Wednesday, February 19, 2014
ENVY RABBIT STYLE LUXURIOUS DILDO
Monday, February 17, 2014
ADAM AND EVE LOVE BULLET
Wednesday, February 12, 2014
Valentines day surprise gift bag of love
Friday, February 7, 2014
KAMA SUTRA WEEKENDERS KIT
Product Description
You've broken away from the routine. Together you are about to explore a delicious new realm of the sensuous. Kiss away edible Original Oil of Love's spicy, warm glow... Feel edible Pleasure Balm sweep over you like a cool, minty wind...Bathe yourselves in the shivery tingle of Mint Tree or snap of Wild Clove Bathing Gels. Afterwards, tickle each other's fancy with a sweet flick of the edible Honey Dust. Let your imagination seize the moment!
Get yours at
http://thetotalparadise.com/Gift-Shop/Gift-Sets/Kama-sutra-weekender-kit/sku-CNVELD-7377?a=thetotalparadise
Monday, February 3, 2014
Sex and mischief faux leather flogger
SHOULD I BRING SEX TOYS INTO THE BEDROOM ON VALENTINES DAY?
Should you try a sex toy this Valentine's Day?
Sex toys have become more popular, thanks to '50 Shades of Grey.' Is there a place for them in your bedroom? Read on to find out
By Patricia Pearson
Should you try a sex toy this Valentine
What should I ask my husband to get for me this Valentine’s Day? Flowers? Dinner out? Or some “You. Are. Mine.” metal handcuffs, courtesy of the new sex toy collection based on Fifty Shades of Grey?
I personally don’t think I’d like to be paddle-spanked or locked to bedposts, but apparently a gazillion women have suddenly discovered these possibilities for fun. And business in sex aids and props is bullish.
The Fifty Shades line by U.K. company Lovehoney launched in November, and includes the “Submit To Me Beginners Bondage Kit,” the “Sweet Sting Riding Crop” and the “Twitchy Palm Spanking Paddle.” Each product includes a quote from one of the Fifty Shades trilogy (by British writer E.L. James), in case customers forget why they would want it: Slowly, he slides the mask on…and I’m blind, reads the text accompanying the “All Mine Deluxe Satin Blackout Blindfold.” Then there’s “Spank me, please…Sir,” I whisper. That goes with the aforementioned Twitchy Palm item, if you hadn’t guessed.
Women who aren’t into this stuff are nevertheless feeling more comfortable in general about bedroom playthings, to judge by the success of products like “We-Vibe.” This is a vibrating thing invented by an engineer in Ottawa, and it’s selling like hotcakes. A silicone-encased, C-shaped contraption that simultaneously massages the clitoris and the G-spot during intercourse, We-Vibe claims to give pleasure to the man, as well. It looks kind of like a hair clip. Only, not.
Another hard-to-describe Canadian invention you might ask for this Valentine’s Day is the “Magic Banana,” which looks nothing at all like a banana and more like the handle of a purse. Anyway, it’s a loop. “Squeezing action on the loop provides a unique and pleasurable way to build your inner strength,” says the website, “while the curve gives extraordinary stimulation for your G-spot.” In other words, it can be used for doing Kegel exercises and as a sex toy. That must be why it’s “magic.”
This upsurge of interest in enhancing our sensual lives got me thinking about the history of sex toys. Traditionally, at least in Western culture, women themselves have been the sex toy. Not long ago, the idea they might want to be spanked or vibrated for sexual pleasure was more or less unheard of. It is, indeed, a peculiar fact that the most sexually satisfied women through large swaths of history were religious celibates and widows. Why? Because physicians from the fifth century BC onward, according to historian Rachel Maines, regularly diagnosed such women with “hysteria.” It was considered a disease related to sexual deprivation in the absence of marriage—which, today, we might call sexual frustration—that could be “treated” by massaging of female private parts, either by a midwife or a physician. (There was a 2011 Maggie Gyllenhaal film called Hysteria on this very subject.)
Hippocrates was the first to diagnose hysteria in 450 BC. A little later, Plato and his ancient Greek brethren believed hysteria had to do with the uterus somehow creeping and wandering all about the body like an escaped amoeba, threatening strangulation as it entered the windpipe, as described in Plato’s famed dialogue Timaeus. It appears to have never occurred to male physicians that the “treatment” they administered was a sexual act; they thought women were capable of actual sexual pleasure only during intercourse with their husbands.
Even Freud, who thought this “hysteria” was related to repressed and childish sexual fantasies, assumed female desire was pathological unless it was expressed through intercourse. (My personal wished-for sex toy, Viggo Mortensen, stars as Freud in 2011’s A Dangerous Method, which explores this subject well.) And here is French psychologist Jean-Michel Oughourlian’s 1991 description of how female orgasm was viewed for millennia: “What is a hysterical crisis? On the clinical level, excito-motor paroxysmic accidents accompanied by convulsions and crises of inhibition with loss of consciousness, lethargy or catalepsy.”
So, basically, women who were married off extremely young to men they didn’t love (and probably couldn’t stand, half the time) were deemed to be sexually healthy since they were having intercourse...whereas women who got to be massaged to orgasm on a regular basis while otherwise maintaining their independence were viewed as pathologically ill. Crikey, are men dumb.
The first mechanical vibrator was invented at the end of the 19th century (perhaps the doctors who specialized in “female disorders,” bringing several patients every day to paroxysm, were thrilled—they may well have been suffering from the first cases of carpal tunnel syndrome). These things were huge, and were powered variously by foot pedal, steam engine and electricity. I recently saw a few on display at the Museum of Sex in New York. They had about as much in common with today’s We-Vibe, and the like, as a toothbrush does with a car wash.
One of them, the “Eskimo Vibrator,” featured an enormous metal dome, maybe six inches across, with bristles attached to something akin to a shower head. (Unclear where the Eskimo motif comes in.) Another, “Macaura’s Pulsocon Hand Vibrator,” resembled a giant egg beater…thing. And the third trophy in the museum’s collection, “The Premier Vibrator,” appeared to be a hairdryer fronted by a doorknob. No, thanks!
Electricity in houses quickly led to personal use by consumers. “The first home appliance to be electrified was the sewing machine in 1889,” notes Rachel Maines in her book The Technology of Orgasm, “followed in the next 10 years by the fan, the teakettle, the toaster and the vibrator.” In 1899, women’s magazines were advertising the “Vibratile” as a treatment for “Neuralgia, Headache, Wrinkles.” Coded language in the ads, stressing women’s “irresistible desire to own it,” and how it could be used “in the privacy of dressing room or boudoir,” gave ladies the nudge-nudge about this so-called health product that was officially asexual.
When home vibrators began showing up in pornographic films in the 1920s, the jig was up, and all the ads vanished from mainstream magazines. The device didn’t resurface until the 1960s when—at last—it was a frankly acknowledged sex toy.
Dildos, for their part, have had a more straightforward identity stretching all the way back to prehistoric times. They have been made of silver, ivory, India rubber and wood, and were sold at market in the Middle Ages as “love gods” or “love birds.” In the 18th century, according to sex historian Havelock Ellis, they were sold in France as “consolateurs” (or comforters) and even featured a squeezable scrotum. Apparently, it was acceptable for women to want such imitations. Even nuns bought consolateurs.
The Museum of Erotica in Saint Petersburg, Russia, features the mummified penis of Rasputin, the “Mad Monk,” who persuaded members of the czar’s inner circle to combine orgies with flagellation—“driving out sin with sin”—in order to come “nearer to God.” I have no idea what that means, but it’s the closest I came to finding a historical whipping game à la Fifty Shades of Grey. I don’t know if times have changed, but they’ve certainly grown less confused.
I did once buy my husband a pair of edible underpants, and they just looked so ridiculous on him that we laughed until we cried. Perverse it may be, but for me it’s humour—not horsewhips—that works on Valentine’s Day.
Get all your valentine day goodies at WWW.THETOTALPARADISE.COM
Monday, January 20, 2014
10 ways for a pleasurable time in an adult shop
Shopping in an Adult Store is a deviant act, and it would be simply the height of shame and embarrassment if anyone knew they were there, and
B) That their own discomfort gives them a free pass to be obnoxious, boorish and predatory menaces within the store. After all, these people working here can’t possibly have any measure of self respect or pride, can they?
Well, dear sir or madam, rest assured that we, the employees of Adult Stores nationwide, are most assuredly not judging you by the 10-inch dildo you just purchased, but we most certainly are judging you by the civility and manners you display in dealing with us. In order to prevent undue embarrassment, let alone the wrath of someone who now knows what you do in the privacy of your own bedroom, I have graciously formulated and humbly submit these 10 Commandments of Adult Store Etiquette for your perusal and enjoyment!
1. Don’t Disrupt Other Customers
When you start your visit by laughing loudly at product, making loud nervous chatter, or (goodness forbid!) commit the cardinal sin of commenting on other customers’ purchases, be prepared to have the staff move to “damage control” mode and try to rush you out of their store as quickly and brusquely as possible. All of us can be nervous when entering an adult store, and a certain degree of good humor is required to make it through your visit without exploding, in some sense or another. But keep in mind that Adult Store employees have worked long and hard (no pun intended) to advance the perceived value of their products. If you act as if there is something inherently shameful, funny, or sleazy about the products or store in general, you not only make other customers think twice about their own presence there, but make your partner think that their shared sensual pleasure is unimportant or untasteful to you. Be as lighthearted, clever, or obnoxious as you like, but try and keep it at personal listening volume.
2. Do Take the Employees Seriously
Adult Store employees are there to help, and face obstacles to doing so you rarely see in mainstream retail. Despite the persecution and disrespect they face on a near daily basis, they come back day after day, with the goal of helping you first and foremost in their minds. Don’t roll your eyes, don’t give them the stinkeye for daring to say “hello”, and don’t assume that they are there because they can’t do anything else with their lives – adult retail work is often a labor of love, often stemming from a deep desire to improve the world, one orgasm at a time.
If an employee informs you of a rule or statute, don’t give them a hard time – comply if you are able, and come back another time if you cannot. Adult store employees understand that many of their customers are nervous, and that they may inadvertently “act out” without intending to. Usually, if you respectfully comply, the employee will have no problems helping you in earnest from that point onward. Adult Stores often face a lot of persecution and legal difficulty just to stay open in certain areas, and having you set a bad example makes things a lot more difficult. Examples include:
Checking ID: Much like the liquor store, many areas require Adult Stores to check all customers’ ID to ensure customers are over 18 years of age, or face hefty fines. Even in areas where this is not required, retailers reserve the right to do so, regardless of apparent age.
Dress Code Requirements: Although you may be free in certain areas to walk down the street in a mesh halter top and loose denim “coochie-cutters” while pointedly bereft of undergarments, adult stores must consider that to allow such attire in their stores appears to condone exhibitionism, prostitution or other unlawful activities. This is a sore subject with many retailers, because this is the exact reason that many stores are closed each year, and face perpetual harassment from law enforcement officials, whether such activity actually occurs or not.
Rules of Conduct: Never assume that rules exist in an adult establishment to play face to law enforcement officials alone. If there are signs prohibiting indecent exposure in private areas of the store, know that it is the duty of employees to monitor behaviour and remove offenders from the premises. Don’t act bewildered when they ask you to put your pants back on while in a video booth, take your hand out of your girlfriend’s pants, or to stop blatantly stroking your partner’s erection through their jeans. Which brings us to number 3…
3. Don’t Disrespect the Premises
Please, try not to leave products lying in the wrong area, don’t break tester toys and displays, don’t drop trash and gum on the floor, and don’t do anything you wouldn’t do in a mainstream retailer. The staff often must be so focused on the serious business of educating customers and upholding rules that they don’t need the added pressure of extreme custodial duties.
Even in stores where tacit “understandings” seem to exist between posted rules and conduct expectations, don’t flaunt your violations. Don’t expose any part of yourself in public areas, don’t interfere with other customers, and for goodness sake, don’t leave bodily fluids of any kind on any part of store property. If you are in a store that seems lax in its enforcement or patrolling of violations of stated policy, please return the favor by following the same rule you would at any campsite: “If you pack it in, pack it out, and leave no trace behind” if you appreciate and want to preserve these endangered national treasures.
4. Do Ask to See Product out of Package
Would you want to purchase a toy that had been handled, unsupervised, by the hands of hundreds of strangers? The answer is likely “no”, but retailers appreciate the value of letting customers know the relative functions and benefits of an item before they leave a store. Almost every Adult Retailer will allow you to see an item out of package and even with batteries in a controlled environment, such as at the counter area. Not only is this one of the most fun parts of an employee’s job, but it also helps to ward off the adult store employee’s natural enemy: the dissatisfied return customer. The more you know about an item before it leaves the store, the less likely you are to come back two days later with the product rattling around in a grocery store bag, complaining that your partner didn’t like it.
Also, as above, the sound of a toy opening unsupervised on the floor is the quickest way to get every available employee on the floor to come up and “overservice” you in an attempt to help you better follow the rules – probably the last thing you want if you were embarassed enough to attempt opening it yourself in the first place. Do everyone a favor and let an employee help you out.
5. Don’t Be Afraid to Ask Questions
Adult Store employees have seen it all, heard it all, and by virtue of simple exposure know more than even most medical professionals about sexual health, safety, and even relationships. Despite certain assumptions made by much of the public, adult industry work is often a labor of love, and Adult Store employees often love to share the knowledge they have obtained.
6. Do Come Prepared
Prepare for your visit in a variety of ways. First of all, have some concept of the experience you want to have. Trying anal for the first time? Looking for a better lubricant? Want to upgrade to a more satisfying toy? It is easy to get so overwhelmed by options that many customers lose heart and end up leaving without anything at all. This is another case where asking an employee about even a basic concept floating around in your head can make all the difference in the world.
Another point to consider is the currency you bring. Many customers do not want an Adult Store appearing on their Credit Card bill (“What if I ever want to run for public office???”), and so their last stop before entering the store is the bank. Not wanting to limit their potential find, many customers opt to carry a single $100 bill. However, most people who take such measures to avoid embarassment ususally end up leaving without buying what they really want, purchasing instead some inexpensive trinket they believe will be “just as good”, or to pass off as a “gift for someone else”… meaning they pay with their big bill and take home all the change in the poor clerk’s register. Be kind, and consider that adult store employees do a lot of business and are often single staffed – bring smaller bills, and know that a cheap toy today may bring a bigger cost tomorrow!
7. Don’t Get Stuck on a Certain Product by Name
General rule of thumb: if they are advertising a product in a magazine or on mainstream TV, a better, less expensive, more refined version already exists in an adult store. Few things are more frustruating to Adult Store employees than having a customer come in looking for “The Super Sparkle Beaver!!! The Sparkle Super Beaver and Super Sparkling Beaver WON’T do!”. Forget for a moment that no such product by any of those names exists – your friend of a friend who does home toy sale “parties” insists it did 5 years ago, and insists it was the best.
If an adult store employee doesn’t think they’ve heard of it, they will likely reccomend a great alternative – this is their polite code for “You may not have any clue what you are talking about – allow me to help by showing you the top items of this century.”
8. Don’t Cheap Out
As touched upon earlier, Adult Store employees are rarely motivated solely by profit. As a result, the only people you disservice when you buy the cheapest product in your line of sight are your partner and yourself. I will also guarantee you that cheap products are almost invariably cheap for a reason – faulty parts, toxic materials, poor designs – these are but a few of the factors that can make your thrifty purchase into a truly regrettable one.
That being said, many Adult Store employees will likely be more than happy to show you the least expensive item of quality – in some cases, these can be less expensive than inferior alternatives! What to look for is the point where the employee is visibly making compromises in their estimation of your satisfaction – Adult Store employees will often give you the best price available at the expense of a higher sale, but they will rarely be enthusiastic to provide you with a lousy experience in order to pander to your frugal side.
9. Don’t Hit on the Staff
The products sold in Adult Stores are generally packaged and price-tagged. Anything not posessing those characteristics is likely not for sale or customer use. Obviously, this includes the employees of the establishment. And yet, every day, customers attempt to use pick-up lines on us such as “Would you like to come home and help me try this out, heh-heh-heh?” or “Your sweetheart must be pretty lucky… where does the line start, heh-heh-heh?”.
Adult Store employees have seen it all, heard it all, and have likely already done anything that appealed to their curiosity at the time. Even though they work in a potentially sexually charged environment, to them, it is really just a place they go to get away from their lives and make their money each day. They see endless lines of people, just like you, buying exactly what you are buying, saying exactly what you are saying – the only possible way to set yourself apart from another sweaty, blustering face in the crowd is to show genuine manners and respect.
To even put them in the position where they have to spend energy deflecting your unwanted advances is the peak of inconsideracy. On the clock, many employees don’t have the luxury of throwing a drink in your face and storming out of the place – they still have a shift to work! Just because their initially polite deferrals don’t present as acute a rejection as you may be accustomed to, doesn’t mean you have a chance.
If, by some expenditure of magic beans or genie-granted wishes, an Adult Store employee does take a fancy to you, rest assured that they likely have the confidence, presence and social toolset and tact to let you know in an appropriate fashion.
10. Do Leave Satisfied
Despite the hardships they may face, Adult Store employees are universally disheartened by one thing only – knowing that, due to some combination of embarassment, lack of knowledge, or simply being overwhelmed by choice, a customer leaves the store either empty-handed, or with an item other than the one they want.
Never assume that, if you experience anything short of ideal bliss from your purchases, that you have the best you can reasonably hope for. Adult Store employees never want to see our customers settle on sticky, irritating lubricants, toys likely to break or poorly designed for human anatomy, or a masssage candle and a greeting card, when what they really wanted was hardcore Tranny porn and a baby-bottle-themed butt plug.
On behalf of Adult Store Employees everywhere, I urge you, ask any question that comes to mind, hold your heads up high, and be prepared to have your wildest desires realized – if you follow these Commandments, you are guaranteed to have an unforgettable experience!
All of these apply to www.thetotalparadise.com customers and staff.
Thursday, January 16, 2014
Introducing sex toys into the bedroom
Did you know that only 30 percent of women can orgasm from intercourse alone? That means that many women are finding other ways to get the job done. While introducing a sex toy into the bedroom could add excitement to your sex life, it could also leave one partner feeling confused. With these tips, introducing a sex toy doesn’t have to be such a touchy subject.
APPROACHING THE SUBJECT
It's a fact that if you've never used a sex toy, broaching the subject with your significant other can be downright scary. In many people's minds, sex toys are equated with giant silicone penises, and what man wants an opponent like that in the bedroom? Luckily though, there are many less intimidating options that won't scare away newbies.
COMMUNICATE
First, always be as open as possible about your needs ahead of time. Communication is the key in any relationship and this translates to the bedroom as well. When you bring up the subject of a sex toy, stress that it is an enhancement to sex similar to candles or music. Make sure he knows that he pleases you and that you would like to explore a little and see where it goes together. Most likely, he'll want to please you as well and will be equally curious. Start small and choose the toy with him so you are both involved in the process. If your partner is still against using a sex toy, buy one on your own and give it a test run solo. With time, he'll probably change his mind and want to see it in action.
COMFORT IS KEY
Another way to introduce a sex toy is by giving him a preview. For example, if you want to try bondage, try something light and playful such as holding his hands above his head during foreplay. This way, you can see how he'll react before actually whipping out the pink furry handcuffs. If all goes well, then proceed with handcuffs. Likewise if you're looking for him to stimulate you somewhere else, for example, place his fingers there and gauge his reaction before introducing a sex toy that might make him feel uncomfortable. The point here is to show him that the toy is all about your pleasure and not there to make up for his shortcomings. Once he sees that he will turn you on even more with the toy, how can he resist?
EXPERIMENT
Remember that intimacy is the goal. Only you know what works in your relationship and by communicating honestly, you are building the foundation for a healthy relationship in the future. It is entirely up to you to decide whether that means with or without sex toys, but a little experimenting never hurt anyone.
For some of the best adult toys and lingerie on the web check out www.thetotalparadise.com
Tuesday, January 14, 2014
History of the sex toy
History
1913 advertisement
For centuries, doctors had been treating women for a wide variety of illnesses by performing what is now recognized as masturbation. The "pelvic massage" was especially common in the treatment of female hysteria in Great Britain during the Victorian Era, as the point of such manipulation was to cause "hysterical paroxysm" (orgasm) in the patient. However, not only did they regard the "vulvar stimulation" required as having nothing to do with sex, but reportedly found it time-consuming and hard work.
One of the first vibrators was called the 'Tremoussoir' invented in France during 1734.[3] The first steam-powered vibrator was called the "Manipulator", which was invented by American physician George Taylor, M.D. in 1869.[4] This machine was a rather awkward device, but was still heralded as some relief for the doctors who found themselves suffering from fatigued wrists and hands.] Around 1880, Dr. Joseph Mortimer Granville patented an electromechanical vibrator. The historical fiction film Hysteria features a reworked history of the vibrator focusing on Dr. Granville's invention.
Between 1835 and 1920, Gustav Zander also designed a device that was often used to attain an orgasm, although it was primarily designed as an aid against eating disorders. It is still on display in the Museum Boerhaave in Leiden.
In 1902, the American company Hamilton Beach patented the first electric vibrator available for consumer retail sale as opposed to medical usage, making the vibrator the fifth domestic appliance to be electrified, after the sewing machine, fan, tea kettle, and toaster, and about a decade before the vacuum cleaner and electric iron. The home versions soon became extremely popular, with advertisements in periodicals such as Needlecraft, Woman's Home Companion, Modern Priscilla, and the Sears, Roebuck catalog. These disappeared in the 1920s, apparently because their appearance in pornography made it no longer tenable for mainstream society to avoid the sexual connotations of the devices.
The vibrator re-emerged due to the sexual revolution of the 1960s. On June 30, 1966, Jon H. Tavel applied for a patent for the "Cordless Electric Vibrator for Use on the Human Body", ushering in the modern personal vibrator. The patent application referenced an earlier patent dating back to 1938, for a flashlight with a shape that left little doubt as to a possible alternate use. The cordless vibrator was patented on March 28, 1968, and was soon followed by such improvements as multi-speed and one-piece construction, which made it cheaper to manufacture and easier to clean.
Since the 1980s, vibrators and sex toys have become increasingly visible in mainstream public culture, especially after a landmark August 1998 episode of the HBO show Sex and the City, in which the character Charlotte becomes addicted to a rabbit vibrator. Appearing in a regular segment on the popular US television series The Oprah Winfrey Show in March 2009,[10] Dr. Laura Berman recommended that mothers teach their 15- or 16-year-old daughters the concept of pleasure by getting them a clitoral vibrator. Today, CVS, Walgreens, Kroger, Safeway, Target and Walmart are among major national US chain retailers that include vibrators on store shelves.
Research published in a 200urnal of Sexual Medicine demonstrates that about 53% of women in the United States ages 18 to 60 have used a vibrator? 9 issue of The Jo at
Enjoy sex toys and novelties and lingerie www.thetotalparadise.com