An Erotic Hypnosis FAQ

Of all the kinks I’ve explored in my diverse and storied sex life, I think hypnokink is one of the ones I get the most questions about. Sometimes people seem flummoxed when I mention it, as if they had never even considered that hypnosis could be perverted into a sex act – and I don’t blame them, because I didn’t really know it was a thing either, before I did it!

I’m no hypno expert – you should look into the work of Mark Wiseman, Sleepingirl, Mr. Dream, Lee Allure, and DJ Pynchon if you want info from more experienced people – but here, nonetheless, are the answers to some of the most common questions I get asked about hypnosis.

Q. What is hypnosis?

A. The way I understand it, hypnosis (or hypnotism) is the process of bringing someone into an altered state (trance).

Q. What is trance?

A. Much like subspace, being drunk/high, or being in “flow state,” trance is an altered state that can change how you speak, how you behave, and how you perceive stimuli. Trance is characterized by hyper-focus, though it may not look like that from the outside. Someone who is in trance is often more suggestible than they would otherwise be, which makes it a useful state for kink games.

Q. What does trance feel like?

A. It’s important to emphasize here that 1) trance feels different for different people and 2) it may not feel like what you’d expect it to feel like. You will have a better hypnosis experience if you’re able to release all preconceived notions about what trance “should” feel like and just remain present and focused on what you are feeling.

That said, for me, trance feels a lot like those calm, still moments between sleep and wakefulness, or like being super stoned but still lucid. My thoughts come more slowly, and there are fewer of them. It’s often hard for me to speak or move when in trance. My eyes fall closed and my body goes slack. I can still perceive and understand what’s happening around me, but am particularly focused on the voice of my hypnotist and have, to some extent, the ability to tune out other stimuli. It’s a warm, pleasant, heavy feeling, like being really sleepy in a big comfy bed.

Q. Afterward, do you remember what happened while you were in trance?

A. For the most part, yes. It can be like subspace in that sometimes my memory will be blurry or will need to be jogged if I’m going to recall the scene. But unless specifically instructed to forget something (a potentially risky practice called hypnotic amnesia), I typically have no problem remembering what happened.

Q. Can anyone be hypnotized?

A. There are some neurological conditions which may make trance difficult or impossible to achieve – usually conditions which affect one’s ability to focus. However, most people can be hypnotized.

Q. Can a hypnotist make you do things you don’t want to do?

A. As Sleepingirl and GleefulAbandon point out in their excellent zine about hypnosis myths, the idea of hypnosis as mind control isn’t right but also isn’t completely wrong. While your trancey brain will often naturally fight against following orders you genuinely don’t want to follow, it is still possible for someone to use hypnosis to sway your behavior in ways that may go against your will. That’s true for lots of kinks: if I trusted a dominant, for example, the intoxication of subspace could make me do things they told me to do during a scene, even if those things hadn’t previously been negotiated or agreed to. As with any kink activity, hypnosis scenes should be thoroughly negotiated beforehand, and you should use your best judgment in selecting partners you think are trustworthy.

Q. How can I learn hypnosis?

A. If you want to be a hypnotist (also known in the community as a top or a ’tist), I would strongly recommend picking up Mark Wiseman’s book Mind Play. It’s a great primer on the whys and hows of erotic hypnosis, and you will be able to at least attempt to hypnotize someone after reading it. There’s also a reading list on Mr. Dream’s FetLife profile that you’ll find helpful.

If you’re only interested in being a hypnotic subject (also known as a bottom or a hypnotee), I still think you should read Mind Play to get a sense for how hypnosis works and what it can be used for. There’s even a section in Mind Play that teaches you how to hypnotize yourself. There are also tons of sex workers and content creators who offer hypnosis videos and audios – Priestess KatherineAlicia Fairclough, Gently Bitten, and Tennfan, for example – though it should be noted that these aren’t a perfect substitute for “the real thing” with a partner, because, like sex, hypnosis works best when all participants involved are present, paying attention, and tailoring their approach to the person or people they’re with.

Q. How did you get into hypnosis?

A. I was vaguely aware of erotic hypnosis before meeting my current partner Matt (a fuckbuddy once tried to induce an orgasm in me using hypnotic-ish techniques, much to my amusement and chagrin), but I never tried it until I started dating them in 2017. It was a major kink of theirs – which they disclosed to me sometime between our first and second dates – and it immediately piqued my interest because of how it could potentially be combined with D/s. We did our first hypno scene by accident (!) and the rest is history.

Q. Is it hot?

A. There are lots of people for whom the hot thing is the hypnosis itself. Maybe being in trance turns them on, maybe seeing someone else going into trance turns them on, maybe hypnosis tropes in TV and movies turn them on, maybe all of the above! As with many fetishes, hypnokink isn’t always easy to explain to people who don’t have that kink. Either you get it or you don’t.

That said, you don’t have to have a hypno fetish to find erotic hypnosis sexy. I (and many others) find it hot for reasons other than the trance itself: for example, the power dynamics at play, the sensory effects hypnosis can induce, and the way a skilled hypnotist can quiet my anxious mind to allow for greater heights of relaxation and arousal. If you eroticize control – controlling someone, being controlled, or both – then hypno can be a really fun and unique way to play with that.

Q. What kinds of things can you do in a hypno scene?

A. Again, check out Mind Play for a list of ideas, as well as Lee Allure’s list. Some things I’ve done in the past: altering the intensity or location of sensations (e.g. making someone’s thigh feel like their cock; turning up someone’s sensitivity), altering how sensations are perceived (e.g. turning pain into pleasure), inducing a state of “bondage” (through the suggestion that a particular body part, or the whole body, is stuck or stilled), reducing inhibitions, temporarily changing someone’s personality (e.g. making them behave like a child or be more dominant), and pairing a particular verbal trigger with some kind of reaction (e.g. you feel your arousal doubling every time you hear the words “good girl”).

Q. Where can I find hypno porn/erotica?

A. Try the Erotic Mind-Control Story Archive, the hypnotism tag on Archive of Our Own, and the porn on Entrancement.

Q. How can you ensure consent and safety in a hypno scene?

A. My approach to kink is focused on harm reduction and being risk-aware, meaning that I recognize every sexual activity has its risks and it’s up to each person to be aware of those risks and make decisions for themselves accordingly. So, as with any kink activity, you can’t guarantee that nothing will go wrong in a hypno scene. That said, you can mitigate risk by thoroughly pre-negotiating your scenes, having a safeword in place, and (if you’re the hypnotist) always building safety measures into your suggestions (e.g. “you will experience [x effect] only tonight and only with me”; “if you are uncomfortable at any point, you will automatically float back up into wakefulness”).

Q. Is erotic hypnosis anything like hypnotherapy?

A. Hypnosis is used in lots of different ways by lots of different people. It is indeed sometimes used in a therapeutic context, by trained professionals, to help with problems like addiction or trauma. It should not be used in this way by anyone who lacks thorough training in hypnotherapy. That said, as with many kinks, hypnosis may not be therapy but it can be therapeutic, in the sense that it may have positive emotional and psychological effects for various reasons. My partner and I have occasionally used hypnosis to achieve positive and non-sexual effects, such as temporarily reducing my anxiety or my chronic pain, but any therapeutic use more complex than that (especially anything involving memories or age regression) should only be attempted by professionals. (If you’re looking for one, I would recommend Dr. Liz Powell.)

Q. How do I find someone to try/practice hypnosis with?

A. My partner’s earliest hypnokink experiences happened on websites where you can chat with strangers who share your interests, like Omegle, but they don’t recommend that because you don’t know who you’re playing with or whether they’re ethical kinksters. You can look for local hypnokink meetups on FetLife, or consider attending hypno cons like Beguiled or Charmed. You could also hire a sex worker who specializes in hypnosis.

 

Hope that helps, y’all!

Down Deep (A Hypnokinky Poem)

down deep i drop for you
so well down the well
and well i just don’t know
how deep i can go
i’m drifting drooping dropping
flowing floating finding
my way to that deepest place
so lost and lovely, listening
to your voice my guide my love
my tether and my terror
we are journeying together
to a spot at the centre of a spiral
feeling flummoxed, flustered, flushed
i flutter, or my eyelids do
they’re heavy now so heavy
that they do what eyelids do
and close without contention
so i let myself let go
and let you drag me deeper
with the wonder of your words
so rhythmic like a ride
over the rapids, over falls and drops
until i’m floating down the river
of my empty addled mind

 

Author’s note: I wrote this as part of the Smutathon!

Monthly Faves: Strangers, Bimbos, & Ghostbusters

It was an offbeat month in my sex life, full of strange kink insights and trippy adventures… Here are some highlights!

Sex toys

• The biggest news in my toy drawer this month was that my precious Eroscillator Top Deluxe BROKE while I was in Portland! After 3 years of loyal service, I guess it decided I had dropped it one too many times (sorry, pal), because two different segments of the body of the toy fell right off. I tried in vain to piece it back together, and then eventually gave up and ordered a new one. It really is that good; I considered whether I could live without it and determined that I could not.

• I got an email from Dame, a sex toy company from whom I didn’t own anything, offering me a toy of my choice. The Kip clitoral vibrator was an obvious selection for me; it’s vaguely Tango-esque and BRIGHT YELLOW! I will probably review it in full at some point, but for now, just know: this adorable little vibe is rumblier and stronger than its small stature would indicate, and it has a lot of features I’m always yelling at sex toy companies to implement, like an up AND a down button, and a travel lock. Well-played, Dame.

• To continue to give Dame kudos: their new aloe-based lube, Alu, is pretty damn good. The ingredients list is impressive (no glycerin, parabens, or propylene glycol) and you can even order a $4 silicone sleeve called Grip that goes around the bottle to prevent you from dropping/throwing it when your hands are lubey. So smart.

Fantasy fodder

• My partner and I have wanted to do a “strangers at a bar” roleplay for a long time and this month we finally got around to it. On one of our free days in Portland, I took a book to a cocktail bar near our hotel, ordered a daiquiri, and sat alone reading – one of my favorite solo date activities. Sir came in a few minutes later, sat a stone’s throw away, and started chatting me up after a little while. One thing led to another and we ended up back in “my” hotel room… This was a super fun roleplay that I would highly recommend, and apparently my vagina agreed, because (uncharacteristically for me) I had an orgasm during PIV – whoa!

• During one of our many late-night phone calls, my Sir asked me what I’d been fantasizing about lately, and I mentioned enjoying the thought of someone going down on me because it’s their job – like a sex worker or an unconventional masseuse. Because my Sir is a genius, they quickly conjured a roleplay in which they, my daddy, had hired a male escort to give me head for my birthday, which he would do while Sir gave him moment-by-moment instructions. This scene pinged so many of my kinks – and also made me laugh a lot, when Sir said the escort was “setting up his supplies” and I couldn’t imagine what “supplies” someone would need for plain old puttin’ a mouth on a vulva!

• I’ve been thinking a lot lately about mental blankness. It helps that I’ve been reading a lot of Sleepingirl‘s hypnosis stories, but more generally, I’ve been pondering the ways intoxication, trance, and subspace can each help me float away inside my own brain during scenes when that’s what I want. For someone like me who’s constantly anxious and overanalytical, sometimes nothing is sweeter or more necessary than just shutting down the ol’ brain and receiving pleasure in absentia. Sir and I did a scene exploring these themes recently through hypnosis and “bimboification”; it was really fun, in a way, to feel my faculties draining away from me.

• Speaking of Sleepingirl: I commissioned her to write me a short story about a sub getting through the airport security line with the help of their hypno-savvy dom. It’s so cute and emblematic of how romantic hypnosis can be.

Sexcetera

• This year I got to attend the XOXO festival for the first time, and it was phenomenal! Some highlights for me: going to a social meetup of language nerds and playing a loud word game led by Gretchen McCulloch, hearing Harry “Hbomberguy” Brewis talk about raising money for Mermaids by live-streaming himself playing Donkey Kong, seeing Amelia and Emily Nagoski talk about the perils of burnout, the entire live podcast lineup, and meeting some readers of my blog (hi)!

• I participated in the Smutathon on Saturday, sex writers’ attempt to write for 12 hours straight to raise money for the National Network of Abortion Funds. My final word count for the day was 13,336 – that’s 11 blog posts (many of which will go up here over the next couple months), 3 newsletters, and 4 poems. The fundraiser has pulled in almost $3K so far – we’d still love to get that up to $5K!

• My Sir and I guested on the Off the Cuffs podcast together this month! It was really fun to sit down with two of my favorite people, drink cocktails, and chat about kink. We covered erotic hypnosis, sleepy sex, long-distance relationships, coming out as kinky, and more. Matt also guested on Question Box; we competed to see who could answer the most personal questions. You know what they say: the couple that podcasts together, stays together… or something…

• Sextistics: This month I had in-person sex 13 times and phone sex 21 times, totalling 34 sessions.

Fashion & beauty

• XOXO gave out adorable pronoun pins to its attendees and I’m so into mine. If we’re gonna normalize sharing our pronouns by default, which we absolutely should, we might as well do it in style.

• I ordered 3 new lipsticks from Sugarpill and they’re all great, though Bliss is disappointingly almost my exact natural lip color (plus glitter), so I doubt I’ll wear that one as much as the other two. My favorite of the bunch is Hijinx, a berry shade overlaid with blue glittery iridescence. Incredible.

• I have a mega-crush on model Alexa Chung (I mean, upon seeing her, who doesn’t, frankly), and lucky for me, she has a YouTube channel now where she does makeup looks, hair tutorials, and more. It’s very good and she is very pretty.

Media

• You owe it to yourself to check out this episode of Punch Up the Jam about the Ghostbusters theme. I was present at the live recording and have honestly never laughed that hard during a live podcast before. You’ll learn a lot about this iconic song and you might also wonder what the hell Ray Parker, Jr. was thinking at times.

• I kept hearing good things about Trick Mirror: Reflections on Self-Delusion by Jia Tolentino, so I tore through it, and it was great. I’ve been thirsting for more essays from introspective women ever since devouring Esmé Wang’s The Collected Schizophrenias, and this hit the spot. It touches on reality TV, “late-capitalist fetishwear,” the beauty myth, Southern hiphop, drugs as a gateway to the divine, and more.

• Current song obsession: “Favorite Show” by Great Grandpa. I keep waking up with this tune lodged in my head lately, so I’ve been groovin’ to it a lot.

Little things

Sleeping together over the phone. Our incredible guests on Question Box. Laughing with Max in his sunny back yard. Getting a window seat on planes. The Multnomah Whiskey Library and their fancy bartenders. Going to the rose garden while really high (um, would recommend). The photobooth machine at the Ace Hotel. When you can tell who’s the dom and who’s the sub in a photo. Hanging out with Epiphora and her wonderful cats. Wandering through Powell’s for hours. Matt bringing me coffee in the morning. “I just want everyone to know that I’m very gay.” Serendipitously sitting next to actors I admire at the theatre. Client projects that fascinate me. Sir sending me ramen when I was sick (and then, later, watching this video of a pastry chef attempting to make gourmet instant ramen from scratch). Seeing Lane Moore and DeAnne Smith do Tinder Live at Comedy Bar, from front-row center. Attending the Bi Arts Festival with a queer femme friend. Going to see movies by myself. Shopping with friends. Solo cocktails-and-reading dates at the Library Bar.

5 Non-Standard Things You Can Do With a Sex Doll

Image via sexdollmarts.com

Sometime last year, I got the kind of email that sex bloggers hope for, pray for, live for. It was an email offering me an item that was not only free, but weird.

The company in question produces and sells adult dolls, and they were reaching out to offer me one of my own – no strings attached. Apparently they had made a surplus of dolls for a recent film shoot and now thought they might as well try to distribute them as promotional samples. Despite living in a tiny apartment already bursting with my possessions, I was elated. This felt like the pinnacle of my entire life as a sex writer. What’s cooler than being offered a free life size sex doll?

This act of generosity didn’t end up coming to pass – the company ghosted me, as so many do – but for those few hopeful days, I thought a lot about what I would actually do with a sex doll. I don’t have a dick to stick inside her, and the thought of fucking a silicone doll with a strap-on cock doesn’t exactly thrill me. But, when I managed to set aside the potential creepy factor, I still viscerally wanted that vapid blonde to be propped up on a chair in my room, peering at me, keeping me company. Why?

Here are a few fun things one could do with a sex doll other than fucking its orifices…

Play dress-up. I mean, this is the obvious one for a femme comme moi. I haven’t entirely grown out of my youthful, Barbie-influenced desires to put cute outfits on beautiful, inanimate human facsimiles. Just as you might swap out certain decor elements in your home to mix things up from time to time, I could put my doll in different outfits to suit my mood on any given day. She could be like a sartorial mascot of my bedroom, setting the tone for the day with her ensemble du jour.

Kinkspiration. As I’ve told you before, my Sir and I are entranced by the idea of using erotic hypnosis to make me think I’m a sex doll. Of course, you don’t need an actual doll to be present for this activity – that’s kind of the entire point – but I did request that my partner show me some photos of sex dolls before and during the trance induction to give me a mental image of what I’m aiming for. Having a sexy real sex doll right there in the room with us would be even better! I could observe her up close and get a more concrete sense for how she occupies space, thereby enabling me to be a better doll when the time came.

Exhibitionism. I’m sort of interested in being watched during sex in theory, but in practice I don’t seem to like it that much. It makes me too anxious and self-conscious, which I’m sure is common. For that reason, I think having a sex doll in the room could be a kind of happy medium – I could suspend my disbelief enough to imagine someone was peering at us from the shadows, without needing to actually contend with the anxiety this would produce if the voyeur was human. One step at a time, you know?

Pictures. Would I look cute kissing a sex doll? Or kneeling between her legs? Or sitting on her face? I don’t particularly think so, but my partner probably would. ‘Nuff said.

Practice. There are a lot of physical kink and sex skills one could practice on a sex doll – flogging, face-slapping, foot worship – but I am thinking mainly of more cerebral ones. For example, I want to work on my dirty talk, especially in a more dominant mode than I’m used to, and practicing by speaking aloud into my empty bedroom doesn’t always cut it. Gazing into the eyes of a doll – however vacant and constructed they might be – would at least approximate the oft terror-inducing experience of saying filthy words to someone’s face. And then maybe I could ramp up to addressing an actual person that way, someday.

What would you do with a sex doll, if you owned one, besides fuck it?

 

This post was sponsored by the folks at sexdollmarts.com, where you can buy premium sex dolls customized to your specifications (fun!). As always, all writing and opinions are my own.

12 Days of Girly Juice 2018: 5 Sex-Savvy Superheroes

Welcome back to 12 Days of Girly Juice, my year-end wrap-up series! Today I’m talking about 5 people who’ve influenced and inspired me massively this year in the arenas of sex, kink, and love…

Nadine Thornhill

There is a sex education crisis happening here in Ontario. As I detailed in a column for Herizons this year, our Premier, Doug Ford, has rolled back our schools’ sex ed curriculum to the one from 1998 – so naturally, it leaves out key information about consent, LGBTQ identities, and the modern sexual risks we face in the age of revenge porn and Snapchat. To say the least, Ontarians who care about sexual freedom are not happy with this development. There’s even a court appeal in the works.

Toronto-based sex educator Nadine Thornhill took things into her own hands in an even more direct way: she started a YouTube series called #SaveSexEd, in which she teaches every module of the scrapped 2015 curriculum, one by one. She’s creating a resource for kids and parents alike, which covers anatomy, consent, healthy relationships, sexual orientation, gender, and much more. She is the hero we need right now and I’m honestly amazed by her.

Sinclair Sexsmith

I’ve loved Sinclair’s writing for years, but this was the year when their work had the biggest effect on my actual life, so I knew I needed to put them on this list. I still keenly remember the day when, about a month into my relationship with my Sir, he texted me that he’d been reading a bunch of Sinclair Sexsmith articles – and I knew that our D/s dynamic was about to get an upgrade as a result.

Sinclair has written in detail about protocol – an aspect of my relationship that gives me great joy now but that I wouldn’t have even known I’d like if not for Sinclair’s writing on the subject. They’ve also written a lot about topping, dominance, and daddy identity – all of which has helped me better understand my partners’ headspace so I can be more empathetic and a better submissive. Their writing is often beautiful, or instructive, or both at once, and I find it inspiring as both a kinky person and a writer. If you haven’t explored their work, you owe it to yourself to check it out!

Eva

Eva is the brilliant mind behind the What’s My Body Doing? sex ed series on YouTube, where she takes a compassionate and research-backed approach to explaining concepts like sexual desire, threesomes, and Tinder. She’s also currently a Masters student, doing research on women’s sexting habits. Fascinating stuff!

When I was younger, I used to be intimidated by people like Eva – people who are close to me in age but have achieved so much already and are dazzlingly smart. But these days I’m more often able to be lifted up by their successes. Eva is so full of fascinating ideas and is so much fun to talk to (not to mention, she has the cutest laugh in the entire world) so every time we chat, I feel inspired and propelled forward anew in my own work in the sex field. What a lovely, clever person!

Dirty Lola

Lola does so much wonderful stuff in the world of sex and kink. Most notably, she founded Sex Ed A Go Go, an event which combines education and entertainment into an exciting night out that’ll leave you better informed about sex and kink. She also does a lot of storytelling, speaking, and tweeting about sex, polyamory, race, kink, and being a “picky slut.” I was lucky enough to share a stage with her this year at both the Playground Conference and the Woodhull Sexual Freedom Summit, where we spoke on a panel together (along with Bex and Kevin) about personal storytelling as activism.

Something I admire about Lola is her dedication to what she calls “edutainment”: that balanced blend between imparting important facts and entertaining the viewer in the process. I think it’s a remarkably smart approach to teaching people about sex, a subject many folks want to learn about but are scared of or intimidated by. Lola extends this approach even into her personal life, writing tweets or telling stories about times she’s been sad or angry or hurt, in order to illustrate points everyone can learn from and feel comforted by. She is a powerhouse and I’m honored to know her.

Mark Wiseman

Mark entered my life through a series of happy coincidences this year. I started dating a hypnokinkster, who urged me to read Mind Play, the best existing primer on erotic hypnosis. Later, I told my friend Dick I wanted to interview a hypnokink expert on the radio, and he immediately called up the hypno expert who’d recently guested on his show to see if he’d do it. It was only then that I put the pieces together and realized that this affable hypnosis nerd was the author of Mind Play!

Mark’s book is still the first thing I recommend any curious hypnokinksters read on the subject, because it lays out everything you need to know in order to start hypnotizing people for sexy purposes in a conscientious and ethical way. He’s done a lot to make an oft-stigmatized kink more comprehensible and clear for those who want to explore it, and that’s worth celebrating.

 

Who were your major heroes in the world of sex/kink/love this year?