SWINGING

Подпись: Sex in suburbia 'Key' parties, popular in the 1970s, took place at the home of players, often married couples - hence the term 'wife-swapping' - where male guests placed their keys in a bowl and female players would randomly choose a set and have sex with the owner. 'Swinging' is a term used for likeminded people who meet in private homes or clubs, where they have the freedom to watch and take part in sexual activity with other consenting adults. The Sexual Freedom League, which began in 1963 in New York City and then California, was originally founded by Jefferson Poland to help set up other groups to promote sexual activity and reform, while 'nude parties', which were really orgy events, began when the league was briefly taken over by Richard Thorne in 1966, splitting the league into different groups with varying sexual objectives. These included the Horny Men's and Wanton Women's circles.

SWING SPEAK

Can entertain: willing to invite people home for swinging ♦ Can travel:
willing to go to someone’s home ♦ Closed swinging: separate rooms to avoid
married couples seeing each other with someone else ♦ Culture: fetishisms
♦ Docile: a willing participant in domination and bondage ♦ Domestic
training: household chores in a humiliating fashion ♦ English culture:
spanking or caning ♦ Exhibitionism: sex with an audience ♦ French culture:
oral sex ♦ Full swap: full intercourse with someone other than a partner
♦ Group: multiple partners ♦ Indoor sports: swinging ♦ Moresomes: more
than a threesome ♦ Open door: couples with other couples ♦ Party clothes:
from lingerie to togas ♦ Roman culture: orgies ♦ Soft: intimacy via kissing,
touching and oral sex ♦ Swedish culture: hands-on, especially massage
♦ Ticket: usually a woman so the man is allowed entrance

jj language OF LOVE?

‘I am happy now that George calls on my bedchamber less
frequently than of old. As it is, I now endure but two calls a week,
and when I hear his steps outside my door I lie down on my bed,
close my eyes, open my legs and think of England/

Lady Alice Hillingdon’s journal, England 1912

Updated: 04.11.2015 — 15:27