Friday, February 13

Don't tell the bedroom police

But kinky sex is on the rise:
"It's a totally new revolution and it's really exploded. The Internet has changed everything. So many people can go online and say, 'This is me. I love this. I am finding like types.'"

And for those who think this phenomenon might encourage anti-social behavior, he counters, "I don't think anyone was really damaged or hurt by book or movie."

Columbia's Kuriansky agrees that "what's weird, sick or kinky for you is what practitioners defend as 'normal' for them."

"Credit, or blame, the Internet, making information available in such a level playing field that outrageous acts have become so accessible they seem mainstream".

"After the pain threshold is crossed, they describe a type of ecstasy called 'flying," Dunlap found in his research. "It is no longer painful and gives an entirely sexual as well as psychological, transcendent place. Flying is bigger than any drug."
So far so good, but...
"We also found a minority who prefer animals to humans," she said. "It's like a sexual orientation and they marry animals and treat like spouse -- whole love affair."

Such was the case with one man who had a relationship with his horse, according to Daniel Bergner, whose book, "The Other Side of Desire," just arrived in bookstores.

"I find I am closer to horses," the zoophile told Bergner, citing the "trust factor."
Uh-oh. I'd better not invite that guy for ASIAN CUISINE...

Meanwhile an economist discusses adverse selection in BDSM clubs.

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