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This is how we do it: ‘We live in a tiny flat with our kids, so we have sex in the woods at night'

This is how we do it: ‘We live in a tiny flat with our kids, so we have sex in the woods at night'

Yahoo5 hours ago

I'd had orgasms with previous partners, but I'd never tried to give myself one – I felt too ashamed
When I met David three years ago, my marriage was breaking down and I'd just had a baby. It was a very low moment. My husband was a shut-down, cold man. Part of what finally motivated me to leave was he seemed incapable of caring for me, or even really talking to me after our daughter was born.
What first struck me about David was his warmth. He is a father and had also been through a difficult separation, so could understand what I was experiencing. David is very funny and free-spirited. What I love most about him is his spontaneity. His brain is wired in a completely different way to mine. I can be quite rigid, but he encourages me to loosen up. He makes me feel interesting, which I'd never felt in my marriage.
I convinced myself that sex didn't really matter in a relationship and that I could do without
I was unhappy in my body after having a child – but David really built my confidence up. I'm embarrassed to admit this, but I didn't even really know much about my own anatomy before I met him. I'd had orgasms with previous partners, but I'd never tried to give myself one – I'd always felt too ashamed. In my previous relationships, after the initial excitement had worn off, I would stop being able to climax, but felt too shy to ever tell any of my partners. I convinced myself that sex didn't really matter in a relationship – and that I could do without it.
When David found out I'd never used a sex toy, he gently encouraged me to buy a few. Now we have quite a collection, and use them together. We live with my young child and his two teenagers in a small flat, so sex can be tricky, logistically. But David has come up with some inventive solutions. We live in the countryside, so sometimes we drive the car down the lane to a wooded area and have sex on the back seats. Sometimes we even have sex on the ground in the actual wood. There's more space that way.
David is so comfortable in his own skin and that makes sex fun and joyful. If you had told me three years ago I would feel this free, I would never have believed you.
Anook had never used a vibrator before we met and now we have an enormous box of toys that we hide under our bed
I remember the first time I saw Anook, in the car park at work. I was stopped dead in my tracks by the look on her face. She was beautiful, of course, but she looked so lost. I had just gone through a terrible divorce, so I recognised something of what I was feeling in her expression. We started talking and I invited her for a coffee. I immediately felt close to her.
The sex has always been very loving between us, but when we first got together, Anook was really lacking in confidence. I think she felt sex was dirty or wrong. I would tell her how stunning she is and she wouldn't believe me. So I'd spend a lot of time reassuring her that sex isn't bad, it's fun and she should enjoy it.
She's come out of her shell a lot. I'm a speaker in sex. I don't claim to be any kind of Adonis, but I can do a pretty good job with my words. So we set the mood that way, and then we also use sex toys. Anook had never used a vibrator before we met but now we have an enormous box of toys that we hide under our bed.
I'm a speaker in sex. I don't claim to be any kind of Adonis, but I can do a pretty good job with my words
Sometimes when we're hanging out with friends, and sex comes up in conversation, I see Anook's eyes completely light up and I think about how much she has changed. She used to be so shy that she'd look at the floor at any mention of the subject. She's helped my confidence a lot, too. I was broken when I met her, but now I'm loud and boisterous. She has built me up so much.
We've actually transferred some of our toys to the back of my car, so we can drive out to the woods and have a bit of time away from the children now and then. We live in a tiny flat with our kids, and it's very difficult to find an opportunity to really let our hair down. Outside at night when there's no one around, we get to make a bit of noise.

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Nancy Pelosi honors those lost to AIDS epidemic with Gay Men's Chorus of D.C. during WorldPride
Nancy Pelosi honors those lost to AIDS epidemic with Gay Men's Chorus of D.C. during WorldPride

Yahoo

time29 minutes ago

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Nancy Pelosi honors those lost to AIDS epidemic with Gay Men's Chorus of D.C. during WorldPride

In the hushed sanctuary of St. Thomas' Parish in Dupont Circle, there is a sacred memorial in fabric and thread. During WorldPride, the Gay Men's Chorus of Washington, D.C., in partnership with St. Thomas' and the National AIDS Memorial, unveiled a deeply personal display of the AIDS Memorial Quilt that includes panels for chorus members who were lost to the epidemic in the 1980s and '90s. Keep up with the latest in + news and politics. The exhibit features full quilt blocks and a companion photo display, honoring dozens of chorus members who died of AIDS complications. Some panels are decades-old, sewn by grieving loved ones at the height of the crisis. One in particular, the first made by and for chorus members, holds special meaning. 'For us, this is not just history. These are our people,' said Michael Hughes, the chorus's outreach manager, who has sung with the group for more than 20 years. 'We estimate that about 100 members of our chorus died of AIDS. A hundred voices silenced.' The idea for the exhibit was sparked earlier this year after chorus members visited a local high school class reading Angels in America. 'The students had no context for what life was like in the '80s and '90s,' Hughes explained. 'We told them about the fear, about watching friends die, and about the quilt.' Related: Democrat Adam Schiff to be the first U.S. senator to participate in California's AIDS/LifeCycle bike ride After that visit, chorus member Larry Cohen emailed Hughes with an idea and a question: What if they searched for quilt panels made in honor of their fallen members? 'So we spent two and a half months digging into the National AIDS Memorial database, the Names Project records, and the digitized archives in the Library of Congress,' Hughes said. 'We were able to confirm 33 individual chorus members who had panels made. Some we remembered personally.' The setting of St. Thomas' Parish is itself part of the story. 'During the AIDS crisis, only two or three churches in the city would even hold funerals for someone who had died of AIDS,' Hughes said. 'St. Thomas' was one of them.' On Friday night, the exhibit drew a special guest, House Speaker Emerita Nancy Pelosi, a longtime and fierce advocate in the fight against AIDS. Pelosi spent time with chorus members and viewed the panels while the group performed two songs in honor of her visit under the direction of Artistic Director Thea Kano. Addressing the chorus members, Pelosi recalled her own early skepticism about the quilt's power. 'At first, I thought a quilt was a bad idea,' she said. 'But I was wrong. The beauty was in the art. And the art became the most unifying thing.' 'People who may not think they have anything in common suddenly find that they do through these panels,' Pelosi continued. 'You see someone's story laid out before you, and the love they had in their lives. The grief, the anger, the joy, all of it. And it moves you.' Related: Pelosi also reflected on the political and cultural battles of the time, and how vital the LGBTQ+ community's activism was to making change. 'When I made my first speech in Congress about HIV/AIDS, people said, 'Why would you talk about that? Why would you lead with that?'' Pelosi recounted. 'I said, because that's why I came here. I came to fight.' 'Yes, we worked to change policies, pass laws, allocate resources," she said. "But the real miracle was the outside mobilization of the LGBTQ+ community who refused to be silent. That's what made the difference. That's what changed the world.' As Pride Month unfolds, the quilt serves as a memorial, a call to action, and a loving and prophetic testament to the quilt's ability to humanize loss, to transform mourning into music. The AIDS Memorial Quilt exhibit is open to the public through Sunday at St. Thomas' Parish. Daily visiting hours and more information are available at

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