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LoginWe aim to destigmatize conversations around sex and relationships while providing practical information to NYU students and our community. Today on the podcast, April and Danielle are once again joined by Zabie Yamasaki, the Founder of Transcending Sexual Trauma through Yoga, an organization that offers trauma-informed yoga to survivors, consultation for universities and trauma agencies, and training for healing professionals. Zabie shares how she has navigated conflict with friends and her partner. She talks about how her identity as an outgoing, second-generation immigrant of South Asian and Muslim background impacted her early life and experience with sex and relationships. Zabie also discloses how her definition of pleasure has shifted over time. This episode may be activating for some. Be sure to listen to your body and take care of yourself! Sexual and Relationship Respect Services Today on the podcast, April and Danielle are joined by Zabie Yamasaki, the Founder of Transcending Sexual Trauma through Yoga, an organization that offers trauma-informed yoga to survivors, consultation for universities and trauma agencies, and training for healing professionals.
Series: Sexual Cultures. Request Exam or Desk Copy. A different look at heterosexuality in the twenty-first century A straight white girl can kiss a girl, like it, and still call herself straight—her boyfriend may even encourage her. But can straight white guys experience the same easy sexual fluidity, or would kissing a guy just mean that they are really gay? For Jane Ward, these sexual practices reveal a unique social space where straight white men can—and do—have sex with other straight white men; in fact, she argues, to do so reaffirms rather than challenges their gender and racial identity.
The tragedy of heterosexuality is this: modern straightness dooms once-hopeful, loving couples to share dull, frustrating, and lonely lives together. In a culture animated by this antinomy, women and men are very different creatures and, by the same token, they are bound to struggle in communicating their needs to one another, to say nothing of living fulfilling lives together. But, how did this situation come to be? Prior to the social evolution of modern companionate heterosexuality, marriage was an explicitly patriarchal, property-centric institution. Across many cultures, wives were merely a tool for property transfer and procreation. A man who is devoted to a woman is subordinated to her.
Kendall Levison , Features Editor April 1, If the person already has a profile, they can see what other users of the app have written about them. Violets allows users to choose from a number of categories that they feel best fit the subject of each profile. Julia Lowen and her roommate Rani Darzi, both CAS juniors, came up with the idea for Violets last semester based on a personal experience.
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6/28/2024
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6/28/2024
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