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How to get lucky on your family vacation
How to get lucky on your family vacation

Yahoo

time27-05-2025

  • Health
  • Yahoo

How to get lucky on your family vacation

'Vacation' and 'sex' were once my two favorite words. Put them together and you've got the mecca of pleasure: a romp in Egyptian cotton sheets followed by a juicy room service cheeseburger. Can you say sex in Italian? I can — 'sesso' — because my husband and I copulated our way across the country early in our relationship. On our honeymoon in Hawaii two decades ago, we barely left our room and nearly missed the luau. Every getaway back then offered foreplay with a view. And then we had a kid. Still, the lure of vacation sex beckons. And not just for me and my husband. According to a survey conducted for the book "Tell Me What You Want: The Science of Sexual Desire and How It Can Help You Improve Your Sex Life," 90% of people fantasized about sex in a hotel. 'All couples put 'vacation sex' on a pedestal because we're more relaxed and playful when we get out of our daily routines,' says sex therapist Emily Morse, author of "Smart Sex: How to Boost Your Sex IQ and Own Your Pleasure" and host of the podcast "Sex With Emily." 'But we shouldn't lose that intimacy because we travel with kids.' So when my husband and I decided to celebrate 20 years of marriage by returning to Maui with our mercurial teen daughter Tess in tow, we vowed to get it on at least once on our trip. We started with a rough strategy: booking a 640-square-foot room with two queen beds. If you're in the mood to get frisky during your family vacation, here are some tips to consider. If you want to engage in some intimate time, add it to your itinerary before you take off. 'You have to schedule sex like you schedule snorkeling or any excursion,' says Morse. 'If you wait around for it to happen, it won't happen.' Sophie Pierce, a mom to three daughters ages 8, 9 and 14, doesn't take chances when she and her husband ex-Navy SEAL Neil Mahoney travel. They think — and act — ahead, so they're not completely disappointed if it doesn't happen during the trip. 'We always have sex the night before we leave for a family vacation, just in case,' says Pierce, the founder of three dance studios in Los Angeles. 'But that doesn't mean we won't try.' My husband and I didn't have a strategy before we left L.A., but I did sneak sensual incidentals like lacy lingerie and a discreet bottle of lubricant into my suitcase. 'Pack a sex toy too,' advises Morse, who says we're more likely to be open to experimentation away from home. We agreed not to bring any work responsibilities on our trip. We're both screenwriters, so we're constantly polishing a script or crafting a pitch. I figured that by eliminating the stress of meeting deadlines, we upped the chances of having sex. Hotels and resorts see you, exhausted parents. Properties are upping their game for young guests with more exciting programming and cooler kids clubs. At the Ojai Valley Inn's 'night camp,' for instance, you can sign the children up for a scavenger hunt followed by dinner, a movie and s'mores. (Surely, that buys you enough time for a romp.) La Quinta Resort & Club in the desert offers junior pickleball clinics, along with massages and facials for tweens and teens up to age 15. At Alisal Ranch in Solvang, kids can hang out at the bar and paint horseshoes or take a riding lesson. Got littler ones? Some clubs, like Kidtopia at the Omni La Costa in Carlsbad, cater to infants (6 months and older) with nurseries on-site. Many hotels also offer babysitting services. Note that clubs typically cater to the toddler-through-12 set. But there are exceptions, like the teen club at Grand Velas in Los Cabos that programs TikTok challenges, dance-offs at a dedicated nightclub with a DJ and karaoke events. At the Grand Wailea where we stayed, however, teens like my daughter Tess just side-eyed each other in the lobby. There was a family lounge on the property with darts and virtual reality, but it wasn't a magnet for adolescents during our stay. 'We're not comfortable getting sitters we don't know on vacation,' says Pierce, who, instead, might pretend to leave the sunscreen in the room and put her teen daughter in charge to duck away from the hotel pool for a quickie with her husband. Or put the younger girls in a shared tub, but take the bath towels and mat so they can't interrupt mom and dad in the bedroom. (Clearly, Pierce's kids are way into self-care.) For middle school teacher Vanessa Orellana — mom to a daughter, 6, and 1-year-old twins — the windows of opportunity for adult time on vacation call for quiet. 'Between hotel beds that squeak and the in-laws' walls, we've identified two golden windows for potential action: nap time and post-bedtime,' she says. 'But even then, success is a coin toss. Our 8-year-old could pop up like a ninja, asking for water.' Life happens, even on vacation. Prepare to pivot to plan B. My husband and I sent our daughter on an errand one morning at the 40-acre Maui resort, but she came back to fetch her AirPods and interrupted our marathon kiss. We shrugged it off and then held hands by the pool. Morse advises: 'With kids, you may have to redefine intimacy on your trip. It could be flirting or even just making out after they go to bed.' Pierce and her husband know their sex will be quick, if it happens at all. One dad of a toddler told me he and his husband have a ritual in which they text erotic messages to each other when they're on vacation — and then promptly delete them. Just be sure to manage your expectations and laugh at any aborted attempts at intimacy. 'We've got an unspoken agreement: no guilt, no grumbling. Just a 'to be continued' knowing glance,' says Orellana. 'It's about connection, trust and keeping the spark alive through the sheer chaos of life with little humans.' In the end, my husband and I did not get lucky. On our final night in Maui, we hit nearby award-winning restaurant Ko, where kids eat for 50% off. Unfortunately, a huge dinner of fresh crudo, lobster tempura, octopus and kobe beef — along with multiple desserts — made us shudder at the idea of any activity. So we had failed at our grand plan. But was our vacation ruined? Not at all. Ultimately, my family bonded in a way that doesn't come easy with a teen. We swam with turtles, thrift-shopped around upcountry and held hands (for three whole seconds) while watching a sunset. And on our first night back at home, my husband and I finally had sex. No fancy sheets or room service, but I did shout, 'Aloooha!' Sign up for The Wild newsletter to get weekly insider tips on the best of our beaches, trails, parks, deserts, forests and mountains. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

How to get lucky on your family vacation
How to get lucky on your family vacation

Los Angeles Times

time27-05-2025

  • Los Angeles Times

How to get lucky on your family vacation

'Vacation' and 'sex' were once my two favorite words. Put them together and you've got the mecca of pleasure: a romp in Egyptian cotton sheets followed by a juicy room service cheeseburger. Can you say sex in Italian? I can — 'sesso' — because my husband and I copulated our way across the country early in our relationship. On our honeymoon in Hawaii two decades ago, we barely left our room and nearly missed the luau. Every getaway back then offered foreplay with a view. And then we had a kid. Still, the lure of vacation sex beckons. And not just for me and my husband. According to a survey conducted for the book 'Tell Me What You Want: The Science of Sexual Desire and How It Can Help You Improve Your Sex Life,' 90% of people fantasized about sex in a hotel. 'All couples put 'vacation sex' on a pedestal because we're more relaxed and playful when we get out of our daily routines,' says sex therapist Emily Morse, author of 'Smart Sex: How to Boost Your Sex IQ and Own Your Pleasure' and host of the podcast 'Sex With Emily.' 'But we shouldn't lose that intimacy because we travel with kids.' So when my husband and I decided to celebrate 20 years of marriage by returning to Maui with our mercurial teen daughter Tess in tow, we vowed to get it on at least once on our trip. We started with a rough strategy: booking a 640-square-foot room with two queen beds. If you're in the mood to get frisky during your family vacation, here are some tips to consider. If you want to engage in some intimate time, add it to your itinerary before you take off. 'You have to schedule sex like you schedule snorkeling or any excursion,' says Morse. 'If you wait around for it to happen, it won't happen.' Sophie Pierce, a mom to three daughters ages 8, 9 and 14, doesn't take chances when she and her husband ex-Navy SEAL Neil Mahoney travel. They think — and act — ahead, so they're not completely disappointed if it doesn't happen during the trip. 'We always have sex the night before we leave for a family vacation, just in case,' says Pierce, the founder of three dance studios in Los Angeles. 'But that doesn't mean we won't try.' My husband and I didn't have a strategy before we left L.A., but I did sneak sensual incidentals like lacy lingerie and a discreet bottle of lubricant into my suitcase. 'Pack a sex toy too,' advises Morse, who says we're more likely to be open to experimentation away from home. We agreed not to bring any work responsibilities on our trip. We're both screenwriters, so we're constantly polishing a script or crafting a pitch. I figured that by eliminating the stress of meeting deadlines, we upped the chances of having sex. Hotels and resorts see you, exhausted parents. Properties are upping their game for young guests with more exciting programming and cooler kids clubs. At the Ojai Valley Inn's 'night camp,' for instance, you can sign the children up for a scavenger hunt followed by dinner, a movie and s'mores. (Surely, that buys you enough time for a romp.) La Quinta Resort & Club in the desert offers junior pickleball clinics, along with massages and facials for tweens and teens up to age 15. At Alisal Ranch in Solvang, kids can hang out at the bar and paint horseshoes or take a riding lesson. Got littler ones? Some clubs, like Kidtopia at the Omni La Costa in Carlsbad, cater to infants (6 months and older) with nurseries on-site. Many hotels also offer babysitting services. Note that clubs typically cater to the toddler-through-12 set. But there are exceptions, like the teen club at Grand Velas in Los Cabos that programs TikTok challenges, dance-offs at a dedicated nightclub with a DJ and karaoke events. At the Grand Wailea where we stayed, however, teens like my daughter Tess just side-eyed each other in the lobby. There was a family lounge on the property with darts and virtual reality, but it wasn't a magnet for adolescents during our stay. 'We're not comfortable getting sitters we don't know on vacation,' says Pierce, who, instead, might pretend to leave the sunscreen in the room and put her teen daughter in charge to duck away from the hotel pool for a quickie with her husband. Or put the younger girls in a shared tub, but take the bath towels and mat so they can't interrupt mom and dad in the bedroom. (Clearly, Pierce's kids are way into self-care.) For middle school teacher Vanessa Orellana — mom to a daughter, 6, and 1-year-old twins — the windows of opportunity for adult time on vacation call for quiet. 'Between hotel beds that squeak and the in-laws' walls, we've identified two golden windows for potential action: nap time and post-bedtime,' she says. 'But even then, success is a coin toss. Our 8-year-old could pop up like a ninja, asking for water.' Life happens, even on vacation. Prepare to pivot to plan B. My husband and I sent our daughter on an errand one morning at the 40-acre Maui resort, but she came back to fetch her AirPods and interrupted our marathon kiss. We shrugged it off and then held hands by the pool. Morse advises: 'With kids, you may have to redefine intimacy on your trip. It could be flirting or even just making out after they go to bed.' Pierce and her husband know their sex will be quick, if it happens at all. One dad of a toddler told me he and his husband have a ritual in which they text erotic messages to each other when they're on vacation — and then promptly delete them. Just be sure to manage your expectations and laugh at any aborted attempts at intimacy. 'We've got an unspoken agreement: no guilt, no grumbling. Just a 'to be continued' knowing glance,' says Orellana. 'It's about connection, trust and keeping the spark alive through the sheer chaos of life with little humans.' In the end, my husband and I did not get lucky. On our final night in Maui, we hit nearby award-winning restaurant Ko, where kids eat for 50% off. Unfortunately, a huge dinner of fresh crudo, lobster tempura, octopus and kobe beef — along with multiple desserts — made us shudder at the idea of any activity. So we had failed at our grand plan. But was our vacation ruined? Not at all. Ultimately, my family bonded in a way that doesn't come easy with a teen. We swam with turtles, thrift-shopped around upcountry and held hands (for three whole seconds) while watching a sunset. And on our first night back at home, my husband and I finally had sex. No fancy sheets or room service, but I did shout, 'Aloooha!'

‘Sex With Emily' Host Reveals What's Ruining Your Sex Life
‘Sex With Emily' Host Reveals What's Ruining Your Sex Life

Yahoo

time16-05-2025

  • Health
  • Yahoo

‘Sex With Emily' Host Reveals What's Ruining Your Sex Life

It's been a long time coming for sex to be considered part of 'wellness,' especially for women. Long-time sexpert and 'Sex with Emily' podcast host Emily Morse recently reflected on 20 years of working to reshape how people think about sex and bringing whole-life sexual wellness to the forefront. In a discussion with TV host and entrepreneur JJ Ramberg at the Flow Space Women's Health Summit LA held at Penske Headquarters in Los Angeles, Morse emphasized sexuality as wellness, which involves a mentally healthy relationship with yourself, as well as healthy communication with partners. More from Flow Space Menopause and Mental Health: Coping with Mood Swings and Anxiety Part of this is working through what she calls 'pleasure thieves.' So what exactly are pleasure thieves? Morse explained: 'If we are not feeling sexually well in our bodies and healthy, if we have stress, trauma or shame—I call those the pleasure thieves—the things keeping us from actually feeling good in our bodies.' She went on to say that 'pleasure thieves' can have a trickle-down effect. 'It's going to impact every other area of our life, no matter if we're taking hormones, or how much protein we're eating or fiber, or pills or all the things.' Shame around sex is one of the major 'pleasure thieves,' Morse said. 'If we still have some internalized shame, which many of us do around sex, if we're not communicating with our partners in a healthy way… that's why sex is wellness, and it impacts every other area of our life.' Pleasure thieves also contribute to a gap in information and therefore knowledge around sex. 'Sex has been shrouded in mystery for so long because those damn pleasure thieves—stress, trauma and shame—have kept us from really paying attention to it,' Morse explained. And that's part of the reason why people don't explore what sex and pleasure could be for them. Thinking about your sex life as part of your overall health gets put on the back burner, until you have more time, or until the kids have left the house, or once the 'honeymoon phase' of a relationship wraps up. 'But over time, when that fades, and it will, most people are going to struggle at some point with their sex lives. We're not sure what to do,' Morse said. Midlife is not too late to reinvigorate the conversation around asking for what you want sexually, she added. 'We never really even knew what was on the menu.' One of Morse's biggest points of emphasis is that sex doesn't just mean penetration. It's not about checking a box of 'how many times per week' it should happen. 'Really, it's about intimacy and connection,' she said. It can be a massage to turn you or your partner on before you get into anything sexual or having an in-depth conversation about what actually feels good to you. Morse also encourages the use of toys and exploring solo sex, because it's not just about sex with a partner. Getting comfortable with these practices are all steps toward shedding the shame, the main pleasure thief innately associated with sex. For Morse, fighting back against pleasure thieves means 'rewriting that narrative that your body is beautiful as it is and deserving of pleasure, and then leading a life that is more pleasure-focused,' she said. 'My mission is to prioritize pleasure and liberate the conversation around sex.'

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