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Posted: 2024-05-01T07:00:02Z | Updated: 2024-05-01T07:00:02Z Want A Better Sex Life? Then It's Time To Embrace 'Outercourse.' | HuffPost Life

Want A Better Sex Life? Then It's Time To Embrace 'Outercourse.'

If you're only focusing on intercourse, sex experts say you're missing out big time.

When we talk about sex , often were really referring to intercourse. But theres so much more to a satisfying sex life than just penetration. And when we broaden our definition of sex to be more inclusive, theres a whole world of pleasure to be gained. 

Thats where outercourse comes in.

Outercourse is really an umbrella term for a wide variety of sexual activities that dont involve any type of penetration, clinical sexologist and sexuality educator Lawrence Siegel  told HuffPost.  

Its a way of increasing sexual passion and eroticism, he continued. Any rubbing, touching, kissing or caressing that doesnt involve any part of one body entering any part of another. It can also involve mutual masturbation, scissoring and dry humping. (That being said, what constitutes outercourse may vary person to person. For instance, some people believe fingering and oral sex are examples of outercourse, while others do not.)

What many people call foreplay would be considered outercourse. But when we refer to all of these sexual acts as just foreplay, it reinforces the idea that penetration is the main event . In reality, these pleasurable activities can be a satisfying sexual experience on their own, even when they dont lead to intercourse, Siegel said. 

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Cavan Images via Getty Images
Exploring outercourse is one way to up-level your sex life.

According to sex educator and podcast host Chris Maxwell Rose , Outercourse can include any way we touch, lick, stroke, stimulate and turn-on the biggest organ in our bodies: the skin, she said. So many of us experience touch hunger   and the remedy is full-body, affectionate touch.

Erotic massage is another example of outercourse that can provide deeply satisfying, highly erotic experiences with touch alone, said Maxwell Rose, who is also the founder of PleasureMechanics.com

Outercourse can even include cuddling and spooning, which foster closeness and a sense of security, said sex therapist and clinical psychologist Nazanin Moali . It can also include talking openly about your sexual fantasies , which allows partners to connect on a deeply personal level, Moali, host of the Sexology podcast , told HuffPost. 

The Benefits Of Outercourse 

Once you get to a certain age or reach a certain stage in your relationship , having sex often means a bit of rushed foreplay as an appetizer before moving on to the intercourse entree. Outercourse can break up dull or repetitive patterns you may have fallen into in the bedroom, opening up new or forgotten pathways to sexual pleasure. 

Many of us remember the very beginnings of our sexual discoveries, even the very beginning of our relationships that started with making out and getting felt up or feeling up, and how exciting that was, Siegel said. Outercourse can really be what helps build a level of passion that creates powerful orgasms.

Outercourse also pushes you to be more sexually creative and connect with your partners in more intentional ways, helping people explore sexual pleasure and stimulation beyond the genitals, said sexologist and sex educator Goody Howard .

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Drazen_ via Getty Images
Outercourse can help you discover different erogenous zones beyond the genitals.

Embracing outercourse can also be great for folks who have arousal issues, Moali said some of whom might avoid sex entirely because of these problems. Same goes for people with certain health conditions or physical limitations that take penetrative sex off the table. 

Within many heterosexual relationships, sexual encounters often commence with an erection and culminate in ejaculation, she said. Consequently, erection difficulties can result in a complete withdrawal from sexual activities. 

Additionally, outercourse is a safer but not entirely safe alternative to penetrative vaginal, anal and oral sex in terms of both risk of pregnancy and STIs.

How To Add More Outercourse To Your Sex Life   

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Kathrin Ziegler via Getty Images
Massage is another example of outercourse that can be satisfying and erotic on its own, said Maxwell Rose.

First, take some time to reflect on one of your best sexual experiences. Think about what you felt before, during and after. This will help you tap into what Moali calls your core erotic emotions. 

For many, consistent themes make sex memorable and exciting. For some, this could be the thrill of being desired, for others, a sense of shame, and for others still, its about power exchange, she explained.

Identifying your core desire is akin to discovering the genre of the novel youre writing. As an author, you can enrich this experience by incorporating elements that heighten the specific emotions you wish to explore.

This exercise will help you zero in on the sexual narratives and types of outercourse that might be most fulfilling to you. 

Exploring outercourse can also be an opportunity to start a dialogue with your partner (or partners) about your fantasies, what you enjoy in bed, and any personal boundaries around things youre not comfortable with, too, Siegel said.  

Talking about experiencing and understanding different types of touch can contribute greatly to experiencing better intercourse, he said. 

Treat this exploration as a way to expand your sexual horizons, Siegel said. Slow things down so you can focus on intimate acts like kissing, cuddling and touching each others bodies in different and intentional ways. 

Use massage and genital rubbing through the clothes; try slipping up from behind while theyre brushing their teeth or doing dishes, or other safe times when they dont expect it, he said.

Incorporate mutual masturbation into your sex play, both with and without sex toys. Even simulated intercourse, like sliding a penis between a partners thighs, breasts or butt. This can be a wonderful entree into experimenting with more ways to pleasure yourselves and each other. 

Try to get out of your head and put aside preconceived notions about what sex should be so you can discover what feels fun and pleasurable for you and your partner. 

It might be awkward at first to remain clothed when connecting to sexual pleasure, especially if youre used to being naked and going all the way, Howard said. But dont be afraid to try something new. My suggestion is to start fully clothed and remove clothing as desired, but not removing any bras or underwear. 

Outercourse can be utilized in a number of different ways for a number of different reasons tailored to your needs and desires as an individual or couple. 

Outercourse can be used as a tease, taunting your lover with an everything-but approach that plays with the charge of withholding penetration, Maxwell Rose said. Or it can be a strategy, a way of finding deeply satisfying sexual connection when penetration is off the menu. One of our most popular podcast episodes is about playing without penetration  because so many people are looking to find new ways to satisfy one another beyond traditional intercourse.

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Before You Go

14 Books That Will Improve Your Sex Life, According To Sex-perts
"The Erotic Mind" by Jack Morin(01 of14)
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The late Dr. Jack Morin was a San Francisco-based sex therapist who focused on not just the factors that make great sex, but also the development and evolution of relationships. His book, The Erotic Mind, is an analysis of 1,000 different climactic sexual experiences. The subject matter alone is enough to titillate even the most timid of readers, but Morin goes further than just a voyeuristic look into peoples most intense encounters. He examines what made these experiences fulfilling emotionally and physically, then offers back to his reader the insight needed for their own self-discovery into what they find sexually fulfilling.

This book is great for anyone who wants to understand what makes their erotic life rev up or stall out. It isn't a how-to book; it's a judgment-free exploration of the variety of erotic responses humans can experience. It is sprinkled with stories from The Group people who shared their peak experiences with the author. If you've ever wondered how to combine intimacy and lust in relationships, you might find some answers here. Wendy Sellers (aka The Puberty Lady) a Michigan-based therapist with a focus on educating children and parents in preparation for puberty and adolescence.
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"Mating in Captivity: Unlocking Erotic Intelligence by Esther Perel(02 of14)
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Esther Perel is a psychotherapist and New York Times bestselling author, with a practice based in New York City and a knack for understanding modern love and erotic intelligence. Her book, Mating in Captivity, is an international bestseller that, according to the publisher, examines the paradoxical relationship between domesticity and sexual desire, and the ways to maintain that desire. Utilizing her decades of experience as a relationship and couples therapist in addition to various case studies, Perels book is like a honest breath of fresh air when it comes to matters of the bedroom.

Perel's work is a must-read for anybody seeking to better understand why desire fades in long-term relationships. Every couple dreads that moment of realization the one when it dawns on you that youve got the sexual blahs. Perel highlights the critical factors at play, helping readers to understand why humans have trouble wanting that which they already have. Readers are challenged to consider how intimacy begets sexuality, how security saps erotic vitality, and how fire needs air. Lovers are enlightened on the importance of erotic independence, investing in one's erotic plot, and how couples can feel more alive. Perel helps readers to focus on how to want what they already have. Yvonne K. Fulbright , an author, relationship expert and AASECT-certified sexuality educator.
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"Come As You Are" by Emily Nagoski(03 of14)
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Regarded as one of the latest and most essential reads on sexual wellness, and also the only book that was suggested by nearly every sex therapist that HuffPost reached out to, Come As You Are, by sex educator and author Emily Nagoski, focuses on womens sexuality using relevant and recent data. Nagoski dives into science, anatomy, hormones and so many other varied components that play a role in sex all in a way thats accessible for any reader. Shes also recently published a follow-up book, Come Together: The Science (and Art!) of Creating Lasting Sexual Connections, which focuses more on maintaining a sexual relationship with your partner that evolves instead of drying up.

I suggest this book for all to read. Dr. Nagoski offers research, examples and exercise for all to explore what women's experience of sexuality looks like. Not every piece of the text will fit for all, and the idea that sexuality exists within the context of the air we breathe as we grow into ourselves is priceless. Hilleren

[Its] revolutionary in the sense of how it reframes female sexuality and normalizes the different aspects of it by including discussions on female and male sexual anatomy, desire/arousability, stress/trauma, societal norms and orgasms. The book also includes worksheets that I find are very helpful to use with my clients and are very reflective for anyone reading the book! Gerdts
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The Come As You Are Workbook: A Practical Guide to the Science of Sex by Emily Nagoski(04 of14)
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This is Nagoskis companion book to her well-received first book Come As You Are in which she colloquially explains the scientific measure the Dual Control Model, first introduced by researchers Dr. John Bancroft and Dr. Erik Janssen, [which] presents the framework that sexual desire is the combination of excitation and inhibition processes, which need to be in balance for a person to feel erotically turned on. This follow-up book by Nagoski is user-friendly and filled with both education and journal prompts that allow the reader to really take a mindful dive into what contexts they need to fully feel: desire, pleasure and arousal. Sari Cooper , certified sex therapist, relationship expert and director of The Center for Love and Sex in New York City. (credit:Amazon)
"She Comes First" by Ian Kerner(05 of14)
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Clinical sexologist Ian Kerner is here to demystify what too many have wondered how to make sure that she comes first. His sex book guides the valiant in their quest of mutual climaxes, and contends the best way to achieve this is on the tip of the tongue. Kerner passionately believes the key to a female orgasm is more likely to happen with oral sex and that its much more than foreplay, but rather the foundational base to great sex. With techniques and methods for the ultimate in sexual efficacy, think of She Comes First, as like an easy-to-read users manual to the vagina and sexual intimacy.

It is a practical and accessible read for men and women who choose to be with a female partner. Nasserzadeh
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"Shameless: A Sexual Reformation" by Nadia Bolz-Weber(06 of14)
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Nadia Bolz-Weber might make a surprising author for a sex book considering shes an ordained Lutheran pastor. But shes not here to shame you out of your kinks. Bolz-Weber is well known in progressive Christian circles as being welcoming, honest and not at all interested in antiquated ideas about sex, gender, and our bodies, according to her publisher. Knowing how damaging puritanical prejudices can be, Bolz-Weber wrote Shameless: A Sexual Reformation, to do just what the title suggests provide a renovated understanding of sex thats free from judgment. Her book crafts a journey that acknowledges the occasionally destructive, guilt-based and archaic views that Christianity has surrounding sex. And using bluntness and humor, Bolz-Weber provides a healing path for intimacy for those who have been impacted by any religion-related shame.

Did you grow up in the midst of purity culture? Have you been steeped in religious training that emphasizes the thou shalt nots and ignores sexuality as part of every individual's wholeness? Well, it's time for a personal reformation, and this book will help you knit together the spiritual with the sensual and sexual. Sellers
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"Pleasure Activism: the Politics of Feeling Good" by Adrienne Brown(07 of14)
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Author and activist Adrienne Brown's book Pleasure Activism: The Politics of Feeling Good, aims to make pleasure and social justice harmonious. By practicing pleasure activism, and pulling from what Brown calls Black feminist tradition, she guides her readers to find a base for their sexual identity in healing. Its composed of essays, poems, interviews and artwork from feminist trailblazers and thinkers like Sonya Renee Taylor, Alexis Pauline Gumbs and more. The essay topics are as vast and multifaceted as sexuality is, with subjects from sex work to climate change, from race and gender to sex and drugs, each providing a way of viewing the politics surrounding sex and our bodies in a positive and empowering way.

I read this book with my clients because it addresses how systems and society sometimes place a dictatorship on how people express their sexuality; how good and how radical it must feel for the female client to see how her performance anxiety was tied to unachievable standards to overperform and please males' bodies? Lastly, by tying race and historical events relating to transpolitics, it adds another layer to how achieving pleasure is a means to achieve justice in a world that constantly pushes against and benefits from the suffering of marginalized communities. Victoria Gerdts , a Los Angeles-based sex therapist with a focus on sexual advocacy for LGBTQIA+-affirmative, feminist/multicultural and disability justice.
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"Guide to Getting it On" by Paul Joannides(08 of14)
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Research psychoanalyst Paul Joannides illustrated book, Guide To Getting It On, was first published in 1998 and continues to be a resource guide for, you guessed it, getting it on. The aim of the book is to help not only heighten intimacy, but also increase your own level of sexual pleasure. It easily breaks down sexual anatomy, orgasms and even the ways to best articulate your desires with yourself and your partner, among other things. And, in the most recent edition of this book, youll find updated studies and factual information on everything from female orgasms to premature ejaculation and plenty of insights on various kinks.

This text is phenomenal for providing clear and direct information for anyone. Readers will learn about topics they may not have considered including sexual behaviors, websites and social practices. The Guide continues to be updated as the world culture changes and is an invaluable resource to practitioners as well as anyone interested in sexuality terms, definitions and practices. Jennie Hilleren ,AASECT-certified sex, marriage and family therapist based in Minnesota.
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"Girl Boner" by August McLaughlin(09 of14)
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Fed up with the ways female sexuality and pleasure are sold, journalist and host of Girl Boner Radio August McLaughlin set out to equip women with true sexual empowerment and female enjoyment in her book Girl Boner. McLaughlin explores how labels are thrust on women and how culture treats sex, without a nuanced or accurate understanding of female desire. She offers a different perspective, one which provides a more inclusive and sex-positive place for everyone, by utilizing honest narratives, tips, journaling prompts and even a guide into seven different types of orgasms.

[Its] an empowering book for younger women to deconstruct the societal messages around their sexuality and own. Sara Nasserzadeh , author, sex therapist and advisory board member of the World Association for Sexual Health.
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"The Vagina Bible: The Vulva and the Vagina" by Dr. Jen Gunter(10 of14)
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Dubbed as Twitters resident gynecologist by her followers online, Dr. Jen Gunter is an esteemed OB/GYN and fierce advocate for womens health. Her encyclopedic book The Vagina Bible tackles all things, well, vaginal and in her introduction Gunter boldly states that she has a vagenda:'' to inform, educate and empower women with vaginas and vulvas. In her book she provides accurate advice and facts about things you might not know, are curious to know, or are common misconceptions about all topics from pubic hair to the HPV vaccine.

It is an informative read which debunks many societal misinformation about the female genitals and reproductive organs in an accessible language. Nasserzadeh
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"Coping With Premature Ejaculation" by Barry W. McCarthy and Micheal E. Metz(11 of14)
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Together, Barry W. McCarthy and Michael E. Metz authored Coping with Premature Ejactulation to provide recent scientifically based and multidimensional methods on overcoming premature ejaculation, a condition that impacts approximately 20-30% of men in the sexually active age group , according to the National Institutes of Health. They discuss the ways in which not only the physical, but also the biological and psychological, can impact men and their sexual performance, as well guide premature ejaculation sufferers on how to maintain healthy partner relationships.

[This is] for men and their partners who want to learn more about how to manage the emotional, physical and relational aspects of premature ejaculation. Nasserzadeh
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Boyslut: A Memoir & Manifesto by Zachary Zane(12 of14)
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[This]is the book you want it to be. [Zachary] Zanes irreverent, sassy writing about his own experiences with bisexuality, modern hookups and being a boyslut (a term coined by Zane) allows the reader to recognize that life has no time for inhibitions. While the book is not a panacea to curing sexual shame, I recommend this book for my queer and kinky clients who need to see that you can navigate shame and still have fun, amazing sex. And if all else fails, its a fun read and conversation starter for your next get-together. Libby Ebert , a Chicago-based relationship and sex therapist at Embrace Sexual Wellness. (credit:Amazon)
Magnificent Sex: Lessons from Extraordinary Lovers by Peggy Kleinplatz & A. Dana Mnard(13 of14)
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[This book] combines modern, in-depth research to find key themes that repeat across relationships that have great sex. From kinky clients to those who have a dead bedroom, Magnificent Sex is a great all-rounder book to reframe what sex can look like and chip away at the sad, incorrect belief that bad sex in relationships is inevitable. If you take nothing else away from the book, please remember that sex does not need to decrease in quality in long-term relationships but instead can be the perfect playground for exploration. Ebert (credit:Amazon)
The Body is Not an Apology by Sonya Renee Taylor(14 of14)
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Sonya Renee Taylor breaks down the body shame that blocks people from authenticity and full expression of their physical/spiritual/psychological/political selves. She takes the reader through the building blocks of radical self-love, including: body ownership and examining all the ways in which folx have learned how to question, criticize, hurt and disown their own bodies due to sexist, heteronormative and white-centered concepts of beauty. Taylor identifies herself as a big, Black, queer person who has created a manifesto to help all people feel like their bodies are worthy of being a nourishing home. Her writing reflects the biopsychosocial-spiritual framework I utilize to honor the multiple intersectional variables impacting peoples sexual and relational functioning. Cooper (credit:Amazon)

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