How To Write Lesbian Sex Scenes

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Writing F/F scenes appealing to women.
  • June 2004 monthly contest
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Colleen Thomas
Colleen Thomas
3,931 Followers

As the title implies this little article is intended for guys who wish to write lesbian themed sex scenes that appeal to women. While I claim no more expertise at it than other writers, I have been asked by a few people to look at their submissions in the category and one of these prevailed upon me to write this little piece. Thanks Rumple.

The first thing that strikes me when I read most submissions by male authors in the category or as a scene in a different category is the lack of emotive response the scene produces.

The next thing I notice is a hurried feel to the work, as if the author is in a race to get to some goal.

The final major thing is a lack of preparation.

So here are a few suggestions for guys who wish to include lesbian scenes in their works, but feel daunted by the prospect. Keep in mind, the suggestions here are based around broad generalizations. If you wish to include a lesbian scene in a work where it isn't the central theme, such as a BDSM or N/C story, then your overall theme may very well supercede the suggestions.

LACK OF EMOTIVE RESPONSE: Women do read erotica for the simple expedient of getting off, but tend to look for something a little deeper. There is an emotional component to the sex act for women, which seems to be much stronger than most men experience. If you wish to write a good lesbian scene you need to tap into that emotion. Does this mean you need to write a novel or give a complete psychoanalysis of each character to get the response you want? No. What it does mean is you need more than "I loved licking her pussy" in the way of emotion.

What is your protagonist feeling emotionally? Why? What is it about this particular woman that makes her attractive and desirable above others? You don't have to delve into romance novels or use flowery language, but you do need to convey a depth of feeling from your characters that goes beyond simple physical attraction. They don't necessarily have to be in love.

Many emotions can drive people into one another's arms. Friendship, sympathy, fear, even dislike can be the motivators. The point is you need to get those motivators across to the reader.

The most vividly rendered and technically correct description of one woman giving another head, without letting your reader know the why and the feelings behind it will pale in comparison to a relatively clumsy and technically flawed description of the same act where the reader can feel the emotion.

It may cost you a few brevity points, but taking the space to let your readers know what your characters are feeling, beyond the physical sensations, will go a long way to making it a good scene. Building an emotional connection between your character and the reader is one of the most fundamental things you can do to improve upon your work. With a female audience it is even more critical. Most of the F/F erotica I have read by men is emotionally gelded. It may work well for a male audience, but it often leaves women cold.

YOU CAN'T HURRY LOVE: Fitting hand in glove with the lack of emotional depth most male writers display is the rushed feeling of the piece. That's also a hallmark of many masculine attempts at writing lesbian erotica. In regular heterosexual (and I assume gay male) erotica there is a definite goal involved. You, as author, are moving the story to get tab A into slot B. In regular erotica this is desirable, as the lion's share of pleasure for the male character will come from penetration by or manipulation of one particular organ. Foreplay is only necessary to get this organ at attention, so to speak.

In the case of lesbian erotica such concentration on one organ or aspect of love-making is disastrous. The pacing of such scenes will leave most female readers feeling cheated more often than not. Jumping straight from disrobing to the breasts or pussy will cause many of them to simply back click and find a better story.

Almost every part of a woman's body can become erogenous with proper stimulation. When writing lesbian themed scenes be aware of this. A shoulder, the elegant line of her neck, her ankles, knees, even the inside of her elbows can be stimulated and produce delicious sensation. I am not saying avoid the breasts or pussy, but I am saying that the scene isn't a race. First one to the clitoris is not the winner in most lesbian erotica. In fact, quite the opposite is true.

Pace your sex scene with an eye to exploration, titillation and slowly driving someone wild with desire. If that means taking a paragraph to describe the kiss rather than a sentence, then you're on the right track. Descriptive prose can do much to raise the tension in your reader, but if you concentrate exclusively on "the erogenous zones" you will be missing a lot of what sex between women is usually about. The first orgasm isn't the best with most women so there is no rush to get to it. It is a precursor, an appetizer if you will.

Sticking with the food metaphor, if you are sitting down to a seven course meal you don't gorge yourself on the soup. You taste it, perhaps eat enough to take the very edge off your hunger. Lesbian sex scenes should be the same. Each segment taking a little more off the edge until you reach the dessert, where both partners are sated for the evening.

LACK OF PREPARATION: The third thing I mentioned was lack of preparation. This is perhaps the worst failing I see in male authored lesbian erotica. Tests and polls show that most women are, at the very least, bi-curious. That does not give you carte blanche to throw your two characters into a sixty-nine. Suzy soccer-mom and her best friend Betty are not going to be sitting in the kitchen one morning, decide they are bored and have a go at each other. It doesn't work that way in reality and if you write it that way, it's going to go over like a lead balloon with most female readers. Obviously, if both partners are experienced it becomes less of a concern, but that expedient has its own pitfalls.

In reality, there are extremely strong societal norms that must be taken into account. It takes more than just some time alone with your best girl friend. There is a significant amount of thought, consideration and usually a considerable amount of fantasizing and wondering that have gone on before the right time, right place and right woman come together to make trying it the first time a reality. Even then, there is generally coaxing, hesitancy and false starts along the way.

Unless you are writing a screenplay for a porn flick there is no "obligatory lesbian scene". You, as author have to set up what's happening and why. You can remove this problem by having both partners experienced, but in doing so you are putting a lot more faith in your ability to provide excitement via description. Also with experienced partners you must keep in mind each will have developed her own techniques and you had better know how one woman pleases another or you characters will come off as phony.

There is a trade-off in degree of experience for your characters. While the combinations are limitless, there is a tendency among male authors to have at least one character with limited experience and thus allow themselves more leeway for writing something they haven't experienced personally.

Assuming then, that you are working with at least one relatively inexperienced character we come back to motivation. This facet of writing a believable and enjoyable lesbian erotic scene is actually better handled before the first piece of clothing hits the floor. Far too often, to attain the somewhat forbidden nature of the act, authors present one of the participants as totally naïve. Poor Suzy soccer –mom, totally naïve and innocent is seduced by her wicked lesbian neighbor. Alcohol or drugs are often used to provide a plausible explanation for her actions. They aren't.

A far better approach is to make Suzy, just a little less naïve. A subtle hint dropped earlier in the story, about that roommate in college or about her attraction to a certain type of woman, plants the seed in the reader's mind. Thus, when your characters do get physical it requires far less suspension of disbelief from the reader, since she has already been prepared to accept that he character may have an interest. You may still capture the hesitancy, strangeness or surreal quality, mental anxiety or whatever you are going for on an emotional level, while making the interaction more believable on the whole.

IN OTHER WORDS: When you are writing a lesbian scene be sure to reach for an emotive response. Pace the scene with more emphasis on the arousal level than on reaching the climax. Make sure you have explained how these two people, came to be together in this time and place, and what motivation drove them to it.

Just a few other general notes:

PRONOUN PROBLEMS: Be careful with pronouns. When writing two female characters you will find the pronouns she and her are difficult to use. Remember the reader cannot see into your head.

When you say her tit, it may be blatantly obvious to you that you mean Suzy's tit, but to a reader it could be either Suzy's or Betty's. Be prepared to use given names more or to use descriptive modifiers such as the blonde's tit or the brunette's tit to denote which character you are talking about.

STRAP-ON STRATEGIES: If one of your partners is using a strap-on or similar sex toy keep in mind the action is not necessarily natural. While a man, once inside, can let his natural instinct take over, a woman has to actually think about what she is doing, at least at first.

While on the subject of strapons it is true that many butch women enjoy having their cocks sucked. If you intend to include this in your scene don't forget the fact that such stimulation is primarily visual. The only real sensation comes from her partner pressing the base of the toy against her clitoral hood.

Writing lesbian sex scenes that women can enjoy is not beyond the ability of most male writers. Just because you have never experienced some of the things you are describing does not mean you cannot do it in an enjoyable way. The key is not in your descriptive prose nor in the fact you don't know what it feels like to have someone's finger in your pussy. The key factor is your mindset.

When writing erotica for men, you are most often shooting for a very visceral response. For most women, that visceral response is inextricably tied to an emotional response. If you concentrate on establishing the emotional connection, between reader and character, you will find the actual explicit descriptive work is not as important. Thus not knowing exactly what a woman feels when she orgasms becomes less important to the work's overall enjoyability than making sure the reader knows the emotions she is experiencing.

Happy writing.

Colleen Thomas
Colleen Thomas
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StatiusStatius4 months ago

It's a shame you are no longer here writing. I do wonder what you would think of my 'Ria' stories and a few others. 5 star advice here. Well done.

ZZchromosomeZZchromosomeover 1 year ago

Very helpful, thanks!

LargoKittLargoKittover 2 years ago

Here's a puzzle: Lots of men enjoy female to female sex in fantasy because there are no other guys between them and their object of desire. Other men want to identify strongly with the male protagonist. But writing female-female sex scenes should require that the writer empathizes, even envisions themself as the characters. Many men, especially if they are mentally in a sexual space, are pretty wary about pretending to be women. For some men that may be a strong secret turn on. Being very vulnerable is also a challenge for a lot of men.

I find that the best way through is to focus on the character as a person rather than as a vehicle to get to the action of the story. If you have a dom and an innocent, get next to how it might feel to control another, or have someone push you around. If that makes you uncomfortable use those feelings in your story. If old friends are going beyond boundaries then really pay attention to each boundary. Pushing a lock of hair off her forehead is a thing. Asking to see a new tattoo. Joking about shaving or waxing. Becoming conscious that your nipples are sensitive and brushing the fabric of your blouse. Getting moist down below has to be disturbing if it hasn't happened before with that person. And wouldn't there be quite a bit of wonder in seeing someone's most intimate parts? Especially if you are *not supposed* to be getting excited about them?

Also remember that as we get older we are willing to take more time, but that women reach their greatest ferocity between 38 and 58. And older gals can be really hungry for it, but as you indicate, with deep and often conflicting emotions. I echo on much you say in my "How To Write Erotica" and other How To writing. Thanks. More.

DocWordsDocWordsover 2 years ago

Thanks. I needed to read that.

DukaaDukaaover 3 years ago

I think this advise is useful not only for lesbian stories or those aimed at a female audience but for written erotica in general. People tend to forget there acutally should be be some kind of (at least partially) logical plot even in porn. Describing characters's emotions and reasoning behind their actions is definitely as (I'd say more) important as the acutal sex parts of a storie. A well written story can compensate a lackluster description of the sex itself, keeping the reader engaged. This doesn't work the other way for me. Having 2 people just go for each other without emotional buildup or any reasoning can ruin even an otherwise perfect sex scene.

ericahopeericahopeover 4 years ago
So true...and could be applied to most any genre

Colleen - Thank you for writing this. One of the most frustrating things (and un-erotic things) to me as a reader and writer is when two characters wind up getting it on with no clear rationale for doing so, other than they're in an erotic story and are probably horny, particularly when a taboo is being broken (best friends don't decide to have sex on a whim, cousins don't wind up in bed with each other just because they're both needy, people don't cheat on their spouses just because they're on a business trip, same-sex partnerships, etc.). I want some sort of motivation for these two specific characters to get together, and I think this applies to most every story, not just lesbian ones (but it's certainly a good point for lesbian stories!).

AnonymousAnonymousover 6 years ago
What if Colleen Thomas was never a woman and is still living?

She could have us fooled? A talented male writer disguised as CT? Hmm never know do we?

NurekNurekalmost 7 years ago
Potential Problem...

I skimmed this article, and found it to be most useful; but here's the difficulty. Now, I'm a guy who tends to ironically hate the sex-act with the deepest passion, but that's not the question, the question is thus: "Why in the world would hatred or dislike between women lead to them hugging and/or kissing to begin with?" I ask that because if you dislike/hate someone else (not that you ever should! But if you did/do) why in the world would you want to kiss them or be in any way tender with them? In all likelihood, if females are something akin to us males in how we respond to emotions like anger, dislike, and/or hatred, then the urge would be to *punch* her, as hard as you could, or to *kick* her, or simply to (and this is horrible) *kill* her, rather than to *kiss* her in the first place.

I'm completely confused by that and would really like to understand my feminine neighbors' thought processes and attitudes on this detail, as it baffles me to no end as to why two women who share an extreme dislike would even concieve of going to bed with oneanother in the first place, and if they did, it'd only be so they themselves could survive, and they'd likely each make sure they have a knife on hand shoud the other make a move on them to begin with!

This fascinates me, but it completely confuses me too.

Sincerely eager to comphrehend;

Nurek.

DumbDude3103DumbDude3103about 7 years ago
Thank You

I'm glad I found this because I've been asking for weeks and the most people suggest is "just keep writing and don't make it a male fantasy." That's bullshit advice, but this was actually quite educating and helpful.

zoemillerzoemillerover 8 years ago
Nice job!

You're doing god's work. :)

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