The Art of Slowing Down
This entry synthesizes insights from 47 articles in the Library
"We rush because we're goal-oriented, performance-focused, or anxiety-driven. But depth lives in slowness. Presence lives in slowness. The body opens in its own time."
— Christine Mason
The Speed of Modern Sex
Contemporary sexuality often moves at a rushed pace. There’s somewhere to get to—arousal, orgasm, finish. Time is limited. Life is demanding. Sex becomes another thing to accomplish efficiently.
This speed isn’t inevitable. It’s cultural, habitual, and changeable.
And it has costs: sex that skims the surface rather than going deep, bodies that don’t fully open, pleasure that peaks quickly and ends, experiences that feel mechanical rather than nourishing.
Slowing down is one of the simplest and most transformative things you can do for your sexual life.
Why We Rush
Goal orientation: If orgasm is the point, why spend time getting there? But when orgasm is the destination, everything else becomes just transit.
Limited time: Real life has constraints. Kids, work, exhaustion. Sometimes quick is all that’s available.
Habit: You’ve always done it this way. The pattern is established.
Anxiety: Slowing down means being present, and being present means feeling. If there’s anxiety or discomfort, speed offers escape.
Performance pressure: If you’re worried about performance, getting it over with reduces exposure.
Unfamiliarity with slowness: It literally feels strange to go slowly if you never have. Discomfort with the unfamiliar drives return to habit.
What Slowness Offers
More sensation: When you go slowly, you feel more. Each touch registers. Speed blurs; slowness clarifies.
Deeper arousal: Female arousal often needs time. Rushing short-circuits the body’s full arousal response. Slowing down allows arousal to build in waves.
More connection: Fast sex can happen without looking at your partner, without really being with them. Slow sex makes disconnection difficult.
Access to different states: Altered states of consciousness—dissolution of boundaries, transcendent experiences—typically require extended time and slowness.
Presence: You can’t go slowly while mentally elsewhere. Slowness and presence require each other.
Nervous system settling: The nervous system needs time to shift into sexual mode. Rushing keeps it activated.
How to Slow Down
Start Before Sex
Slowing down doesn’t begin in bed. It begins before:
- Transition time between daily life and intimacy
- A few minutes of breathing together
- Eye contact before touch begins
- Setting the space (lighting, music, temperature)
The slower you begin, the slower you’re likely to continue.
Time the Touch
Notice how long each touch lasts. Extend it. If you would usually stroke three times and move on, stroke ten times. Let each touch be complete before beginning the next.
Create Gaps
Don’t fill every moment with stimulation. Let there be pauses—moments of stillness where nothing happens except presence.
In the gap, sensation integrates. Anticipation builds. The body has space to respond.
Breathe
When you’re breathing slowly and deeply, you can’t move quickly. Breath sets the pace. Use it intentionally.
Remove the Goal
If you’re aiming for orgasm, you’ll rush toward it. What if there were no goal? What if the only purpose were to feel good, moment to moment, for as long as it felt good?
This doesn’t mean no orgasm. It means orgasm isn’t the measure of success.
Use Words
Tell your partner you want to slow down. Ask them to move more slowly. Communication prevents mismatched pacing.
Set Time
If you have 15 minutes, you’ll go quickly. If you have two hours, you might actually use them.
Schedule longer sessions deliberately. Protect the time.
Resistance to Slowness
You may encounter resistance:
Boredom: If you’re used to speed, slowness may feel boring at first. This is adjustment, not truth.
Anxiety: Presence can feel uncomfortable. If slowing down increases anxiety, that’s information—perhaps about what you’re avoiding.
Partner mismatch: Your partner may want to go faster. This requires conversation.
Physical difficulty: Some people (often men) find slow stimulation more physically challenging. This can be worked with.
Feeling unproductive: In a productivity-obsessed culture, slow sex can feel indulgent or wasteful. It isn’t.
Slowness as Practice
You don’t have to make every encounter slow. Sometimes quick is right.
But practicing slowness—deliberately, regularly—develops capacity. It teaches your body a different rhythm. It reveals what’s available at a different pace.
Think of slow sex as a practice, not a rule.
An Invitation
The invitation is simple: Whatever your current pace, try halving it.
Move half as fast. Stay twice as long. Breathe twice as deeply.
Notice what becomes available at this pace that wasn’t available before.
Go Deeper
These are the original writings this entry draws from:
What Supports This
Physical expressions of this philosophy