Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast
Results 1 to 10 of 15

Thread: How I started my fondness for women's struggles

  1. #1
    miguf2563
    Guest miguf2563's Avatar

    How I started my fondness for women's struggles

    The beginning of my fondness for the women`s struggles, happened when I was almost
    10 year old. At that time, I couldn?t to watch movies or TV that contained violence. That
    was so until a marriage friend of my family and his 15 year old son, came to visit us.
    This young teenager wanted to go to see a movie of spies of the James Bond type that
    it exhibited one of the cinemas of the city. So the marriage asked to my parents
    permission to take me with them and so accompany to their son.

    These films of low budget obtained a lot of hearing in those years, due to the success
    achieved by the original English version. In general these films were European
    coproductions: Franco-Italian, Italo-Spanish, Franco-English, etc.

    Well, once the requested permission is obtained. We entered to the cinema with my
    companions and after having eaten sweets, chocolates and popcorn. The movie was
    started, already in the first minutes, you could guess everything about these movies
    that imitated to the agent 007. I must mention that I was struck by the appearance
    of the Eiffel Tower in some scenes and the hairstyles of the actresses because were
    typicals of that time.

    Then, at some point in the film, the secret agent was to meet with an informant
    at a nightclub. I can remember that right in the center of that place there was a
    white hammock hanging and there were tables with lamps that surrounded it and
    at each table there were two to four people.

    Suddenly, a man with a microphone announced the main event of the night:
    "Women's struggle in the hammock".

    Then the lights went out and there was only one large reflector illuminating the hammock.
    Just then, a slow and sensual music began to play. To the same time, two girls dressed
    in cheetah bikinis more cheetah light sneakers (closed by the heel and finished in tip).

    One of the girls was blonde, she had long hair, smoothed and rolled up, while the other
    was redheaded, which had a wavy hair that fell on her shoulders. I could estimate that
    both had the same height (5?5) and weight (124 pds), the blonde had a more roasted
    skin color and the redhead had a white skin. Their bodies were toned, thin and athletic
    and wore brasier cup D.

    In that, they both climbed into the hammock and greeted the present audience who
    automatically applauded them, then they slowly took the typical posture of a fight
    and headed toward the center of the hammock without looking away from each other.

    When they got there, they immediately pounced one on the another, which caused
    them to fall on the hammock and roll with frenzy, each tried to stay on top.
    In addition, they tried to apply keys of surrender, for example they used their legs,
    like real tongs trying to catch and squeeze the body of the other.

    Everything was very exciting: the music, the public encouraging them, the bikinis,
    the hairstyles, the slippers, the fight and the moans that both emitted either by
    the effort or by a well applied key. The fight progressed then I could appreciate
    that the fighters were getting tired, since the combat had lost its initial intensity.
    In spite of this, they kept rolling in close-bodied embraces and their moans were
    louder.

    Suddenly and without warning, the redhead took advantage of the weariness of the
    blonde to place her legs around the neck of the blonde. This made her will begin
    to contort her body frantically trying to get out of that key of surrender, tried to
    use her hands to pull away the legs that tightened her neck but did not have the
    strength to do so.

    Just then, there was an approach to the blonde's slippers, which desperately agitated
    while the redhead, in the background, pushed her body back. Next, the blonde and
    her slippers stood motionless, she was unconscious on the hammock. Next the place
    it lightened, then i could see to the redhead, release to her victim. Then she stood up
    and she began to happily leaping on the hammock next of her defeated rival. Besides,
    she raised her arms on signal of victory. Then, the public applauded euphorically the
    triumph of the redhead.

    From that moment, I became a fan of women's struggles.

    miguf2563

    P.D The name of the movie I still can not find out, according to the description someone
    can help me to know what is the name of this movie?
    Last edited by miguf2563; January 10th, 2017 at 07:07 PM.

  2. #2
    Senior Hostboard Member
    How I started my fondness for women's struggles


    Ragnar0k's Avatar
    Join Date
    April 2nd, 2011
    Location
    UK
    Posts
    355
    Follows
    0
    Following
    0
    Mentioned
    0 Post(s)
    Tagged
    0 Thread(s)
    Quoted
    7 Post(s)

    Re: How I started my fondness for women's struggles

    Hi miguf2563,

    I really enjoyed reading your post. I think we must all cast our minds back at some point to try and work out when and how our fondness for women's struggles really started.

    In my own case it came about in my early teens, when I was in the habit of regularly devouring many different books including SF, fantasy and spy novels.

    I remember in particular buying a fantasy novel in the 'Gor' series written by John Norman. The stories resembled some of the John Carter of Mars stuff, but had the added spice that occasionally the strong fiery female characters would fight each other, usually for the man that they wanted to bed. Needless to say the concept of competitive female action came as a revelation to my feverish young adolescent mind: especially as this was the time that I was becoming interested in members of the opposite sex at school (who still seemed pretty unattainable at that age!)

    A similar theme cropped up when I read the James Bond thriller 'From Russia With Love' at about the same time. As you may know the book contains the famous gypsy fight which is also portrayed well in the film of the same name. For a mainstream novel, it remains a powerfully erotic depiction of competitive female aggression (and the rivalry is all over a man again!)

    Its fair to say that these two literary references alone had a massive impact on my developing sexual proclivities at a relatively tender age. I particularly remember fantasising regularly about being pinned down and ravaged by a beautiful gypsy woman who was both stronger and a more accomplished wrestler than I could hope to be as an adolescent boy.

    Item 3, and perhaps the final clincher, was when in those pre-internet days I stumbled across a stash of well-thumbed porn mags and found a fascinating story in one concerning two women having a sex-fight involving strap-on dildos. I think by the time I finished reading that one there was no going back!
    Last edited by Ragnar0k; January 8th, 2017 at 06:08 AM.

  3. #3
    Senior Hostboard Member
    How I started my fondness for women's struggles


    Catfightfactory's Avatar
    Join Date
    April 4th, 2010
    Location
    Shitt Hole
    Posts
    228
    Follows
    0
    Following
    0
    Mentioned
    0 Post(s)
    Tagged
    0 Thread(s)
    Quoted
    8 Post(s)

    Re: How I started my fondness for women's struggles

    Mine start with 12 years old on Dalton women

  4. #4
    Hostboard Member SarahtheSlayer37's Avatar
    Join Date
    October 20th, 2015
    Location
    The US
    Posts
    56
    Follows
    0
    Following
    0
    Mentioned
    0 Post(s)
    Tagged
    0 Thread(s)
    Quoted
    2 Post(s)

    Re: How I started my fondness for women's struggles

    I've always just been really competitive with other women, and in early highschool a girl I was dating introduced me to the fetish! I was hooked instantly, and my sexuality became increasingly reliant on sexfighting. <3 Now it's hard to even get off with some slight competition, or shit-talk. Which, probably annoys the hell out of the girlfirend.

  5. #5
    Senior Hostboard Member sffan4e's Avatar
    Join Date
    August 13th, 2005
    Posts
    1,508
    Follows
    0
    Following
    0
    Mentioned
    0 Post(s)
    Tagged
    0 Thread(s)
    Quoted
    0 Post(s)

    Re: How I started my fondness for women's struggles

    I don't know exactly when it started fir me, but I think it was very early on, when I got fascinated by female clashes in comics and cartoons.
    It wasn't untill All the marbles, though that I saw catfighting and female wrestling on screen.
    Although arousing, that still that wasn't exactly my thing. In the era of videotapes, I got some female wrestling videos, but all of them left me unsatisfied. In those days you still had paper catalogues and paper forms to mail your orders with. You know that you get old when younger people don't know what the he'll you are talking about. Dial phones? It's just pressing keys on a touch screen, right?

    Then the internet came available and I was introduced to the work of California Wildcats. After that I learned that there was something named sexfighting. And although we didn't had the allmighty Google, there were search engines. And slowly I came across the likes of Napali Video, DWW's HPC, etc.
    But it was with Calwild when I saw 'the light'. That what I was looking for, without knowing what it was.
    Last edited by sffan4e; January 8th, 2017 at 11:50 PM.

  6. #6
    Senior Hostboard Member
    How I started my fondness for women's struggles


    dwcole's Avatar
    Join Date
    December 27th, 2008
    Posts
    359
    Follows
    0
    Following
    0
    Mentioned
    0 Post(s)
    Tagged
    0 Thread(s)
    Quoted
    0 Post(s)

    Re: How I started my fondness for women's struggles

    Like RagnarPK, for me it was a movie I saw years ago that got my fondness rolling to.
    And my fondness for Raquel Welch helped.
    The movie was of course - One Million Years BC. When Raquel got to rolling around on that
    cave floor with that other woman - I was hooked.
    From then on, if I even thought there was going to be two women fighting in a new movie.
    Then I was going to that movie. Then came the first time I went to a adult book store, and
    saw catfighting magazines and these cheap catfighting paperback novels.
    Then I discovered, Cavalier magazine with a section called - fight time. And on the back of one
    of these mags, I saw a ad for Napali Video.
    Then came - the internet, and the rest is history.

  7. #7
    Senior Hostboard Member
    How I started my fondness for women's struggles


    Ragnar0k's Avatar
    Join Date
    April 2nd, 2011
    Location
    UK
    Posts
    355
    Follows
    0
    Following
    0
    Mentioned
    0 Post(s)
    Tagged
    0 Thread(s)
    Quoted
    7 Post(s)

    Re: How I started my fondness for women's struggles

    Quote Originally Posted by sffan4e View Post
    I don't know exactly when it started fir me, but I think it was very early on, when I got fascinated by female clashes in comics and cartoons.
    It wasn't untill All the marbles, though that I saw catfighting and female wrestling on screen.
    Although arousing, that still that wasn't exactly my thing. In the era of videotapes, I got some female wrestling videos, but all of them left me unsatisfied. In those days you still had paper catalogues and paper forms to mail your orders with. You know that you get old when younger people don't know what the he'll you are talking about. Dial phones? It's just pressing keys on a touch screen, right?

    Then the internet came available and I was introduced to the work of California Wildcats. After that I learned that there was something named sexfighting. And although we didn't had the allmighty Google, there were search engines. And slowly I came across the likes of Napali Video, DWW's HPC, etc.
    But it was with Calwild when I saw 'the light'. That what I was looking for, without knowing what it was.

    I also enjoyed watching All the Marbles - great plot-driven story about the California Dolls, two aspiring female wrestlers and the scrapes they get into along the way. Agree that the wrestling was fairly mainstream, but there was a short mud wrestling sequence, and the final tag team bout with the Toledo Tigers, who played the heels, was pretty special.

    I believe all the actresses trained and did the stunts themselves without doubles and Peter Falk - TVs Columbo no less - played their manager!

    The director Robert Aldrich had a 9 million dollar budget to play with - imagine what sort of a sexfight film we could make with that!

    - - - Updated - - -

    Quote Originally Posted by dwcole View Post
    Like RagnarPK, for me it was a movie I saw years ago that got my fondness rolling to.
    And my fondness for Raquel Welch helped.
    The movie was of course - One Million Years BC. When Raquel got to rolling around on that
    cave floor with that other woman - I was hooked.
    From then on, if I even thought there was going to be two women fighting in a new movie.
    Then I was going to that movie. Then came the first time I went to a adult book store, and
    saw catfighting magazines and these cheap catfighting paperback novels.
    Then I discovered, Cavalier magazine with a section called - fight time. And on the back of one
    of these mags, I saw a ad for Napali Video.
    Then came - the internet, and the rest is history.
    I also loved that movie!
    Like you I must have scoured every new movie that came out for similar. Of course the action rarely developed the way we would like to see it going so our fevered imaginations had to supply the rest!
    After I read that first catfight story in a porn mag I became aware through the small ads that a specialist literature actually existed but it wasn't until I moved to London that I was really able to access this regularly. There was a small shop in Soho that sold bad reprints of Stanton comics, Amazons in Action and the like. I ended up going in there pretty regularly until the internet kicked in and saved us all.

  8. #8
    Senior Hostboard Member Julieta76's Avatar
    Join Date
    April 12th, 2004
    Location
    Kissfight city
    Posts
    144
    Follows
    0
    Following
    0
    Mentioned
    0 Post(s)
    Tagged
    0 Thread(s)
    Quoted
    10 Post(s)

    Smile Re: How I started my fondness for women's struggles

    I was a teenage when I was reading my cousin's comic books. He have lots of collections of compilations like Cimoc, or Zona84.
    I remember a couple of squares where two maids have a catfight, slapping and rolling on the mud. And the winner, then kiss the loser and then slaps her. They was separated, and as my cousin came here, he never let me look at those comics again. I?ve never get that story.

    During my 20's I saw a movie where two girls catfight naked under the jail showers, before turning on and grinding, start to kiss and fuck each other.

    And with the internet, I?ve realize what sexfight is, and first time I saw Joslyn (from Chickfight) kissing and grinding, still dressed with Veronica, I get aroused. Then Rolen got my attention with Jewel and Tori. But Francesca Le have all the prizes.

    Later, I?ve found the yahoo group (death today sniff) about cyber sexfight) and I loved all the funny, sloppy and descriptive matches I?ve had.

    Also, I?ve tried a couple of times in real life, and I loved it! But I?ll keep the details for myself.

  9. #9
    Junior Hostboard Member Tit4Tat85's Avatar
    Join Date
    November 22nd, 2016
    Posts
    9
    Follows
    0
    Following
    0
    Mentioned
    0 Post(s)
    Tagged
    0 Thread(s)
    Quoted
    0 Post(s)

    Re: How I started my fondness for women's struggles

    When I was a kid I saw women's wrestling on WWF and something was sparked in me from then on. I never really acted on it but whenever a women's match came on I was really invested in it. With the internet I discovered the world of erotic wrestling from sites like Steel Kittens and DT. That led me to eventually discover the idea of sexfighting. I think California Wildcats was the first site I saw it on. I also liked the tit battles from Napali. Over time I can honestly say that my tastes have grown to lean more towards sexfighting as there's just something in sexual competition that appeals to me more than anything else. Part of it I think is how personal a sexfight is. I mean catfights are personal but with sex the women are, for lack of a better word, violating one another at a whole different level. Anywho I should probably stop rambling before I go too far off topic! LOL

  10. #10
    Hostboard Member clash11's Avatar
    Join Date
    April 28th, 2016
    Location
    Australia
    Posts
    86
    Follows
    0
    Following
    0
    Mentioned
    0 Post(s)
    Tagged
    0 Thread(s)
    Quoted
    0 Post(s)

    Re: How I started my fondness for women's struggles

    I remember the first time i saw tit to tit contact . I had just started to date a girl with huge boobs and she asked me to come and watch her play Netball . I had never seen Netball played before . The girl my GF was marking was almost a perfect match for her , close in height , build and boob size . They seemed to spend the hole game with their boobs pressed together pushing one and other one way or the other . Finally there was a wild high pass thrown and both girls tried to catch it only to collide their boobs together , both girls came away holding their boobs . After the game i asked my GF about the boob contact and she just shrugged and said i was just marking her . needless to say i fell in love with her and Netball
    Last edited by clash11; January 11th, 2017 at 06:55 AM.

Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast

Tags for this Thread

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •