Sex Position, Sex Talk, and Fetishes
How to Transform Your Sex Life Through Kama Sutra, Tantric Sex and Maximizing Orgasm. Master the Art of Sex
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Narrated by:
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Brittany St. Arnold
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By:
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David Martin
About this listen
When you realize that the vast majority of the Kama Sutra isn't generally sex, it turns out to be much more bizarre once you think a 2,000-year-old content keeps on having this impact on your sexual minds.
The first Kama Sutra, as opposed to numerous hot and substantial sex manuals, is a philosophical book that gives experiences into a compensating life and fructuosity. It comes chiefly due to the idea of sex (and intriguing sex positions) as an ordinary and solid piece of life, to the extent sex is a handbook. This is a sex. (While queer sex and non-regularizing sex personalities are in the book, it is a very informative supposition that the peruser's essential sexual relationship is hetero) yet some place down the line (with something other than a little orientalism), the non-sexual parts of the Kama Sutra have been neglected, that is a very hetero-regulating book.
Believe it or not, it's not primarily a sex manual.
The Kama Sutra, accepted to be composed during the second or third century C.E. by the Hindu Vedic scholar Vatsyayana, is a guide for temperate living, loaded up with aphorisms on the idea of love and the significance of family life. It recounts finding a real existence accomplice and making an agreeable relationship, exploring the difficulties of extramarital connections, adjusting family and obligation and the need to bring home the bacon - just as an assortment of positions for sex.
"Sutra" in Sanskrit implies treatise; "Kama" alludes to want, delight or sex. In this way: Treatise on want/pleasure/sex. For Vatsyayana, be that as it may, want/delight/sex holds an unexpected significance in comparison to for us world-weary moderns excessively acquainted with commoditized sex.
Want, delight and sex in the Kama Sutra are contextualized, seen as a major aspect of a perspective wherein people move together in human expressions of affection and in families and in bigger systems of relations.
©David Martin David Martin (P)2020 David Martin