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Thread: Does tribadism really work?

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    Senior Hostboard Member kamafight's Avatar
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    Does tribadism really work?

    i mean, do women really get sexual pleasure by rubbing their pussies together? it strikes me that they would need perfect aim. rubbing their mounds against each others thighs might work better. but then, i am not a woman. and i dont think there are any women here. anyone know? we might be accused of mansplaining in the real world

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    Senior Hostboard Member Giannis-CB's Avatar
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    Re: Does tribadism really work?

    Quote Originally Posted by kamafight View Post
    i mean, do women really get sexual pleasure by rubbing their pussies together? it strikes me that they would need perfect aim. rubbing their mounds against each others thighs might work better. but then, i am not a woman. and i dont think there are any women here. anyone know? we might be accused of mansplaining in the real world
    Look at this link. It is an article about tribadism and scissoring which is written by the FEMALE author/journalist e.t.c. Tina Horn.
    More about Tina Horn here : You can see her photo. Yes, SHE IS A WOMAN and she loves scissoring !
    About Tina | Tina Horn


    Once you are there, read about her (optional, if you want), then click on "articles", then read her article : Is scissoring a thing ?" , written at 2014. It is at the bottom of the list of her articles.

    It was written after the "tribadism explosion" of 2013-2014, which happened after people watched the film "Blue is the warmest color" (a.k.a. Life of Adele) which won the award for best directed film and best actresses in Cannes festival, France, 2013. The film had a lez plot, its European version had about quite some minutes of intense scissoring between the two actresses who kept the main roles (Lea Seydoux, Adele Exarchopoulos) . The American version is censored, it has the same scene in less time). BTW the film has other lez scenes as well, between Lea and Adele. Very hot, all of them.

    It was the FIRST TIME In WORLD's CINEMA HISTORY that a MAINSTREAM movie, no porn, showed that much of scissoring. This had NEVER happened before.

    Suddenly a lot of people learned about trib/scissoring e.t.c.
    A lot of women talked about it those times. Some women wrote that they do not like trib. Some other women though, wrote that they love it ! One of them is Tina Horn.

    After that film, porn industry "invented" trib, that was the reason of the "trib boom" after 2013. Till then lez action was - mostly - kisses-caresses-fingering-toys-strapon-oral. You could find trib rarely and that trib action was for about a few seconds or 1-2 min. After 2013, that changed, and we, the trib fans, became happier
    Of course there were some exceptions, there were a few videos with very hot trib scenes which lasted enough. However, most of porn videos with lez scenes were the way i mentioned before.
    Trib also became more popular thanks to the erotic wrestling videos of DWW which had a lot of trib action.

    So yes, my friend... trib DOES exist, it is a real action that two lez or bisexual women use to do often among other actions they also like. Not all the lez/bisexual women, as i wrote before quite some of them do not like it. However there are also bisexual/lez women who love it.

    I want to add something more, in addition to Tina's Horn article : trib is NOT for any pair of women. Any two women can do trib, that's true. Easily or not so easily. But in order two women to enjoy a REAL hot trib session, their "body-form" must fit. This does NOT happen for any pair of women. It is not so easy always for two women to have a perfect grinding of their pussies and/or to keep their clits in touch. This has to do with the female anatomy of the two women "down there" : their weight, their pelvises' anatomy e.t.c.
    This is the ONLY exaggeration we, the writers of trib stories do : For us, the two women who keep the roles of the two tribbing it out women in our trib or sexfight stories always have a perfect match. In real life, this does not happen all the times, not for every two women who go for trib. But we simply exaggerate in order to write a hot story, we do not say lies, we do not describe something which can not be done.
    Many times a pair of women have a perfect match to do trib. The women in our fantasies, the women we write about, they are always at this case.
    Last edited by Giannis-CB; April 22nd, 2019 at 03:59 PM.

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    Senior Hostboard Member catfightlover40's Avatar
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    Re: Does tribadism really work?

    Dear Giannis,

    I won't quote your whole reply as it'd be too long, so I wish to address some of its points for correction or expansion. First and chiefly I'd modify the claim "this much scissoring has never been done this many times" to "in Western cinema". I've talked in length about the fact, that after the sexual revolution in the late '60s and early '70s, where America was forced down on a path of renouncing mainstream erotica (yet you can still show gore and violence), other parts of the world did not follow that trend. Most famous among them is Emmanuelle from 1974, which spawned a series, spin-offs and imitators, and it was mainstream showing. Movies like that along with others in that offering should be examined before we could make a knowledge based claimed that this much scissoring has never been done before. I do give you that the newest social media generation upon running into this movie will claim that it hasn't been done before as nowadays everybody wants to be the popular kid in school and facts are only worthy if they make you popular.

    I have to address the second point for its heteronormativity. People are people. For centuries, the heavily edited/redacted Kama Sutra was advertised as the book of sex for us the hetero crowd, but educational books, including drawings depicting sexual acts between gays and lesbians existed as well. Not only that, we know from surviving depictions created for noblemen in China, Japan and Korea that the medieval "Pornhub" was ricepaper painting depicting imagined, but mostly real acts. Thus demand for the forbidden fruit was always constant, but that's not necessarily overlapping with reality. What has to be understood here that even in the most oppressive of times, human desire to pass on knowledge as a form of legacy is a primal one, not unlike wanting to have progeny. As a monoclastic culture plagued by mainstream bigotries, LGBT literature became heavily personalized. The more people wished to persecute it, the more it allowed for it not just to be secret, but also to be selective. Humans are humans, so, yes, at times the power dynamics were less than ideal and citizens of colonies or those of military occupation had to things for their benefactors they personally did not like.

    The third and last point: you say that perfect tribbing is the only exaggeration... except you forget you already start out with hot women. You could take an author like Luffington Sandcastles, for whom it took almost the entirety of his writing career to have readers accept characters that are not perfect. This is because unlike catfights, sexfights are written almost exclusively for men and women who're interested in the carnal side of the affair. Nothing wrong with that, but that's where I circle back to the original 1994 visual novel (which is not a comic book!) upon which Blue is the warmest color was based.

    The author expressed some displeasure over the fact that it was a period piece for a reason and I happen to agree with her. It's not just a coming-of-age, slice of life story, but also one where one of the partners has had sexual experience with her own gender. One has to understand here, that while the French really did important scientific legwork in identifying how the HIV works, the French sexual revolution never extended to the LGBT. It's a pretty big point in the story that she comes to terms with who she is sexually with literally no help from anybody but her partner. The importance of the story comes from it not being simply about being gay or lesbian. Their breakup is owed to the fact that until the finish, where she selfishly thinks she can win her back, her egotistical traits take over, and she tries to own her. That makes it a relatable relationship problem with admittedly hot sex.

    If it's not written as a fetish story (and Blue isn't), an author can focus on other factors that play into how they have sex. What is personal, social, cultural background? Does she or will she fear peer pressure? How confident is she with her own body image? How judgmental will her partner be? Does she want to put up with keeping a body in shape for an optimal sexual experience? How selfless or egotistical will she be as a lover? Just some of the questions that concern actual people.
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    Senior Hostboard Member Giannis-CB's Avatar
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    Re: Does tribadism really work?

    Quote Originally Posted by catfightlover40 View Post
    Dear Giannis,

    I won't quote your whole reply as it'd be too long, so I wish to address some of its points for correction or expansion. First and chiefly I'd modify the claim "this much scissoring has never been done this many times" to "in Western cinema". I've talked in length about the fact, that after the sexual revolution in the late '60s and early '70s, where America was forced down on a path of renouncing mainstream erotica (yet you can still show gore and violence), other parts of the world did not follow that trend. Most famous among them is Emmanuelle from 1974, which spawned a series, spin-offs and imitators, and it was mainstream showing. Movies like that along with others in that offering should be examined before we could make a knowledge based claimed that this much scissoring has never been done before. I do give you that the newest social media generation upon running into this movie will claim that it hasn't been done before as nowadays everybody wants to be the popular kid in school and facts are only worthy if they make you popular.

    I have to address the second point for its heteronormativity. People are people. For centuries, the heavily edited/redacted Kama Sutra was advertised as the book of sex for us the hetero crowd, but educational books, including drawings depicting sexual acts between gays and lesbians existed as well. Not only that, we know from surviving depictions created for noblemen in China, Japan and Korea that the medieval "Pornhub" was ricepaper painting depicting imagined, but mostly real acts. Thus demand for the forbidden fruit was always constant, but that's not necessarily overlapping with reality. What has to be understood here that even in the most oppressive of times, human desire to pass on knowledge as a form of legacy is a primal one, not unlike wanting to have progeny. As a monoclastic culture plagued by mainstream bigotries, LGBT literature became heavily personalized. The more people wished to persecute it, the more it allowed for it not just to be secret, but also to be selective. Humans are humans, so, yes, at times the power dynamics were less than ideal and citizens of colonies or those of military occupation had to things for their benefactors they personally did not like.

    The third and last point: you say that perfect tribbing is the only exaggeration... except you forget you already start out with hot women. You could take an author like Luffington Sandcastles, for whom it took almost the entirety of his writing career to have readers accept characters that are not perfect. This is because unlike catfights, sexfights are written almost exclusively for men and women who're interested in the carnal side of the affair. Nothing wrong with that, but that's where I circle back to the original 1994 visual novel (which is not a comic book!) upon which Blue is the warmest color was based.

    The author expressed some displeasure over the fact that it was a period piece for a reason and I happen to agree with her. It's not just a coming-of-age, slice of life story, but also one where one of the partners has had sexual experience with her own gender. One has to understand here, that while the French really did important scientific legwork in identifying how the HIV works, the French sexual revolution never extended to the LGBT. It's a pretty big point in the story that she comes to terms with who she is sexually with literally no help from anybody but her partner. The importance of the story comes from it not being simply about being gay or lesbian. Their breakup is owed to the fact that until the finish, where she selfishly thinks she can win her back, her egotistical traits take over, and she tries to own her. That makes it a relatable relationship problem with admittedly hot sex.

    If it's not written as a fetish story (and Blue isn't), an author can focus on other factors that play into how they have sex. What is personal, social, cultural background? Does she or will she fear peer pressure? How confident is she with her own body image? How judgmental will her partner be? Does she want to put up with keeping a body in shape for an optimal sexual experience? How selfless or egotistical will she be as a lover? Just some of the questions that concern actual people.
    Hello catfightlover,

    At first let me focus that my native language is not English so grammar/phrasal mistakes may be here and there. This is important because maybe, i did not let you clearly understand what i was talking about.
    I simply replied to a comment by kamafight, who was wondering if trib is really works.

    My reply was a reply to a board about sexfights, titfights. So my thoughts, my preferences, the reply i wrote here, have ONLY to do about it. It was not a discussion about movies, directors... As it was not about world economy or politics (just examples). I have my personal opinion about all these (social events, arts, politics, economy, movies, sports, e.t.c.) but i will NEVER talk about all these here. It is DEFINITELY NOT the right place for me. here only my "dark side" speaks LOL not the bright one (if i have one ! LOL) .
    I am here for fun as many other people. JUST FOR FUN. I have other places , other sites to show all the rest If i want to. I try to not mix them. I BELIEVE that you and many other trib writers/readers have similar thoughts and have other places to show your interests for all these things we must concern about.

    Here I focused ONLY about scissoring/trib/sexfights/lez action trying to show what i think AND to write my opinion to kamafight and to all the trib fans there.

    So... Emanuelle... Yes a GREAT FILM, but NO scissoring. The whole discussion was about scissoring and trib. It was not about lez films or mainstream films with lez scenes in general
    "Blue is the warmest color" was the FIRST MAINSTREAM movie which had some of intense trib. A mainstream film which awarded in Cannes Festival (the director and the two main actresses) , a very important movie festival. I did NOT write a review about it. I did NOT write how close to real life it was (or not). I did NOT focused on its plot. I only commented about its scissoring scenes. Without to underestimate or to overestimate all the rest. Not my intention.

    And yes... after 2013, we had a "trib boom". People learned about trib, porn industry tried to get advance of it producing MUCH MORE videos with trib scenes (which lasted longer or much longer than before). Till last year, now i feel (a personal feeling, i may be wrong) that trib moves to be "out" again. I posted a thread about this, months ago. Again, i wish i am wrong.

    I also replied to kamafight if scissoring is really good for some women or not. I posted a way to find Tina's Horn article about it, i also wrote how is trib in real life. I am into trib for 30 years ! yes, that many ! I have read a lot about it, i do not mean stories only. I have PERSONALLY MET lez or bisexual women who told me about it. I am old enough to say that i have a well proved experience about it. In all its forms, from trib videos and stories till serious discussions about it. When i say that i am FULLY into it, i mean it ! LOL

    I do not argue with you. Your reply was very interesting, i mean it. But i think that i was not that clear and probably you misunderstood what i wanted to write.

    Very friendly
    Giannis

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