Special Guide- Dirty Talk Techniques
Spoken eroticism has existed far longer than written erotica. Ancient lovers whispered specific, explicit descriptions of what they wanted long before any of it was put to paper. Early sexual guides across cultures emphasized the role of the voice: how to speak during sex, how to vocalize pleasure, how to tell a lover exactly what you wanted them to do. Japanese pillow books included blunt, uncensored lines lovers used during sex — not metaphors, but direct descriptions of bodies and acts. Middle Eastern poetry often featured public verses and private whispers, where erotic commentary was as important as touch. Even early Europeans practiced verbal seduction disguised behind coded phrases that, once the door closed, dropped all pretense. Then came telephones. And suddenly people could speak their desire from anywhere. The erotic call — breathing, moaning, describing — became its own art form, especially for lovers separated by distance. Voice became touch. Dirty talk isn’t new. W...