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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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Dildo Buyer’s Guide” Choosing the Right Size, Shape and Material

The Flared Base Rule

A dildo buyers guide for gay men starts here because this is the non-negotiable: if a dildo is going anywhere near your arse, it needs a flared base. A flared base is a base wider than the widest point of the toy. Without it, there is no reliable way to retrieve the toy if it travels further than intended. The rectum can hold objects, and it will. This is a medical emergency when it happens.

Every dildo sold on the Manatomy site that is described for anal use has a flared base. If you are buying a dildo elsewhere, check this before purchase.

Size: Starting Smaller Makes Sense

The temptation to size up is real and understandable. The practical advice is to resist it for your first dildo. Anal capacity develops over time with consistent use. A toy that is too large for your current capacity produces pain and negative associations, not pleasure. A toy that feels genuinely manageable produces enjoyment and provides the physical progression toward larger sizes over time.

For a first dildo, something in the 3-4cm diameter range at the widest point and 12-15cm in usable length is a sensible starting point. The Smooth Satisfier at $18.50 and Petite Pecker at $18.50 are both in this range.

Shape and Curve

Straight Dildos

Straight dildos are the most versatile and the easiest to use in multiple positions. The Smooth Satisfier and Dragon Scale are both straight designs. For someone new to dildos, a straight toy is easier to control and predict than a curved one.

Curved for Prostate Stimulation

A slight upward curve directs pressure toward the anterior wall of the rectum, where the prostate sits approximately 5-7cm inside the body. The Love Wand Glass Dildo has a curve designed specifically for this. The effect of direct prostate pressure is different from general anal stimulation, more focused and internal, and for some men significantly more intense.

Material Options

Silicone Dildos

The Smooth Satisfier, Petite Pecker, Pleasing Pink, Dragon Scale, and Wrist Fist are all silicone. These are body-safe, sterilisable, and durable. Use water-based lube with silicone toys.

Glass Dildos

The Furrowed Glass Dildo at $22.50, Love Wand at $34.50, and Groovy Wand are borosilicate glass. Firm, smooth, fully sterilisable, and excellent for temperature play. Glass dildos are often underrated because of an assumption that they are fragile, but borosilicate glass is tougher than it looks. Handle with normal care and avoid dropping.

Suction Cups and Harness Compatibility

The Unicorn Suction Dildo at $22.50 has a suction cup base, which allows hands-free use against a flat surface. This changes solo use completely, freeing both hands and allowing positions that are not possible when holding the toy. Worth considering if hands-free play is relevant to how you want to use it.

Some dildos are also harness-compatible, meaning the base fits into a standard O-ring harness. The Thrusting Dildo 7 Inch at $85 is an example. This is relevant if you are using a strap-on setup.

Your First Dildo vs Upgrading

A first dildo: silicone, smaller end of the range, flared base. Simple and body-safe.

Second dildo: move up in either size or function. A curved silicone toy for prostate focus, or a glass toy for temperature play.

More experienced: larger sizes, dual density materials (like the Dual Density Dildo 7 Inch at $36.50), or a thrusting dildo.

Pair this guide with the safe anal sex guide for preparation and lube advice.

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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How to Use Your First Butt Plug: A Relaxed Guide for Men

Choosing Your First Size

If you are thinking about how to use a butt plug for the first time, size is the first decision that matters. Go smaller than your instinct says. A plug that feels genuinely small in your hand is the right starting point. Something in the 2-3cm diameter range at the widest point is manageable for most people. The Gem Joy Silicone Butt Plug and the Slender Sensual are both designed with this in mind, and they are a good reason why these two move consistently through the shop.

You will read articles that suggest starting with a finger first, and that is sound advice. If a finger is comfortable, a slim plug will be comfortable. If a finger is not yet comfortable, the plug can wait.

Lube: More Than You Think You Need

Lube is not optional with anal play. The anus does not self-lubricate the way a vagina does, and without sufficient lube, insertion is uncomfortable at best and causes small tears at worst. Use more than you think is necessary, then add more.

For silicone plugs, water-based lube is the correct choice. Silicone-based lube degrades silicone toys over time, which is worth knowing before you reach for whatever is in the drawer. Apply lube to both the plug and the external area before starting. If things feel like they are dragging or catching at any point, add more lube immediately.

The Gem Joy and Slender Sensual are both silicone, so water-based lube is the go with both.

How to Actually Relax

This is the part most guides underexplain. Relaxation during anal play is a physical skill, not just a mental state. The external anal sphincter responds to breath. A slow exhale as you apply gentle inward pressure is more effective than trying to force relaxation by thinking about it.

Lying on your back with knees drawn up, or on your side in a foetal position, are the two positions most people find comfortable for solo plug use. Sitting over the plug is harder for beginners because the body instinctively tenses.

If you feel resistance, stop. Breathe out slowly. Wait. Try again with more lube. Pain is a signal to stop, not to push through.

Insertion: Step by Step

Get yourself relaxed and aroused first. Arousal naturally relaxes the pelvic floor, which makes a meaningful difference. Apply lube generously. Position the tip of the plug at the opening and apply consistent, gentle inward pressure while you breathe out slowly. The plug should slide in gradually, not pop in suddenly.

The narrowing neck of a butt plug is what keeps it in place once the widest point has passed. You will feel the sphincter close around the neck, and at that point the plug is seated correctly. It should feel like a full, slightly pressured sensation. Not painful.

If the plug has a gem or decorative base, make sure the base is sitting flat against the body and is not being pressed inward. The flared base is a safety feature. It is what prevents a plug from travelling further than intended.

How Long Can You Keep It In?

For a first session, 15-30 minutes is a reasonable starting point. There is no benefit to pushing through discomfort in the early sessions. The body adapts over multiple sessions, and what feels like a lot at 20 minutes becomes comfortable at 45 minutes after a few weeks of regular use.

Remove the plug if you feel any sharp pain, significant cramping, or numbness. These are signals to stop.

Removing the Plug

Removal is as deliberate as insertion. Relax, breathe out, and apply gentle outward pressure. The plug should come out smoothly. If it feels like it is resisting, add more lube and wait a moment. Tugging forcefully is never the right approach.

Cleaning and Storage

Rinse the plug under warm water immediately after use, before anything has a chance to dry. Silicone plugs can be boiled for full sterilisation, or run through the dishwasher on the top shelf without detergent. Store separately from other toys to prevent materials from reacting with each other. A small cotton pouch or zip-lock bag works fine.

For full cleaning guidance across all toy materials, see the Manatomy sex toy cleaning guide.

What to Try Next

Once a smaller plug is comfortable for extended sessions, moving up one size is straightforward. The Plunge Plug and Rainbow Butt Plug are natural second toys. The Knub Stainless Steel Butt Plug is worth considering if you are interested in temperature play and the firmer, weightier sensation that metal provides.

From butt plugs, the natural next steps are dildos for prostate stimulation or vibrating plug toys. The Scorpion Vibrating Cock Ring and Butt Plug combo covers both shaft stimulation and anal play in one toy, which is a practical next step for solo sessions.

MANATOMY TEAM NOTE: We have been writing about and selling anal toys in Australia since we started the shop. The questions we get asked most are about lube quantity (always more than you think), relaxation (it is a skill that develops), and whether a small plug is embarrassingly small (it is not). Start small, use a lot of lube, and do not rush the process.

Related guides: How to Clean Your Sex Toys Properly  •  Lube Guide for Men: Which Type to Use and When

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