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Owned by Marta

The Sensual Sisterhood

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A place where women come home to their bodies, shed shame, and remember what it feels like to be confident, sexy, and ALIVE AF.

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4 contributions to 🍉 Sexual Healing 🍉
🔥Let’s Get Closer 🔥
New here? Let’s not be strangers. 🍉Where are you from? 🍉What brought you here? 🍉What would you like to learn/find here? 🍉Maybe one thing we should know about you? I’ll go first 👀
🔥Let’s Get Closer 🔥
1 like • 11d
I’ll jump in 💫 🍉 I’m based in the US, but my work (and my heart) spans globally. 🍉 I’m here because I believe sexual healing happens through embodiment, safety, and pleasure, not fixing or performing. 🍉 I love helping people reconnect to their bodies, their desire, and their truth — especially after years of numbness, shame, or over-functioning. 🍉 One thing to know about me: I’m deeply devoted to pleasure as medicine. Not bypassing. Not hustle-in-disguise. Real, nervous-system-safe aliveness. Excited to be here and to know you all — who’s next? 👀🔥
😳 Fear of Sexual Failure? What It Actually Is
One of the MOST common sexual issues for both men and women, yet almost no one admits they have it. “What if I don’t get aroused?” “What if I can’t satisfy them?” “What if my body fails me?” “What if I disappoint them?” Sound familiar? That’s fear of sexual failure, the anxiety that something will go “wrong” during sex and you won’t be “good enough.” 🧠 What’s underneath this fear? Spoiler: it’s not really about sex. It’s about anxiety, perfectionism, and the pressure to perform. Common roots include: - 🌪 Performance anxiety - your brain shifts into “evaluation mode” instead of “pleasure mode.” - 😬 Overthinking - focusing on the outcome instead of sensations. - 💔 Fear of rejection. - 😶 Shame about your body or skills. - 🔥 Putting your partner on a pedestal (“they’re too good for me”). - 🧨 Past negative experiences - even one “failed attempt” can create a loop. And when anxiety hits, your nervous system goes into “threat mode,” lowering arousal. For men → difficulties with erection or control. For women → lack of lubrication, tension, pain, difficulty relaxing. 🧩 How it shows up: - avoiding sex with new partners - needing “perfect conditions” to feel comfortable - being overly controlling or emotionally checked out - losing pleasure - feeling like you’re watching yourself from the outside - avoiding intimacy to avoid “failing” 🧠 Important truth Fear of sexual failure creates the failure itself. 100% nervous system logic. When the brain is anxious, the body cannot feel pleasure. Period. 💡 What helps? (If you want, I can make a full post with techniques.) But briefly: - 🧘‍♂️ shift focus from performance → to sensation - 💬 name the anxiety — it reduces pressure instantly - 🐢 slow down, let the body catch up - 😏 choose connection, not perfection - 🤝 work with a therapist if it becomes a repeating pattern Have you ever felt scared your body might “not perform”?
😳 Fear of Sexual Failure? What It Actually Is
0 likes • 11d
This is such a clean, accurate breakdown — and the nervous-system framing is everything. I’ll underline one core truth from my work: fear of sexual failure is fear of disconnection from yourself. The body isn’t “failing.” It’s protecting. The moment sex becomes a test, the nervous system shifts into threat mode. And a threatened body does not open, lubricate, soften, or stay present. That’s biology, not a personal flaw. What consistently helps is not “fixing” arousal, but rebuilding safety through pleasure: - Bringing attention back to sensation instead of outcome - Slowing way down so the body can lead - Naming what’s happening out loud, which immediately reduces charge - Choosing touch, warmth, breath, and connection before technique Pleasure practice off the bed matters here too. When someone is practiced at being in their body without judgment, sex stops feeling like a performance and starts feeling like a shared experience again. So yes — anxiety creates the very thing people fear. And safety, presence, and permission are what unwind it. This conversation alone will help a lot of people exhale.
Sex & Stamina ⏰
Ever wondered how many times in a row a man can have sex? Or how long sex is “supposed” to last? 🧠 Let’s unpack the myths and get into the science. ✅ On average, studies show that penile-vaginal intercourse lasts 5–7 minutes. In a large multinational study of 500 heterosexual couples, the median intravaginal ejaculation latency time (IELT) that’s from penetration to ejaculation was 5.4 minutes ✅ Most men need a refractory period (aka recovery time) after orgasm. The range in the study was extremely wide: from under 1 minute to over 44 minutes. That could be a few minutes… or a few hours. It gets longer with age, stress, alcohol, or lack of sleep. And yes porn completely lies about this. ✅ Women? We don’t have a refractory period. Which is why some women can have multiple orgasms but only if they feel safe, connected, and actually turned on. ✅ Research on multiple orgasms in men is limited, and while some men report them, they are rare 🔍 How This Changes the Narrative - If you’re chasing “30‑minute sex” or multiple rounds back‑to‑back every time — you’re chasing a myth. - Knowing the average is ~5-7 minutes helps you let go of the clock and focus on what really matters: pleasure, connection, presence. - The variations (range up to 44 minutes and beyond) mean what’s normal is wide, there’s no single “right” number. - The refractory period isn’t a flaw. it’s natural and influenced by many factors (age, health, novelty). - So if you’re worried you “can’t go again” fast, or you’re done in “too short” a time. it might just be your physiology + context, not a failure. 🔥 Guys, this part is for you: If you’ve ever felt pressure to perform, go multiple rounds, or always be ready… you’re not alone. But stamina isn’t just physical. It’s emotional. Mental. Nervous-system based. 👇 So tell me: What’s helped you last longer, stay present, or enjoy sex more? Breathing? Kegels? Better foreplay? Mindset shifts? Drop your tips in the comments. let’s support each other. 🔥
Sex & Stamina ⏰
0 likes • 11d
This is such an important myth-buster — and I love that you brought actual data into the conversation. What I see over and over is that the obsession with time and stamina pulls people out of pleasure and straight into performance anxiety. Once you’re watching the clock or judging your body, presence is gone… and pleasure follows right after. I’d underline this part even more:Stamina isn’t just physical. It’s nervous-system regulation. When someone feels relaxed, unpressured, and connected: - arousal deepens - sensation expands - ejaculation timing often shifts naturally - and sex feels fuller even if it’s “shorter” by the clock - For women especially, the absence of a refractory period doesn’t mean “infinite orgasms.” It means the body needs safety, turn-on, and unrushed attention. Without that, the system shuts down just as fast. So yes — let go of the stopwatch. Great sex isn’t about duration or rounds. It's about quality of sensation, connection, and presence. Curious to see where this conversation goes — these kinds of posts are how we unhook people from shame and bring them back into their bodies.
So… what actually makes sex good?
I’ve been doing some research - talking to people, reading studies, asking my clients, friends and strangers. And here’s what I’ve found: The most common factor people mention when describing great sex? Feeling safe to talk about what they like. Turns out, good sex isn’t about performance - it’s about communication, presence, and relaxation. People who feel free to express their needs, set boundaries, and share desires tend to report way more satisfaction in bed. So… maybe the real “sex skill” isn’t about technique. Maybe it’s about how well you can talk, listen and stay present... How easy is it for you to talk about sex?
So… what actually makes sex good?
0 likes • 11d
Yes. And I’d take it one layer deeper. Feeling safe to talk about what you like is huge — and that safety usually comes from feeling safe in your body first. When the nervous system is regulated, presence becomes possible. When presence is there, communication flows without effort. Good sex isn’t a performance. It'snot even primarily a conversation. It's co-regulation. When two people feel relaxed enough to stay embodied: - Desire becomes clearer - Boundaries come online without shutting things down - Pleasure can build instead of being rushed - That’s why pleasure practice matters so much. Not to get better at sex, but to get better at feeling. When you’re connected to your own sensations, it’s easier to name what you want, notice what’s working, and stay present when intensity rises. So yes — talking matters. But the foundation is safety, sensation, and self-trust. When those are there, great sex stops being a mystery and starts being a conversation your body already knows how to have.
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Marta Kagan
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4points to level up
@marta-kagan-9607
I help women over 40 fall in love with their bodies, experience the best orgasms (with or without a partner), and feel powerful, confident, & sexy AF!

Active 22h ago
Joined Nov 11, 2025
Boston