The Right angle
Some sexual positions have been popularized by legendary scenes in famous movies. Among them is the Right angle, a glimpse of which was provided in the 1981 film The Postman Always Rings Twice. The Right angle owes much of its fame to a rare combination of intense pleasure and endless possibilities for movement.
© Alejandro Rodriguez
Few people haven’t seen the famous scene in The Postman Always Rings Twice, in which Jack Nicholson and Jessica Lange yield to an irresistible surge of desire and make wild love on a kitchen table. Re-enacting this erotic scene at home, which doesn’t require sending flour flying across the room, will bring you both tremendous arousal and satisfaction.
Unlike Jack and Jessica, it is essential that you spend time on foreplay, preferably with the woman standing next to the edge of a table, before getting into the actual Right angle position.
The man kneels by her side and explores her sex with his lips and tongue. The woman falters under the mounting pressure and lies down on the table. The man stands up, caresses his partner’s body and firmly lifts up her bottom. The woman’s buttocks should be at the edge of the table, opening the door to her inner sanctum, which the man enters by holding her hips or the table.
Most of the pleasure stems from the ease with which the man, in his standing position, can thrust back and forth at will. The woman’s welcoming sex, as well as the sight of her abandoning herself to soaring pleasure, is a huge turn-on for him.
He does all the work, so the woman only needs to think about her own pleasure. Depending on the level of excitement, she may want to rest her feet on the man’s shoulders, or to bring her knees closer to her stomach, in which case penetration will be much deeper, bringing even more amazing pleasure.
If the woman likes to be a little more in charge, she can cross her ankles behind her darling’s back, lock him inside her legs and guide the rhythm to her liking.
When they’re done with the Right angle position, tireless lovers can perhaps move on to the more physically demanding Venus’ necklace position.
Louis Asana
Copyright © 2010 Doctissimo
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