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How to Use a Penis Pump: A Step-by-Step Guide

What You Need Before You Start

Learning how to use a penis pump correctly starts before the device is in your hand. You need: a clean, trimmed pubic area (excess hair prevents a proper seal), a generous amount of water-based lube or pump lubricant to apply to the cylinder rim, and a cock ring if you want to maintain engorgement after the session.

The Beginner Bubble Pump at $36.50 and the Power Up Penis Pump at $38.50 are the right starting points for air pumping. The HydroMax 7 Bathmate is the entry point for water-based pumping, which many men prefer for its more even pressure distribution.

Creating a Good Seal

The seal between the cylinder rim and your body is the most important mechanical factor. No seal means no suction. Apply lube generously to the rim of the cylinder and to the skin at the base of your shaft. Position the cylinder at the base, pointing your shaft straight into it, and press firmly against the body to create the seal.

For air pumps, the squeeze bulb or hand trigger creates the vacuum once the seal is established. For water pumps, the cylinder is filled with warm water before the seal is created in the bath or shower.

Step-by-Step Pump Technique

Begin pumping slowly and build pressure gradually over 2-3 minutes. You are aiming for a firm, comfortable suction, not a painful one. The shaft will start to engorge and expand to fill more of the cylinder. Stop when the pressure feels firm. Hold for 1-2 minutes, release pressure, rest for 30-60 seconds, then repeat.

Three rounds of 5-7 minutes each is a reasonable beginner session. This approach is gentler on the tissue than one long continuous pump and produces comparable results.

What Results Are Realistic?

Temporary Effects

After a session, the engorgement typically lasts 20-60 minutes, longer if you are wearing a cock ring. The shaft will look and feel fuller than usual. This is a real physiological effect and it is temporary. It is not a permanent change from a single session.

Long-Term Use

Men who pump regularly over months report modest but consistent improvements in erection quality and general engorgement. The research on this is limited. What is supported by evidence is that vacuum constriction is an effective treatment for erectile dysfunction as a non-pharmaceutical option. For men using it recreationally, the honest answer is that results vary and permanent significant size change is not a realistic expectation.

Air Pumps vs Water Pumps

Air pumps create vacuum mechanically. They are straightforward to use, work anywhere, and are effective. The Beginner Bubble Pump and Power Up are both solid air pump options at $36-38.

Water pumps like the HydroMax 7 Bathmate create pressure through warm water. The water distributes pressure more evenly across the shaft and is generally considered gentler on the tissue, particularly for longer or more frequent sessions. The Bath Fun Water Pump at $128 is the next step up. The science behind how hydro pumps work differently from air pumps is covered in the companion post How Does a Penis Pump Work.

Using a Cock Ring After Pumping

Fitting a cock ring immediately after a pump session maintains the engorgement significantly longer than unpumped erections. The XL Doughnut Cockring or the Vibes Vibrating Cock Ring are both good options for this purpose. Fit the ring before releasing suction if possible, or immediately after.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Pumping too fast: rapid pressure build-up is less effective and more likely to cause temporary skin bruising or spots around the shaft from burst capillaries (called petechiae). This is not dangerous but is a sign you are applying too much pressure too quickly.

Skipping the lube on the rim: the seal quality drops dramatically without adequate lubricant, and repeated adjustment tries damage the tissue more than a properly lubricated session.

Expecting overnight results: consistent use over months, not days, is the relevant timeframe for any conditioning effect.

Related guides: How Does a Penis Pump Work? The Science Behind the Suction  •  Penis Pump vs Ball Stretcher: What’s the Difference and Which Do You Need?

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BDSM for Gay Men: A Practical Starting Point

What BDSM Actually Is

BDSM for gay men is not a single practice. It is an umbrella covering bondage and discipline, dominance and submission, and sadism and masochism. Most people who explore kink engage with one or two of these areas rather than all of them simultaneously. A man who enjoys light bondage and power exchange has no obligation to engage with impact play. Someone who enjoys sensation play may not be interested in restraint. BDSM is a category, not a single activity.

The common thread across all of it is consent, communication, and the intentional construction of a scene or dynamic between the people involved.

SSC and RACK

Two frameworks shape how the kink community talks about consent. SSC stands for Safe, Sane, and Consensual. RACK stands for Risk-Aware Consensual Kink. RACK is the more widely adopted framework in more serious kink communities because it acknowledges that some activities carry inherent risk even when practised carefully, and the goal is awareness of that risk rather than a claim that everything can be made perfectly safe.

What both frameworks have in common: all activity requires clear, informed, ongoing consent from everyone involved. Consent can be withdrawn at any point. Intoxication compromises the ability to consent.

Safewords

A safeword is an agreed word or signal that stops a scene immediately, no questions asked. ‘Red’ for stop is the most widely used default. ‘Yellow’ means slow down or check in. Using a safeword is not a failure. It is the system working correctly. For any bondage or impact play, agreeing on a safeword before starting is not optional.

Starting Points: Light Bondage

Restraints are the most common entry point for kink beginners because the concept is straightforward and the gear is accessible. The Velcro Wrist Restraint is the right starting piece because velcro releases instantly. There is no key, no buckle fumbling, no delay between wanting to get free and being free. This is important for both trust and safety in early sessions.

The Ankle Cuffs and Handcuffs in PU are the next step up, providing more structure and a different texture. The Elevated Legs and Handcuffs Restraint set at $38.50 provides a more complete restraint configuration suitable for working toward a fuller bondage scene.

Inflatable Fuck Pillows like the Cylinder or Oval versions are sometimes overlooked as bondage accessories, but they function as positioning aids that change angles and restrict range of motion without requiring any kind of restraint hardware.

Power Exchange Basics

Power exchange means deliberately giving up or taking control within a negotiated framework. A dominant (Dom) takes charge. A submissive (sub) yields control. The specific form of that exchange varies enormously between couples and scenes: it might mean physical restraint, orgasm control through chastity, following instructions, or the psychological weight of a D/s relationship structure that extends beyond individual scenes.

The key thing a new person needs to understand about power exchange is that the submissive partner has more structural power in the dynamic than the label might suggest. The sub sets limits, can use the safeword, and consents to the exchange. The Dom operates within those limits. A Dom who ignores limits or pushes past a safeword is not doing power exchange. They are doing something else.

See the full power exchange guide on the Manatomy blog for a deeper look at what these dynamics look like in practice.

Impact Play Basics

Impact play involves striking the body for sensation. Spanking, paddling, and flogging are the main formats. Each has a different sensory profile: an open-handed spank is a sharp, hot sensation; a paddle is more thuddy and diffuse; a flogger distributes the impact across many falls and can range from a soft thuddy sensation to sharp sting depending on the material and swing.

The Spanker is the accessible starting piece. The Tails Whip is a short multi-tail flogger suitable for beginners.

Safe zones for impact play are the fleshy, muscled parts of the body: buttocks, upper thighs, upper back. Avoid the lower back (kidneys), spine, joints, the head and face, and the front of the body (organ risk). This is not a comprehensive impact play guide: the Manatomy impact play guide covers technique, intensity progression, and aftercare in more detail.

BDSM Gear at Different Price Points

Starter kink kit under $100: Velcro Wrist Restraints, Rubber Tipped Bondage Pegs, Spanker, a blindfold. These items cover light restraint, sensation play, and impact play at a low cost of entry.

Mid-range: Ankle Cuffs, Handcuffs, a flogger, Elevated Legs Restraint set. This extends the bondage options and adds a proper impact implement.

More invested: leather restraints, metal hardware, a chest harness, dedicated collar. These are for people who have found their kink interests and want to invest in gear that will last.

Aftercare

Aftercare is what happens after a scene ends. The physiological come-down from intense kink play, particularly impact play and deep power exchange, is real. Adrenaline and cortisol drop, and both the Dom and sub may need physical comfort, reassurance, and rest.

Common aftercare: physical closeness, a blanket, water, food, conversation or quiet depending on what the person needs. Sub drop (a low mood following a scene, sometimes delayed by 24-48 hours) is normal and worth knowing about before a first heavy scene.

Aftercare is not an optional extra. It is part of the practice.

Related guides: Power Exchange: A Guide to Dominant and Submissive Dynamics  •  Impact Play: A Guide to Spanking, Paddling and Flogging

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Is Ball Stretching Safe? What Men Actually Want to Know

The Direct Answer: Yes, When Done Correctly

Is ball stretching safe? The direct answer is yes, for most healthy men without underlying testicular conditions, when practised with appropriate technique, starting weights, and session lengths. The risk profile of ball stretching done correctly is low. The risks of ball stretching done incorrectly are real and worth understanding.

What Normal Stretching Sensation Feels Like

The sensation of normal, safe ball stretching is a continuous outward pull on the scrotal skin. It is a surface-level sensation, not internal. It sits in the spectrum between pressure and a mild ache. It should not feel like a sharp pain. It should not feel like the pull is coming from inside the testicle itself. It should not produce a dragging sensation in the groin.

The sensation at moderate weight feels similar to wearing a heavy pendulum. It increases during movement and decreases when sitting still. This variation in sensation during movement is normal and expected.

Warning Signs That Mean Stop

Remove the stretcher immediately and do not continue if you experience any of the following:

Sharp pain at any point during a session. This is the most important signal.

Pain felt inside a testicle rather than in the scrotal skin.

A dragging sensation in the lower abdomen or groin that feels internal rather than cutaneous.

Numbness in the scrotal area.

Colour change in the scrotal skin, particularly any blue or purple discolouration.

Any of these sensations warrant removing the stretcher immediately and monitoring. Sharp internal pain or significant colour change warrant seeing a doctor.

The Weight Progression Question

The most common injury pattern in ball stretching is progressing in weight too quickly. Men who are comfortable at silicone and leather stretcher levels sometimes move to 380g or 830g steel within weeks. The scrotal tissue needs time to adapt. Rushing this progression means the tissue is put under stress it is not ready for.

A reasonable progression timeline: 4-8 weeks at a given weight before moving to the next level. This is not a rigid rule, but it is a conservative guideline that reduces injury risk.

Session Length by Experience

For beginners: 15-30 minutes per session. Recovery time between sessions matters in the first month.

After consistent use for 4-6 weeks: 45-60 minute sessions are appropriate for most men.

For experienced users: sessions of 2-3 hours and, for the most experienced, longer, are possible. These timelines develop over months to years of consistent practice, not weeks.

The Steel Weight Question

Steel ball stretchers like the 380g and 830g options carry more inherent risk than silicone or leather simply because the weight is higher and the material is rigid. If a rigid steel stretcher is worn and then physical activity causes the scrotal skin to catch or the weight to shift unexpectedly, the result can be more significant than with a flexible option.

For the 380g Steel Ball Stretcher: suitable for men who have been stretching with lighter options for at least 6-8 weeks without issues. For the 830g: suitable for men with several months of consistent experience.

Pre-Existing Conditions

Men with a history of testicular torsion, varicocele, epididymitis, hydrocele, or any testicular surgery should consult a doctor before starting ball stretching. These conditions alter the anatomy and risk profile in ways that are not predictable from general guidelines.

Ball stretching is not suitable during active infection or inflammation in the scrotal area. Wait until fully recovered before resuming play.

Related guides: Ball Stretching for Beginners: What It Is and How to Start  •  Ball Health for Men: What’s Normal and When to Check In

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How Does A Penis Pump Work? The Science Behind the Suction

The Vacuum Principle

How does a penis pump work begins with simple physics: pressure differential. A cylinder is placed over the flaccid or semi-erect shaft and a seal is created at the base. Air is then removed from inside the cylinder using either a hand pump, a trigger mechanism, or water displacement, creating a partial vacuum inside the cylinder.

The partial vacuum means there is less air pressure inside the cylinder than outside the body. Blood, which is under positive pressure from the cardiovascular system, is pushed into the erectile tissue of the shaft because the pressure inside the cylinder is lower than the pressure in the surrounding blood vessels. The shaft engorges and expands into the available space.

Air Pump vs Water Pump

Air Pumps

Air pumps remove air mechanically to create vacuum. The vacuum can be created rapidly with a hand pump or more gradually with a squeeze bulb. The pressure is applied to the entire surface of the shaft uniformly within the cylinder. The Beginner Bubble Pump and Power Up Penis Pump are air pump devices.

Air pumping is effective and straightforward. The limitation is that the air-skin interface can cause surface skin to draw into the vacuum more than the deeper tissue, particularly at high pressure. This is why maintaining a proper seal and not over-pressurising is important.

Water Pumps

Water pumps like the HydroMax 7 Bathmate are used in the bath or shower. The cylinder is filled with warm water before the seal is created. Pumping displaces the water to create pressure. The water distributes force more evenly across the shaft surface than air, which many men find more comfortable and which may reduce the surface skin effect noted with air pumps.

Water is also incompressible, which means the pressure response is more immediate and can be managed more precisely. Many regular pump users prefer water pumps for longer or more frequent sessions for this reason.

What Engorgement Looks Like

After a pump session, the shaft typically appears visibly fuller and firmer than its usual erect state. The glans may be particularly engorged. The sensation is a tighter, fuller feeling. This engorgement is real physiological change resulting from increased blood volume in the tissue.

The effect is temporary, lasting 20-60 minutes after the session without a cock ring, and longer with a ring maintaining constriction at the base. After the blood redistributes, the shaft returns to its normal state.

Realistic Long-Term Results

The question of whether regular pumping produces permanent change is one without a definitive yes or no. The mechanism by which it might produce permanent change is the same as that proposed for any repeated tissue expansion: consistent distension may stimulate tissue growth over time. The evidence base is limited.

What is consistent across user reports is that regular pumpers often report improvements in erection reliability and general engorgement over time. Whether this is attributable to the pumping directly or to the increased genital attention and blood flow engagement is difficult to separate. The practical answer is: some men find benefit from regular pumping. No one should expect dramatic permanent size change in a short timeframe.

See the how-to guide for pump technique, session lengths, and a specific comparison with ball stretching.

Related guides: How to Use a Penis Pump: A Step-by-Step Guide  •  Penis Pump vs Ball Stretcher: What’s the Difference and Which Do You Need?

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The Gay Man’s Guide to Sex Toys: Where to Start

Where to Start: The Two Core Categories

The gay man’s guide to sex toys starts with the most useful framing: the two most common entry points for gay men into sex toys are anal play and solo stimulation. Everything else builds from or runs alongside these two categories. Starting with one and exploring from there is more effective than trying to cover every category at once.

Anal Play: Plugs, Dildos, and Anatomy

Anal play is probably the most common reason gay men start exploring sex toys. The category divides into butt plugs (designed for wear, for the sensation of fullness and the stretch of the sphincter), dildos (designed for active stimulation, prostate targeting, and depth), and vibrating toys that add motor-driven stimulation to either category.

For a first toy: a silicone butt plug in the smaller range is the standard recommendation. It is body-safe, introduces the sensation of anal penetration in a controlled way, and is easy to use solo. From there, the natural progression is a curved dildo for prostate stimulation, and eventually larger sizes as comfort and capacity develop.

The prostate is located approximately 5-7cm inside the rectum on the anterior (front) wall. Direct prostate stimulation produces a sensation that is different from any surface stimulation and is a significant part of why anal toys are a distinct experience rather than simply a substitute for something else.

Cock Rings: How and Why

A cock ring is the second most common entry-level toy for men. It applies constriction at the base of the shaft, slowing the outflow of blood from the erectile tissue during arousal. The result is a fuller, firmer erection that sustains longer than without restriction. Many men also report a more intense orgasm at the end of a session with a ring on.

Silicone cock rings are the right starting point. The Tyre Cock Ring 2pk is one of the most affordable options and works for most men. Vibrating rings add stimulation on top of the constriction. Metal rings provide more firmness and weight but require accurate sizing.

Masturbators and Strokers

Masturbators are sleeves or cup-style toys that add texture, pressure, and sometimes suction or vibration to manual stimulation. The quality difference between a basic budget sleeve and a well-designed masturbator is genuine. A masturbator with thoughtful internal texture provides stimulation that is not possible with the hand alone.

For an extended session approach, automatic masturbators provide hands-free stimulation. For edging practice, a manual sleeve with low-resistance texture allows more control over stimulation pace.

Ball Stretchers and Pump Toys

Ball stretchers apply sustained pull to the scrotum. The sensation is different from anything else in the category, a constant outward tension that heightens scrotal awareness throughout a session. Penis pumps apply vacuum to the shaft, causing temporary engorgement. Both categories are about physical sensation and, for consistent users, gradual physical conditioning over time.

Silicone ball stretchers are the correct starting point. Air pumps are accessible and effective for penis pumping. Water pumps like the HydroMax 7 are a step up.

Kink Gear: Entry Points

Kink gear covers a wide range. For gay men new to kink, the most accessible entry points are cock rings worn as part of a kink session, light restraints like velcro wrist cuffs, and a chest harness for aesthetic and sensory play during sex. These three categories are low commitment, relatively affordable, and give a genuine read on which direction your kink interests point.

Pup play gear, chastity devices, electro play, impact implements, and sounding are all further along the specificity spectrum. Each has its own learning curve and community knowledge base.

Sex Dolls and Realistic Toys

Realistic toys, from simple strokers with realistic orifice textures through to full torso sex dolls, occupy a category that is about immersion and physical realism in solo play. The appeal is the qualitatively different experience of a realistic surface compared to a neutral sleeve.

At the accessible end: realistic strokers and smaller orifice toys. At the committed end: torso dolls like the Bro’s Bum or the Bendy Babe XL. Weight is the practical consideration. Under 5kg remains manageable for storage and cleaning. Over that, logistics become a real factor.

Materials: What You Need to Know

Silicone is body-safe, non-porous, and sterilisable. It is the gold standard for anal toys in particular. TPE is softer, often cheaper, used for masturbators and sex dolls, but porous and cannot be fully sterilised. Metal and glass are non-porous and fully sterilisable. Each material has appropriate use cases. See the sex toy materials guide for the full breakdown.

Building a Collection Over Time

The most common pattern is a modest start with one or two toys, development of clear preferences from using those, and gradual expansion into areas that have generated genuine curiosity. There is no correct collection. There is only what works for you.

Every major category covered in this guide has its own dedicated post on the Manatomy blog. Whatever area appeals, there is a specific how-to guide waiting.

Related guides: Sex Toy Materials Guide: Silicone, TPE, Metal, Glass and More  •  How to Use Your First Butt Plug: A Relaxed Guide for Men

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Discreet Sex Toy Shopping in Australia: What You Need to Know

How Manatomy Handles Packaging

Discreet sex toy shopping Australia is a real concern for a significant portion of buyers, and it shapes how we handle every order at Manatomy. All orders ship in plain outer packaging with no product description, no brand logo, and no indication of the contents on the outside of the package. The return address on the label uses Manatomy as this is the registered business name with no mention of associated with adult product contents.

The charge that appears on your bank statement uses the business name Manatomy and does not include any reference to adult products or sex toys purchased. If you have concerns about this before ordering, you can contact the shop directly and we will confirm the exact billing name that will appear.

Delivery Options

Standard delivery in Australia uses registered post with tracking. Authority to leave is available for most residential addresses, which means the package can be left in a safe place without requiring a signature. For buyers who want more control, specifying a preferred delivery window or selecting a Parcel Collect option through Australia Post allows pickup from a post office at a time of your choosing.

Delivery to a work address is possible, as with any retail order. The external packaging gives no indication of the sender or contents.

Returns and Exchanges

Returns on unused, sealed products are handled through the standard shop process. For hygiene reasons, opened products cannot be returned unless they are defective. All defective product queries are handled discreetly through email. Contact details are on the Manatomy website.

Digital Privacy

The Manatomy website uses standard eCommerce security (SSL/HTTPS). Payment processing is handled through a third-party payment gateway and card details are not stored by the shop. If you have concerns about account data or want to query what information is held, contact the shop directly.

Shopping Discreetly on a Shared Device

If you are shopping on a shared computer, using a private browsing window prevents your browser history from recording the visit. On most browsers, this is accessible through the menu as Private Window, Incognito, or InPrivate depending on the browser. Bookmarks and browsing history do not persist after closing a private window.

Related guides: The Gay Man’s Guide to Sex Toys: Where to Start  •  Sex Dolls for Men: What to Know Before You Buy

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Gay Kink Culture in Australia: A Scene Guide

The Australian Leather and Kink Scene

Gay kink culture Australia is centred primarily in Sydney and Melbourne, with the Sydney scene having the most institutional visibility due to Mardi Gras and its associated events. Melbourne has a more independent and arguably more experimental scene, with strong connections between kink, queer arts, and underground nightlife. Brisbane, Adelaide, and Perth have smaller but active communities with their own events and spaces.

The scene spans multiple kink traditions: leather (the most established), rubber and neoprene, pup play, BDSM, and broader fetish communities that include harness wear, uniform play, and others. These communities overlap significantly and the same people often move between multiple areas of the scene.

Key Events

Sydney Mardi Gras

Mardi Gras is the most visible point of entry into the Sydney queer and kink scene for newcomers. The leather and fetish community has a substantial presence at Mardi Gras, including a visible contingent in the parade and associated events. The Leather Pride events in the weeks around Mardi Gras are more specifically targeted at the kink community and more representative of the scene than the main parade.

Midsumma (Melbourne)

Midsumma is Melbourne’s equivalent of Mardi Gras and includes community events across the LGBTQI+ spectrum. Kink and fetish events are part of the programming, though they are embedded within a broader community festival rather than being as leather-specific as some Sydney events.

Club Nights and Play Parties

Beyond the major festivals, the scene operates through regular club nights and play parties. These are typically promoted through community networks, FetLife, and social media rather than mainstream event listings. Finding them requires being connected to the scene, which brings us to community entry.

Getting Into the Scene

The most effective entry point for most people is FetLife. It is the primary social network for the kink community in Australia and globally. Creating a profile, joining state-based groups, and attending community meetups (not play parties, but social events specifically for people new to the scene) is the standard pathway.

The leather community in particular has a mentorship tradition. Finding an experienced person willing to act as a guide through the scene is common and actively supported by the community. This does not require a formal arrangement. It can start with having genuine conversations at community events and finding people with relevant experience.

Venue Etiquette

Sex-on-premises venues, play spaces, and leather bars have etiquette that varies by venue but has common threads. Do not touch without asking. Do not take photographs without explicit consent. Respect the dress code (most leather venues have one). If you are spectating, do not interrupt scenes. Follow the instructions of venue staff immediately.

Dress codes at leather events typically specify leather, rubber, uniform, or bare chest. These are taken seriously and are part of what creates the atmosphere of the event. Arriving in street clothes to a leather night is generally not welcomed.

Gear as Culture

The kink community in Australia, particularly the leather scene, has a relationship with its gear that extends beyond function. A harness is not just a wearable toy. It is a marker of community membership, an aesthetic choice, and a signal of interest and identity. The Hue Harness, Neoprene Zip Harness, and Elastic Ring Harness represent different points on the spectrum from high-investment leather culture gear to accessible entry-level fetish wear.

Understanding the cultural weight of gear helps when you are entering the scene. What you wear communicates something. Choosing it deliberately is part of how the community works.

Related guides: Wearing Your First Harness: A Practical Guide for Gay Men  •  Pup Play Culture in Australia: Community, Identity and Events

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Nipple Play for Men: Why It Works and How to Explore it

Why Male Nipple Sensitivity Varies

Nipple play for men starts with an honest acknowledgement: male nipple sensitivity varies significantly from person to person. Some men have highly sensitive nipples that respond strongly to light touch. Others have minimal nipple sensation. Neither is abnormal. And sensitivity can be developed over time through consistent, attentive stimulation.

Men who dismiss nipple play based on early experiments with rough or immediate heavy stimulation often find the experience different when they approach it with more progression and patience.

Building Sensitivity Over Time

Nipple sensitivity responds to conditioning. Consistent, gentle stimulation over multiple sessions increases nerve sensitivity in the area over time. Starting with lighter touch and progressing gradually is more effective than starting heavy.

Begin with gentle pinching or rolling between fingers. Circular friction with a finger. Then introduce toys as your sensitivity builds and you understand what sensation works for you.

Suction Toys

The Silicone Nipple Suckers at $18.50 use vacuum suction to draw blood into the nipple, increasing sensitivity and producing a pulling sensation. They sit over the nipple, are squeezed to create suction, and can be left in place for minutes at a time. The longer they are worn, the more heightened the sensitivity becomes when they are removed.

The Nipple Twist Pumps at $24.50 add a rotating component that allows you to increase suction and add a twist sensation simultaneously. Both styles produce a similar fundamental effect but with different levels of intensity.

Clamps, Pegs, and Pressure

Bondage pegs, including the Rubber Tipped Bondage Pegs 4pk at $12.50, apply pressure to the nipple. The sensation is a sustained, sharp squeeze. The intensity depends on the spring tension of the peg.

Rubber-tipped pegs are gentler on skin than bare metal clips and are a reasonable starting point for anyone new to nipple pressure. The sensation when the peg is removed, as blood rushes back into the tissue, is often described as more intense than the sensation while it is on.

Nipple Stickers and Tape

Nipple stickers like the Caution Nipple Stickers, Black Cross, Touch Me, Kiss Me, and Eat Me Nipple Stickers are part aesthetic accessory, part sensation play. They create a light covering pressure and add a visual element during play. They are the most accessible starting point for anyone curious about nipple attention who does not want to begin with suction or clamps.

Incorporating Nipple Play Into Broader Sessions

Nipple stimulation works particularly well alongside other stimulation because of how different sensory inputs can amplify each other. Nipple stimulation during penetration or during edging is often significantly more intense than the same nipple stimulation in isolation.

In BDSM contexts, nipple play is often part of a broader scene involving restraint or power exchange. The combination of restraint (limiting the ability to respond to or stop nipple stimulation) and nipple play is a common pairing because the intensity of the sensation is heightened by the inability to control it. See the BDSM guide for how this fits into a broader scene structure.

Related guides: BDSM for Gay Men: A Practical Starting Point  •  How to Edge: A Guide to Edging for Men Who Want Stronger Orgasms

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Safe Anal Sex: A Practical Guide for Gay Men

Preparation: What Actually Matters

Safe anal sex for gay men starts with preparation, and the preparation conversation is often more complicated in people’s heads than it needs to be in practice. The main concern for most men is cleanliness. The practical answer is: the rectum does not permanently store faeces. The lower rectum is generally clear unless a bowel movement is imminent. For most men, a shower, emptying the bowel before play, and avoiding a meal 1-2 hours before is sufficient preparation for sex without penetration beyond the lower rectum.

For more thorough preparation or deeper penetration: a simple anal douche or bulb syringe with lukewarm water is the most common approach. Fill, insert gently, release, and repeat until the water runs clear. Use lukewarm water only, never soap, never tap water at significant pressure, never enemas with additives. The rectum absorbs water and compounds introduced into it.

Douching: How to Do It Correctly

A bulb syringe holds about 150-200ml of water. This is enough to clean the lower rectum. Fill with lukewarm water, insert the nozzle gently with a small amount of water-based lube, squeeze slowly, retain briefly, and release over the toilet. Repeat 2-3 times until the water is clear.

Do not use a full enema bag with high volume. Do not add soap or other compounds to the water. Do not douche immediately before sex as the tissue needs a short recovery period after water contact.

Over-douching disturbs the rectal microbiome and can make the tissue more vulnerable. It is not something to do multiple times per day.

Lube: The Most Important Variable

The single factor that makes the biggest difference to comfort and safety in anal sex is lube quality and quantity. The anal canal does not self-lubricate. Without sufficient lubrication, microtears occur in the delicate tissue. Microtears increase STI transmission risk and cause pain.

Use more lube than you think is necessary. Apply it to both the penetrating partner and the external anal area. Reapply during the session if there is any sensation of drag or friction. There is no such thing as too much lube for anal sex.

For lube types and which to use in different situations, see the Manatomy lube guide for men.

Protection and STI Risk

Receptive anal intercourse has the highest per-act STI transmission risk of any sexual activity, including HIV, gonorrhoea, chlamydia, and syphilis. Condoms, when used consistently and correctly, significantly reduce transmission risk for all of these.

PrEP (pre-exposure prophylaxis) is available in Australia and is highly effective at preventing HIV transmission when taken as directed. It is not a replacement for testing and does not protect against bacterial STIs. Regular STI testing (every 3 months for men with multiple partners) is part of practising safe anal sex in the full sense of the term.

Positions for Comfort

Positions that allow the receiving partner control over the depth and pace are most comfortable for first-time or less experienced anal sex.

Riding: receiving partner on top, controls all movement and depth. This position gives the most autonomy to the person receiving and is often recommended for firsts.

Missionary with elevated hips: pillow under the lower back changes the angle and can reduce strain. The Inflatable Fuck Pillow is designed for exactly this purpose, allowing the angle to be set precisely.

Doggy style: the angle can be very comfortable but gives the penetrating partner more control, which is worth factoring in.

Pain: What Is Normal and What Is Not

Some sensation during anal sex is normal. Pain that causes you to want to stop is a signal to stop. The distinction between the mild stretch of penetration and actual pain is worth paying attention to rather than pushing through.

If penetration is consistently painful: more lube and slower approach. If discomfort persists, try a different position. If pain is persistent across multiple sessions regardless of preparation, talking to a doctor about whether there is an underlying anatomical reason is worthwhile.

After-Sex Care

Post-sex, the anal tissue has been stretched and stimulated. A gentle warm wash is sufficient. If there is minor bleeding, this is usually a minor tear and typically resolves within a day. Significant bleeding warrants medical attention.

Rest is natural after extended anal activity. For solo toy use, see the butt plug guide and dildo guide for care-specific information.

Related guides: Lube Guide for Men: Which Type to Use and When  •  How to Use Your First Butt Plug: A Relaxed Guide for Men

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Lube Guide for Men: Which Type to Use and When

Why Lube Is Not Optional for Anal

A lube guide for men has to start with a statement of principle: anal sex without lube is not a good idea. The anus and rectum do not self-lubricate. The tissue is more delicate than vaginal tissue and microtears from insufficient lubrication create routes for STI transmission and cause pain. Lube is not an accessory for anal play. It is a requirement.

The same applies to toy use: most toys benefit from lube, and for any toy used anally, generous lube application is non-negotiable.

Water-Based Lube

Water-based lube is the most versatile option and the correct choice for toy use. It is compatible with all toy materials including silicone, TPE, glass, and metal. It does not degrade condoms. It rinses off easily. For anyone using toys, water-based is the default.

The limitation of water-based lube for sex rather than toy use is that it dries out during use more quickly than other types, particularly in the absence of additional moisture. Reapplication is normal and expected during extended sessions.

Silicone-Based Lube

Silicone lube is longer-lasting than water-based, does not dry out during use, and is excellent for anal sex where reapplication needs to be minimal. It feels smoother and more slippery than water-based.

The critical limitation: silicone lube degrades silicone toys. Using silicone lube with a silicone dildo or plug will eventually damage the toy surface. Silicone lube is suitable for use with metal, glass, and condom-covered toys. Not suitable for direct use with silicone, TPE, or rubber toys.

Oil-Based Lube

Natural oils like coconut oil are sometimes used as lube and are effective for anal sex and masturbation. The limitations are significant for some use cases: oil degrades latex condoms (do not use oil with latex condoms), oil is difficult to clean thoroughly from toys and from the body, and oil can disrupt vaginal or rectal flora balance in some people.

For solo use without condoms and with non-latex or no toys in play, oil-based options are reasonable. For partnered sex with condoms, stick to water-based or silicone.

Anal-Specific Lube

Anal-specific formulations are typically thicker water-based lubes with longer-lasting texture. Some also include a desensitising ingredient. The desensitising component is worth approaching carefully: pain during anal play is useful information that tells you to slow down or stop. Numbing the area removes that feedback. Using a desensitising lube in a first session is not recommended.

How Much Lube Is Enough?

More than you think. This comes up in every lube conversation because it is genuinely one of the most common mistakes. Start with what feels like a significant amount applied to both the toy or partner and the external area. Once insertion begins, reapply at the first sign of any resistance or dragging sensation. Running out of lube mid-session is avoidable with a little over-preparation.

Lube and Condoms

Water-based lube is compatible with all condom types: latex, polyurethane, and polyisoprene. Silicone lube is compatible with all condom types. Oil-based lube is compatible with polyurethane and polyisoprene only, not latex.

A small amount of water-based lube inside the condom before fitting improves sensation for the wearer and reduces friction.

Note on Poppers and Lubricants

Several products in the Manatomy shop are listed under machine lubricant for legal compliance reasons. These include the Jungle Juice Black Label, Gold Label, and Platinum Label, and the Amsterdam 30ml. For session-related use of inhalants alongside lubricants, see the BDSM guide for context on how they are used in kink settings.

Related guides: Safe Anal Sex: A Practical Guide for Gay Men  •  Sex Toy Materials Guide: Silicone, TPE, Metal, Glass and More

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