A Feminist Guide to Sex Education (Illustrated)
By Miss Rosen on October 22, 2020
Virginity: A Concept
If You Have a Vulva, You Have a G-Spot
“When Zoe met Liz” reads like a page from a Hollywood film about two young women coming of age in New York City during 2010s. Nearly a decade ago, photographer and now-
New Yorker photo editor Elizabeth Renstrom met Zoe Ligon, who would soon become a sex education and entrepreneur, while the two twenty-somethings were working at a local American Apparel store.
After realizing they both lived in the same neighborhood, they started commuting to and from work together. A friendship quickly blossomed, and theirs has become a relationship that has grown both personally and professionally. Together, Renstrom and Ligon have authored their first book,
The Myth of the Loose Butthole
Ralf Geithe via iStock
Every person who engages in anal sex fears that they will one day possess a bashed and battered asshole, one that’s not as bright and tight as it used to be. I can admit that I was once a part of that camp, fearing that every time I bottomed, I was causing permanent damage to my precious b-hole. But, as is true with most generalizations, you come to realize it’s (mostly) a bunch of BS.
I became particularly invested in this topic after working with a sexual wellness company that launched a service called Text-a-Sexpert, in which a fellow sex educator and myself would answer people’s personal sex questions via text message. Almost instantly, I was taken aback by the volume of folks who wrote me desperate that their holes were or would soon become loose as a result of receptive anal intercourse.