Aroma therapy: The smell of my vagina helped me overcome shame & love sex
By: Archer Magazine
I want women to smell their underwear everyday.
Why?
I overcame shame and learned to love myself by getting high off my own supply.
Many women recoil at the smell of their vagina, I know, I was one of them for many years.
Too many “smells like fish” jokes around the lunch table from awkward pre-pubescent boys lodged themselves into my brain and made me literally turn up my nose at any smell rising up from down under.
The irony was that my vagina never smelled foul. I actually always thought it smelled quite sweet.
In fact, I sort of enjoyed it.
And yet, embarrassment and a lack of quality information created a serious aversion. This often resulted in over washing, which, ironically, led to yeast infections that made it actually smell a bit off.
It wasn’t until I was in my late twenties on a sort of feminist uprising that I began to stake my scented claim.
I began to sniff my own panties as an act of defiance every time I found myself on the toilet.
Over time, I began to give into the intoxicating fragrance.
Extra time allotted in the bathroom for huffing my own perfume, grew to be a favourite ritual and sweet way to spend time with myself.
As I began to open to myself in this way, something else began to open up as well.
My sensitivity during sex began to increase, and I actually started to enjoy sex more. Before that, I really wasn’t enjoying sex much at all.
But how could taking a sniff your own whiff be cause for extra genital sensitivity?
The answer may not be quite what you would think. In fact, it was thinking that was the answer, or rather the problem.
Anxiety. Anxiety was the problem.
Most times during sex, I spent so much time in my head worrying about how I looked, smelled or if I was doing a good enough job. It didn’t leave much room to actually be present in, let alone enjoy, the experience.
As I began to fall in love with the way my yoni smelled I began to relax, and actually open to more pleasure and enjoyment.
And even more so when I could smell her.
That anxiety eventually turned into authentic enjoyment when I smelled my own juices. As you might imagine, this made sex more pleasurable.
The quick reasons behind how this works in the brain is that neurons that fire together wire together. When two things occur within the same context they form an association to one another in our brains.
When we eat watermelon outside on summer days, the smell of fresh cut grass makes us crave watermelon. Our brains are flexible, and while this association process mostly occurs beyond the level of our noticing, we can actually use it to our advantage.
We can use it, for example, to associate the smell of our own vaginas with enjoyment, and thus make sex more pleasurable.
If I wanted to up the ante on this even more, I could actually masturbate while consciously smelling my vagina.
The same association holds true for creating other aspects of our experience as well.
The more we consciously associate ourselves – parts of our body, our personality, our work – with pleasure, the more pleasure we will begin to feel naturally in our bodies and in our lives.
And because, in general, sex happens in the head, training our brains “on to pleasure” helps create more enjoyable sexual experiences.
Believe it or not, this works regardless of what our partners may or may not be doing. This is empowering because it places us back in the driver’s seat of our own joy and fulfilment, versus leaving it up to someone else.
If you want to have better sex, and you don’t yet love the smell of yourself, close your eyes, take a deep breath in, and let yourself fall in love with you all over again.
Arin Amsler is an entrepreneur and pleasure advocate tackling taboos surrounding topics like periods, consent, and female pleasure through products and education company My Little Yoni. She also coaches individuals and couples to experience more pleasure in the bedroom and in life.
This is was so helpful. Thank you, I was looking for a way to overcome the shame behind my scent. I spend so much time avoiding my natural aroma, by the time I actually get a whiff I don’t how to feel. Definitely something I’ll be working on in the New Year. So many articles on shame and embarrassment but no instructions on how to heal it and these were rather simple instructions. Thank you!
well i am 41 years old a guy and an athlete and as a guy you are completely correct it actually a bit attraction for me when i see my partner loving her own smell and i do to , in my 20s i used to think am i weird for actually being turned on with how my partner smelled , even sometimes didnt like perfumes or any other other than her own natural smell and i felt a little embarrassed admitting that to my gf at the time being afraid she would think i am weird but as i grew i never feel embarrassed or hesitated to tell my partner how her smell specially her vagina smell turns me on and of course the taste ,
anyways i wish more women would understand that like you do , and MEN because a lot of idiots who dont understand that, makes life much better with ur significant other.