said a big yes and wanted to keep saying a big yes — and someone else had sex with, on or to you anyway, that is rape.

It is rape when one person does something sexual on, to or inside a person who is unable to give informed consent to sex because they’re asleep or otherwise incapacitated, like via drugs or alcohol (even if they drank or drugged of their own accord), because they’re ill, injured, or emotionally bereft, or due to lack of physical, intellectual or emotional maturity, developmental disability, mental illness or because the person assaulting them is in a position of power over them, like a teacher, clergyperson or police officer. If someone engaged you sexually on their part when you were in a position of being unable to give consent or full consent, then you have been raped.

All of these things are rape no matter your gender. While rape is overwhelmingly a crime committed by men, rarely women rape, too. And while far more women than men are raped, men are also raped, usually by other men. Transgender and genderqueer people can be and are raped as well.

No matter what ANYONE tells you, it is not your fault. There certainly is fault, but it lies with the rapist, not the victim.

You may have walked home alone against your better judgment, you may have been at a party and had too much to drink, or you may have gone alone with someone and initially trusted them and wanted to be with them, but changed your mind, or been sexually engaged with someone and then decided you did not want to be at any point during that act. You may have chosen to be with a partner who is or was a rapist, and you may even have had some clues that they were not safe or healthy for you. Even if any of these conditions were present, and even if you didn’t make the best choices, if you have not given consent to share physically, and another has done so without your consent, the fault lies with them and them only. While things like alcohol can increase the risk of rape, no one takes a drink because they want to be raped; they take a drink because they want a drink. The person responsible for rape is the person who chose to rape, not the person who was raped.

What should you do right away if you’ve been raped?
On a practical level, there are several things you should consider doing. Ideally, you should first contact a friend or family member you can trust, who can be with you indefinitely, immediately. Having someone with you for emotional support can be a real lifesaver. No matter what your initial emotional response is — and it differs a lot among people — you will likely want someone you can trust and who you know cares for you to come and give you aid.

Next, you should consider calling the police, once that person is present, or go to the station to report a rape. When and if you do, you should state as soon as possible, that you wish to prosecute: even if you’re not sure if you’ll want to right away. Filing a report, hard as it can be, is wise to do so that pressing charges is an option for you if you want to exercise that option. Without that report and evidence, pressing charges later is very difficult. You can change your mind later if need be, but saying such as early as you can will initiate testing you will need, and better reporting of the incident. Do NOT at any point, appear to waver on your desire to prosecute, even if you are unsure. When at the station, or at the scene at which you have reported, ask for a rape crisis counselor or advocate. That person will help and support you and your needs during this process.

If you were vaginally raped, and thus, have a risk of pregnancy, you should be offered emergency contraception when you are reporting your rape. If you choose not to report, you can obtain EC over-the-counter at your pharmacy if you are over 18 (and in many countries, if you are any age), and if you are a minor, can get a prescription for it from any doctor, clinic or emergency room. You can also ask a friend to go get it for you if they are of legal age to do so. You’ll want to also be sure to schedule an STI screening within the month. It’s sometimes hard to have a gynecological exam shortly after rape, but if you did contract an infection, you’ll want to know so that you can treat it or deal with that without becoming incredibly ill on top of everything else.

As much as you may want to take a shower or bath, it is ideal not to do so until after you make a report and are tested. Showering can remove important evidence like semen, skin and hair, and clothing fibers or fingerprints. Wait until after your examination for bathing: even if you’re not sure yet if you will want to press charges, it’s best to do everything you can to leave that option open, and provide all the evidence of the assault you can in case you do want to do so later. As well, write down all you can recall about the incident, and keep a copy of what you have written for your own records, and give another copy to both the police and a lawyer.

As far as deciding to prosecute, there are several factors you should consider (and you can ask for a rape advocate at the police station to help you make these choices). Rape trials are still not made easy on the victim, and they are often a long and arduous process. Many people still hold the outdated and ignorant notion that in some way, it is the victim’s fault. You may hear much of this, if you go to trial, from the perpetrators defense. You may also encounter it at the police station. Rape trials take time, as well. Most rape prosecution cases in the United States average anywhere from a few months to over a year to complete, and take at least ten to twenty days to even begin the process. However, for yourself, and other victims, bear in mind that the only way to continue to smash the myths surrounding rape, and make clear it is a serious crime, is to prosecute. You may also have medical expenses you will have to pay, including further testing, STI treatment, abortion, and psychological treatment. You may lose money by taking the time from work or school you need to heal yourself — all of these expenses are damages, which you are owed compensation for. Above all else, rape is a crime, and persecuting a criminal helps to keep that criminal from committing the same crime, both to you, and to others.

Generally, you do not have to make up your mind right away, when you report your rape: if you need more time to decide what to do, then ask for that time.

Healing Yourself: Body and Soul
For many of us who are survivors of rape and other sexual abuse, we have taken, and may still take, a lot of time healing ourselves, and dealing with the issues this abuse brings up.

After a rape, sexual abuse or attempted rape, a person who has been victimized often experiences what Ann Burgess and Lynda Holmstrom coined Rape Trauma Syndrome in 1974. RAINN outlines those three phases and their effects as follows, and you should take a look at them both so you can understand what you may already be feeling, and so you can have an idea of what you might be dealing with from here on in.

The Acute Phase: This phase occurs immediately after the assault and usually lasts a few days to several weeks. In this phase individuals can have many reactions but they typically fall into three categories of reactions:

  • Expressed- This is when the survivor is openly emotional. He or she may appear agitated or hysterical, he or she may suffer from crying spells or anxiety attacks.
  • Controlled- This is when the survivor appears to be without emotion and acts as if “nothing happened” and “everything is fine.” This appearance of calm may be shock.
  • Shocked Disbelief- This is when the survivor reacts with a strong sense of disorientation. He or she may have difficulty concentrating, making decisions, or doing everyday tasks. He or she may also have poor recall of the assault.

The Outward Adjustment Phase: During this phase the individual resumes what appears to be his or her “normal” life but inside is suffering from considerable turmoil. In this phase there are five primary coping techniques:

  • Minimization- Pretends that “everything is fine” or that “it could have been worse.”
  • Dramatization- Cannot stop talking about the assault and it is what dominates their life and identity.
  • Suppression- Refuses to discuss, acts as if it did not happen.
  • Explanation- Analyzes what happened- what the individual did, what the rapist was thinking/feeling.
  • Flight- Tries to escape the pain (moving, changing jobs, changing appearance, changing relationships, etc.).

There are many symptoms or behaviors that appear during this phase including: Continuing anxiety, severe mood swings, a sense of helplessness, persistent fears or phobias, depression, rage, difficulty sleeping (nightmares, insomnia, etc), eating difficulties (nausea, vomiting, compulsive eating, etc), denial, withdrawal from friends, family, activities, hypervigilance, reluctance to leave house and/or go places that remind the individual of the assault, sexual problems, difficulty concentrating and/or flashbacks.

The Resolution Phase: During this phase the assault is no longer the central focus of the individual’s life. While he or she may recognize that he or she will never forget the assault; the pain and negative outcomes lessen over time. Often the individual will begin to accept the rape as part of his or her life and chooses to move on.

What you need to heal will tend to be very individual, and you’re the one who is likely to know best what it is you need. By all means, give yourself the time that you need to grieve, and try not to get caught up in feeling like time for grieving is about being weak or pathetic. It’s not: grieving after any kind of assault is healthy and important. In terms of your support people, you get to make the rules. If you want to talk about it, talk about it. If you don’t, even if people around you will say you should, you get to decline and wait until that’s what feels right. You need to work through the feelings of sorrow and anger you have to heal, and to reclaim your life and your body. Support is a big deal, but largely, you will have to do your own healing in your own way. Accept that, and aim for being a survivor, not a perpetual victim.

There are many support groups for survivors to help you get through these phases and to that resolution in time, and you will most likely find your own personal support circle invaluable. In time, try to work towards speaking up and speaking out — do not let abuse silence you. It’s not your fault that you were raped, but whether you do what you can to heal from it and work through it is a choice you get to make.


If, like a majority of survivors, you were raped by someone known or close to you — a friend, a boyfriend, a family friend — then you’re also grappling with some extra-tough feeling when it comes to being betrayed by someone you invested trust in and may care for a lot. It may be hard for you to accept that person really raped you, and hard for you to cut ties with them. In the case that you’re inclined to either pretend rape wasn’t rape, or see if the person who raped you will say they’re sorry and not do it again, I’d encourage you to rethink that, even though I know it’s hard. Someone who raped you once will likely do it again if given the chance, or abuse you in some other way. As well, trying to continue being close with someone who raped you tends to leave a person constantly triggered and — validly — never feeling safe. It’s always best to stay as far away as you can from someone who has done you harm, and even though dealing with a broken friendship or breakup after you’ve been assaulted is certainly more pain on your plate, it is less painful than being raped by that same person again, listening to someone who raped you excuse what they did, or watching someone who did you that harm try and pretend it never happened.

You may want to evaluate the rape situation to take any future preventative measures you can. While we cannot always prevent rape, there are some basic things we can do — you may know about them already — to help protect ourselves. As well, feeling more confident in being able to help protect yourself can help with the blows rape often has on self-esteem and our feelings of safety in the world.

Have you taken a self-defense course? If you go to a party with lots of folks you don’t know, do you bring a friend with you, and keep a friend with you? When on first dates, do you first choose a public place to meet to make a good judgment call on your date safely? In your relationships, casual or serious, are you doing your best to choose partners who treat you with care and respect, and who treat sex as mutually beneficial and mutually consensual? Paying attention to your gut instincts about a person and listening to what the people who care for you have to say about them, too? Are you taking your time getting to know someone before you’re alone with them? If and when partners give you any indication that your "yes" to sex isn’t of penultimate importance, are you getting away from them, pronto?

These precautions, mind you, do not always work, but they do some of the time. However, we can empower ourselves by being sure we are giving ourselves as much respect and safety as possible, and demanding respect and safety from others, and make the possibility of rape smaller.

As well, given the world that we live in, few rape survivors manage to escape periods of time in which we blame ourselves for our assaults. So, do all that you can to remind yourself — or keep others close by who can help remind you — that you are not at fault, and that you didn’t do anything to "deserve" to be raped. No one wants to be raped, no one deserves to be raped.

Healing Our Culture
An additional precaution, that can also help to heal the sexual and emotional dysfunction in our culture is to keep sex, and discussions of it, open, honest and frank. Empower yourself sexually — tell potential partners from minute one that you expect to be taken seriously if disinterested, without argument, and that you are owed that respect, which is one you will gladly give to them yourself. Having strong self-esteem which you voice is another thing that can help weed out dangerous people: people who like to victimize people are looking for people who are most easily victimized, and someone who is clear and strong with their boundaries doesn’t look like an easy mark.

Do not use sex as a tool for barter or emotional game-playing. Treat it as sacred. If you are angry with a partner, voice your anger. Do not withhold sex as an illustration of it. If you do not want to have sex with that person, say so, and explain why. But do not use sex to try and negotiate for something else, for example, an emotional commitment.

Make your personal limits clear, and do not be afraid or shy to do so. The biggest contributors to sex crimes in this culture are silence and shame. If we understand that sex is sacred, and is normal and healthy, and do not treat it as a taboo, or as something filthy or criminal, we can help to heal our culture, and do our small part to help eradicate rape.

SOURCE: http://www.scarleteen.com/article/crisis/dealing_with_rape