Sex
Is your vibrator bad for the environment?
Going green has never felt so good, thanks to popular lines of enviro-friendly sex toys
(Credit: Ipatov via Shutterstock) From local organic produce to energy-efficient appliances, progressive Americans are greening their lives one karma-enhancing product at a time — and sex toys are no exception.
Believe it or not, it wasn’t always possible to swing by your well-lit neighborhood sex shop for a rechargeable, toxin-free vibrator. “Prior to the early 2000′s, all you could find was [toxin]-laced plastic toys in the seedy back rooms of Times Square-style sex stores,” says Stefanie Iris Weiss, author of “Eco-Sex: Go Green Between the Sheets and Make Your Love Life Sustainable.” But then high-end companies like Jimmyjane and Lelo started to produce vibes that did away with one-use batteries and dangerous chemicals. The San Francisco-based sex shop Good Vibrations just launched a specialty website for eco-friendly vibrators, which now account for roughly a quarter of its monthly sales. Babeland, a “women-friendly” sex shop started in Seattle with outposts in New York, offers an Eco-Sexy Kit, which comes with a solar-powered mini-vibe, vegan lube and condoms, and an organic massage candle. There are even companies like Kink Junkie (tagline: “a dirty kind of green”) providing environmentally friendly fetish gear.
The market for eco-vibes was created by both the mainstreaming of sex toys (dinky, disposable versions are available at even chain stores like 7-11 and CVS) and dawning green awareness. “From individuals’ honest attempts to go greener to huge companies greenwashing their mission, this set of issues has the eye of much of the public now,” says Carol Queen, a Good Vibes staff sexologist. The especially optimistic, like Weiss, see it as part of “a collective ‘waking up’ going on everywhere,” and even points to Occupy Wall Street movement as an example: “We can’t wake up politically but leave our sexuality behind.” Weiss’ book covers not only sex toys but all areas of our modern romantic lives, including ethically produced chocolates and roses.
Most eco-vibe fans seem motivated by basic environmental concerns, like generating too much trash. “I love rechargeable toys because I don’t worry so much about using a lot of batteries that I then have to chuck,” says Clare Jacky of Minneapolis’ Smitten Kitten, which sells aluminum, steel, glass and even wood toys. “And I kind of perversely love the idea that glass and aluminum toys can go in your recycling.” (And so does her garbage man.) The desire to cut down on garbage also means investing in longer-lasting toys: “I think my Jimmyjane toys will be with me for 20 years at least. They are not heading to a landfill any time soon.” At close to $150 a pop, they’d better not. Die-hards also look after their carbon footprint — just as with “locavore” eating, there is a growing “locarotic” movement, says Queen — and buy toys that come in recyclable packaging.
One of the biggest motivators, though, is basic self-interest. “Just like we now know to avoid BPA in baby bottles, when it comes to sex toys, a wholly different arena, we’re getting conscious,” says Weiss. Although there is certainly someone out there who gets off on rubbing potentially cancer-causing plastic between her legs, it’s a mood killer for most. In 1994, Good Vibrations started questioning the safety of toys with phthalates, but at the time outside sex toy manufacturers “had no idea how to address” the issue, says Queen. “Now this material has been phased out of practically everything.”
Despite the growing range and quality of eco-sex-toys, some customers find they fall short on the performance front. Erin, a 35-year-old from Chicago, tells me, “My wife and I got a solar-powered vibrator, because we liked the idea of it. It was a sex life fail. It couldn’t hold enough charge to get either of us off. Very disappointing.” The price can be another disincentive: Megan, a 25-year-old from Wisconsin, went searching for an eco-vibe due to battery-guilt but says, “We ended up buying something not green for cheaper — made with things safe for the body, of course, but something cheaper and not necessarily safe for the environment.”
As with any area of lifestyle activism, people commit at vastly different levels. There will be extreme adopters who “eschew toys and other products for old reliable erotic options like body-to-body contact with spit as lube, simply because they’re concerned that any other mode of sexual expression is insufficiently green,” says Queen. “And some folks will continue to be the non-organic-beef-eating, Hummer-driving, cigar-chomping pesticide users of the sex world, and will throw their condoms down the toilet if they deign to use them at all!”
Tracy Clark-Flory is a staff writer at Salon. Follow @tracyclarkflory on Twitter. More Tracy Clark-Flory.
Massage therapists rubbed wrong by sex talk
A Jennifer Love Hewitt show and the Travolta allegations have masseuses tired of being confused for sex workers
(Credit: iStockphoto/sybanto) Joe, a licensed massage therapist, knows what it’s like having a famous client who expects something extra. He had an Academy Award-winning actor begin gyrating on his massage table before raising his hips in the air to show off his erection. “He was hoping that I would play with him in some shape or form,” he says.
Needless to say, Joe isn’t surprised by allegations by two masseurs that John Travolta got handsy during massages. (Travolta’s attorney has denied all the allegations, and called them “ridiculous.”) “It happens all the time,” he says, and not just with celebrity clients. He frequently encounters men who try to fondle him, usually while he’s working on their glutes or lower back and their hand happens to be level with his crotch. “They think they’re so original, but they’re all so much the same,” Joe says, his voice rising. “They all use the same tactics, the same body movements, the same gyrations and grinding my table, the [heavy] breathing.”
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Tracy Clark-Flory is a staff writer at Salon. Follow @tracyclarkflory on Twitter. More Tracy Clark-Flory.
A night at the vibrator museum
Early vibrators were hand-cranked, two-person jobs -- and prescribed by doctors. How far we've come since then
(Credit: Antique Vibrator Museum) I can now say that I’ve used a turn-of-the-century vibrator — on my hand, but still.
The silver, hand-cranked contraption is usually kept behind glass at Good Vibrations’ Antique Vibrator Museum in San Francisco — but staff sexologist Carol Queen made a rare exception. “This is very special,” she whispered, unlocking the case and carefully pulling out Dr. Johansen’s Auto Vibrator, a relic from 1904. The “auto” part is not so much: It was a two-person job, with her having to crank the device’s handle to get it thrumming. Pressing my finger tips to its inch-wide circular platform of pleasure, I was pleasantly surprised by its power.
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Tracy Clark-Flory is a staff writer at Salon. Follow @tracyclarkflory on Twitter. More Tracy Clark-Flory.
Maggie Gyllenhaal on sexual liberation
The beloved indie star tells Salon about her "vibrator movie" and why she loves playing transgressive women
Maggie Gyllenhaal (Credit: Reuters/Mark Blinch) When I met Maggie Gyllenhaal about six weeks ago, she was enormously and gloriously pregnant, stretching out on a sofa with her shoes off and feet up in a Manhattan office building. (Since that time, Gyllenhaal and husband Peter Sarsgaard have welcomed their second daughter, Gloria Ray, to the world.) We were there to talk about “Hysteria,” the charming, lightweight feminist farce from director Tanya Wexler that explores a key event in the history of female sexuality: the invention of the vibrator by Mortimer Granville, a Victorian doctor who was seeking to cure the mysterious “female malady” that lends the movie its title.
Continue Reading CloseMother-daughter sexperts
Susie Bright and her daughter, Aretha, make parental talks about sex look easy -- and fun
Most parents loathe talking to their kids about the birds and the bees, let alone pubic hair grooming, faked orgasms and “water sports” — but most parents are not legendary “sexpert” Susie Bright.
Better than talking about these things, she penned an advice column in 2009 with her daughter, Aretha, then 19, for the ladyblog Jezebel. Their answers to questions about everything from porn to Paxil were unflinching but playful, and at times controversial. Now the pair have collected those columns into a new e-book, “Mother/Daughter Sex Advice.” Together, they read as an irreverent version of “Our Bodies, Ourselves” for the Internet age. The mother-daughter team also reflect on what the experience of writing the column was like, and it turns out it wasn’t as weird as many would think: For the most part, it was just a continuation of conversations they had been having throughout Aretha’s life.
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Tracy Clark-Flory is a staff writer at Salon. Follow @tracyclarkflory on Twitter. More Tracy Clark-Flory.
On the rack: A cultural history of breasts
Did breasts evolve for lactation or to enhance sex appeal? A new book explores why they matter
(Credit: iStockphoto/NadyaPhoto) It’s hard to be boobs. Sure, breasts are cherished as givers of milk and the pinnacle of sex appeal, but the modern world hasn’t been good to mammaries.
As Florence Williams writes in “Breasts: A Natural and Unnatural History,” they’re the most tumor-prone organ in the human body. They “soak up pollution like a pair of soft sponges,” and transmit environmental toxins to babies through breast milk. “Breasts are bellwethers for the changing health of people,” she says. While we’ve “genetically modified our crops to be able to protect them from the ill effects of pesticides,” Williams writes, “we haven’t yet figured out how to modify our breasts.” Aside from using saline and silicone, of course.
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Tracy Clark-Flory is a staff writer at Salon. Follow @tracyclarkflory on Twitter. More Tracy Clark-Flory.
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