Since vibrators became mainstream, there’s been so much ego-soothing talk centered around how they won’t replace men. We’re constantly using apologetic language to assure people that sex toys are great, but lovers—ones with penises, specifically—will always be better. We take pains to explain that sex toys and masturbation are not replacements for partnered sexual play; rather, self-love is its own, separate activity. It’s normal and perfectly healthy to masturbate while in relationships.
Yet, amid all of this orgasmic chatter, we forget to acknowledge an important fact: Some women prefer masturbation to partnered sex. And you know what? That’s OK.
A new study from the Journal of Sexual Medicine on female masturbation habits found that 9% of participants reported preferring masturbation to partnered sex (meaning intercourse), and 21% even preferred it to receiving oral.
Partnered sex is great and all, but when you know how to make yourself come, sometimes masturbation is just more appealing. Here are some reasons why some women prefer masturbation to partner play.
where your clit is.”
When you masturbate, you know you’re going to climax (most of the time, anyway). It’s not a guessing game and the energy input is relatively low.
“I would rather masturbate than have sex with a partner because I know that I’m going to have an orgasm every single time,” says Jennifer F., 29. “If I do stuff with a partner, even one I trust, it’s just not a guarantee.”
Most intercourse does not engage the clitoris
The clitoris is the powerhouse of female orgasm. It has more than 8,000 nerve endings, the majority of which are clustered in the hooded glans clitoris, the nubbin on the top of the vulva. When you’re having intercourse, this sacred piece of female anatomy is all-too-often sidelined. “Partnered sex would be great if the people I fucked knew how a clit works,” says Maddie N., 25. When author Maryann Karinch was doing research for her forthcoming book,Mature Sexual Intimacy, she found that many of the women she spoke to found that their male partners “do not know how to manipulate the clitoris as effectively as they do—whether we are talking about the external part of the clitoris or the internal part.”“Sometimes you’re busy living your best life and don’t have time for bullshit people who don’tShe found this trend to also be true of the G-spot: “Two women, both of whom are in their early 60s, told me they find it easier and more fulfilling to hit the mark inside the body with a good toy than with a penis.”where your clit is.
Many of us don’t know how to communicate what we need
With the state of sex ed being what it is in this country—you rarely hear the word “clit” in a classroom, let alone instructions on how to locate it—we often wind up spending a serious amount of time instructing lovers how to get us off. In many cases, women say nothing at all, leaving us orgasm-less and pissed off. We aren’t given a vocabulary to discuss desire and pleasure so, when it comes to sex, we’re lost. “I know of many women who feel ashamed and embarrassed to speak up in the bedroom and direct their partners, so it makes sense that they prefer masturbation as then they can focus just on themselves,” explains Lucy Rowett, a certified sex coach and clinical sexologist in Brighton, England.Masturbation makes for faster orgasms
Sometimes getting yourself off is just the easier route. “Masturbation can be more appealing because it's low maintenance; partnered sex requires tuning into another person,” says Pam Shaffer, MFT, a licensed marriage family therapist in Los Angeles. “If you are looking to figure out what you like or get to sleep, you don't want to have to worry about tending to another person's needs.”If you are looking to figure out what you like, you don't want to have to worry about tending to another person's needs.Between our busy schedules, terrible dating experiences, and greater focus on career trajectory, sometimes we just don’t have the time to give a new partner an anatomy lesson. “If you want to get a quickie in, you know exactly where your spots are,” says Cristina Vanko, 30, author of Adultish. “Sometimes you don’t want to explain to someone what you want them to do.” Melissa L.*, 29, agrees: “Sometimes you’re busy living your best life and don’t have time for bullshit people who don’t