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Erotica Sex

Elust #70

exposing 40
Photo courtesy of Exposing 40

Welcome to Elust #70

The only place where the smartest and hottest sex bloggers are featured under one roof every month. Whether you’re looking for sex journalism, erotic writing, relationship advice or kinky discussions it’ll be here at Elust. Want to be included in Elust #71? Start with the rules, come back June 1st to submit something and subscribe to the RSS feed for updates!

~ This Month’s Top Three Posts ~

Exposed! My Mom Knows!

Flash Fiction: “A Taste”

I am a Sex Blogger & I Reject Pseudonymity

~ Featured Post (Molly’s Picks) ~

‘X’ is for X…
Give my guilt an erotic payoff? Tell me more.

~ Readers Choice from Sexbytes ~

*You really should consider adding your popular posts here too*

Dis-moi…

All blogs that have a submission in this edition must re-post this digest from tip-to-toe on their blogs within 7 days. Re-posting the photo is optional and the use of the “read more…” tag is allowable after this point. Thank you, and enjoy!

Blogging

Hidden

Thoughts & Advice on Sex & Relationships

The Great Outdoors (Or Why I Trust Him)
I’m Reminded You Can’t Force an Orgasm
Yes I am Sexy
Why Choose Monogamy When You Can Choose Every
Would you? Could you?
On Being Haunted

Thoughts & Advice on Kink & Fetish

A Horse Among Unicorns: Embracing my Straight
Being a Disabled Top in Kink Community
And here I thought kink was all about consent
10 Signs You Don’t Understand Submission
The Answer

Writing About Writing

Sex in Real Life vs Fiction
Terms of Use

Poetry

Six Nine – A Happy Horny Haiku

Erotic Fiction

One Saturday Evening
Cerulean
Stolen Minutes
Taste
Haunting you
Woken
Q is for Quenched
A schoolgirl spanking story 10
Sit Here Please
My Prize

Sex News, Opinion, Interviews, Politics & Humor

Fat-Shaming
Spanking, Brits, and what if we didn’t?
“V” is for Virgin

Erotic Non-Fiction

My first date with Lexy – Part 2
Goodnight kiss
How To Kiss Me Like You Mean It
running cold and hot
His cum came out my nose.
Going Down. Honey, Coconut Oil and Cum.

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Sex

Q&A with Madeleine Holden

The one downside to March’s epic Q&A with Buzzfeed’s Gaby Dunn was that finding a suitable follow-up interviewee suddenly became a bit of a thankless task. Like a band wrestling with ‘second album syndrome’, I wasn’t sure whether to stick or twist; to offer up more of the same, or to seek out a completely different point of view.

Unlike Alanis Morissette, The Stone Roses, and The Clash, I eventually realised that if it ain’t broke, you really shouldn’t waste time trying to fix it. Smart, interesting, thoughtful perspectives on sex and gender politics will always be worth sharing, and the subject of today’s Q&A has plenty to offer.

Madeleine Holden (@moscaddie) is a lawyer and writer from New Zealand, who currently lives in London. She’s written for Vice, The Hairpin, and Wondering Sound among others, on subjects as diverse as rap music, stolen celebrity nudes, and why John Grisham should probably rethink his views on inequality in the criminal justice system. She is also the genius behind Critique My Dick Pic, a site which got added to my Bookmarks roughly 0.37 seconds after I clicked through to it for the first time.

Maddie was kind enough to give me some of her time this week, and to answer my questions on feminism, consent, life in London, and, first up, the art of the dick pic…

Categories
Sex

Go fuck myself? Yes please

Her: Where would you go if you could travel back in time?

Me: Hmm, good question. I think I’d go back to one of the times we were fucking. And join in.

Her: Oh…dammit, you have all the best ideas.

I had that conversation a while back, with an old squeeze who sadly now lives too far away for anything other than occasional, flirty chat. It popped back into my head this afternoon, when I saw the following tweet:

How are the two connected? Well, while my friend was busy thinking about our time-travelling threesome, and enjoying the idea of being fucked by two guys, I had something slightly different in mind.

I was in my early 20s when I first started fantasising about being fucked by another guy. The details were usually pretty blurry back then, but whatever else the scenario involved, the dick thrusting in and out of my arse always looked like an awful lot like mine: same sort of size, same sort of shape, same circumcised head.

That sounds narcissistic, but looking back now it makes total sense – to me, at least – because at that stage I didn’t really have many other reference points. The porn I looked at as a teenager came in top-shelf magazine form, or on VHS from the local video shop; it featured plenty of anatomically instructive close-ups of tits and cunts, but no actual sex, and certainly no erections. Even at university, when internet porn was starting to become more widespread, I didn’t have my own laptop, and was too scared of being caught to do anything more than browse Literotica from time-to-time on the college computers.

By the time I was 22/23, I could probably count on one hand the number of hard cocks I had actually seen; when I imagined what it might be like to get fucked with one, it felt natural to use my own as a starting point.

My horizons have broadened somewhat since then, as has the level of creativity that finds its way into my sexual fantasies. Nowadays the guys I imagine fucking me tend to look very different, as do their dicks: they’re typically longer than mine, or thicker, or longer and thicker; some are cut, but many aren’t; some are carefully-crafted figments of my own imagination, others are dicks I’ve seen in porn clips, or Tumblr feeds, or dirty IM chats.

There’s one exception to all of that though, and it goes back both to the conversation with my ex-fuckbuddy and to one of my favourite novels, The Time Traveler’s Wife. In the latter, Henry has sexual encounters with various past/future versions of himself, as (I think) does his wife, Claire. When chatting to my friend, I was thinking less about how much she might enjoy being fucked by two versions of me at the same time (that really would be narcissistic), and more about a scenario in which I’d be able to have sex with her, while simultaneously being fucked by the other ‘me’.

The idea of that is really hot for a few reasons, but I think the biggest one comes back to that old chestnut, curiosity. I know how it feels to slide my cock inside someone’s cunt, and I know how it feels to squeeze it inside their arse. I know what effect it has when they slowly ease up and down the full length while sitting on top of me, or when they grind back against the base as I kneel behind them. What I don’t know – can’t know – is how that feels for them. What it’s like to have me push inside them, or how the rhythm of my body feels as we fuck.

I want to be fucked by another guy, in part, because I’m curious to know what it’s like to be penetrated in that way, rather than to be the one doing the penetrating; wanting to be fucked by my own cock – or wanting to suck it – is pretty much the logical extension of that curiosity. Whether it involves time travel, or a rapid acceleration in cloning technology, the first thing I’d want to do with an identical copy of myself would be to get down on my knees and find out what it’s like to experience a blow job, or a good hard fuck from the other side of the fence.

And that’s where the ‘Clone a Dick’ kit comes in. Or where it could come in, anyway. Like Abbi, I own a version of that product…except in my case, it’s been sitting in various suitcases, cupboards, wardrobes, and drawers for about the last six years. It was bought for me by one of my last serious girlfriends, at a time when she was planning to go travelling for a few months and wanted to take my cock with her. In the end the trip never happened, and we split up shortly after it fell through; the dildo kit is one of the few enduring legacies of that relationship.

I’ve thought about using it on various occasions since then, and have even discussed it with a couple of partners, but for whatever reason the box remains unopened. I suppose it’s partly fear of disappointment – for all that it should be incredibly sexy, I suspect that in the wrong hands the moulding process might just turn into a slightly tedious, awkward anticlimax – but there’s also an extent to which I haven’t really decided what I want to do with the finished product.

Right now, it’s basically Schrödinger’s dildo. As long as it stays in the box, it can be all things to all people; like the conversation about time travel, it acts as a catalyst for other thoughts and fantasies, with a resulting erotic power that exceeds what it could be reasonably expected to deliver in physical form. For my ex, and for a couple of playmates since her, the appeal lies in having a dildo modelled on my cock. Others think of it in purely decorative terms – “what a great ornament for my mantelpiece,” was one partner’s comment. I had incredibly filthy conversations with one woman who wanted to tie me up and fuck herself with the dildo while licking the tip of my cock till I begged for mercy; and even filthier sex afterwards, as she used one of her own toys as a stand-in, telling me the whole time how much better, how much bigger it felt than my dick would, and driving me crazy in the process.

All of those would be great options – and honestly, however I end up using the kit I’m sure it’ll provide a lot of enjoyment. However, running through all of the conversations I’ve had about it, and sitting somewhere at the back of my mind each time I’ve turned the box over in my hands when moving flat, or reorganising my stuff, has been one pretty basic thought…

“…I wonder how this would work with a harness.”

Categories
Erotica Sex

Elust #69

sexhobby
Photo courtesy of Sex Is My New Hobby

Welcome to Elust #69

The only place where the smartest and hottest sex bloggers are featured under one roof every month. Whether you’re looking for sex journalism, erotic writing, relationship advice or kinky discussions it’ll be here at Elust. Want to be included in Elust #70? Start with the rules, come back May 1st to submit something and subscribe to the RSS feed for updates!

 

~ This Month’s Top Three Posts ~

Bully for you
Watching Me
Red in Tooth and Claw

~ Featured Post (Molly’s Picks) ~

He’s Got Her
Subject/Object/My Desire

~ Readers Choice from Sexbytes ~

*You really should consider adding your popular posts here too*

Waiting with Snowdrops

All blogs that have a submission in this edition must re-post this digest from tip-to-toe on their blogs within 7

days. Re-posting the photo is optional and the use of the “read more…” tag is allowable after this point. Thank you, and enjoy!

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Other photos Sex

Exceptional Pants

I have a drawer full of boxer shorts. They’re a mix of various colours, patterns and brands, but are all styled in pretty much the same way: that hybrid, boxer-brief look, which offers the winning combination of length and fit, and actually only dates back (apparently) to the early 90s.

Pretty much the only exception is a pair of blue-and-white, striped, Calvin Klein briefs, which I bought on a whim about four years ago. As a rule, I think of briefs in the context of the old Marks & Spencer five-pack, bought for me by my Mum and replaced only when I grew out of each set. Heading into my teens, I envied the boys who strutted around the school changing rooms in their ‘trendy’ boxer shorts, while I squirmed in the corner in my tighty whities, painfully aware of how little they concealed from external scrutiny and (as I saw it at the time) critical judgement.

It is unsurprising, therefore, that one of the first piece of clothes shopping I did when I got to university – the Promised Land of (relative) financial independence – involved buying several pairs of loose, long, branded boxers: in my head, guaranteed both to impress the ladies and to hide away a part of myself that I desperately wanted to impress them with.

Things have obviously changed a lot since then, but my general disdain for briefs is a legacy that’s still reflected in most of what I wear. That pair of striped Calvins bucks the trend for one simple reason: wearing them makes me feel good.

IMAG1212_2_1

I’ve written before about my general lack of interest in lingerie, but even in that post I remember noting that for me, the positive value of underwear lies in the impact it has on the person wearing it. If a particular bra makes you feel sexy and confident, that will carry across in most cases to your behaviour, and to your enjoyment of whatever you’re doing. Likewise, something about this pair of briefs managed to overcome my natural aversion to the style enough that I bought them in the first place, and has ensured that ever since then they’ve been one of my ‘go to’ options any time I need an extra spring in my step.

And crucially, that’s not directly appearance-based. One partner used to laugh whenever she saw me in them; she felt the same way I generally do about briefs, and to her, this was just another example of why men shouldn’t prance around in them. I didn’t care too much about that though. I would run my hand over the back of them, or cup the bulge in the front, and feel good about myself, even as she shook her head at my extreme lack of cool.

In the end, choosing clothes should always be about figuring out what will make you comfortable and happy in your own skin. At some point, my one pair of briefs will fray or fade – maybe a hole will appear in the fabric or under the waistband – and I’ll be forced to throw them away. I probably won’t replace them, and will instead go back to having an underwear drawer stuffed exclusively with boxer-briefs.

Until then I’ll continue to enjoy the effect they have on my outlook, and on how I feel about my body. I’ll keep wearing them on dates, or when heading out on a booty call, whether the person I’m seeing thinks they’re sexy or naff. If it’s the former, that’s great, and will make me feel even better about myself; if it’s the latter though, that won’t stop me slipping into (and ultimately out of) them, and it won’t kill my happy vibe…because in the end, I’m not wearing them for her – I’m wearing them for me.

 

Categories
Sex

Different

“Oh. My. God,” she said, her eyes wide and a little wild. “That feels…different.”

“Different…good?”

“Different fucking AMAZING!”

I tried to control my movements – tried to take it slow – but she pushed back onto me and my hips responded with jerky, trembling thrusts. There was no resistance and no pain; just the hot, tight grip of her arse around my cock, and our see-saw grunts as I pushed inside her again and again.

It didn’t last long, of course. We were both too aroused for that; our heads spinning with the joyful newness of it all, the shared, giddy excitement that comes from trying something for the first time and finding it to be both everything and nothing you expected. I came with a long, shuddering groan, and flopped down on top of her, sweat puddles squelching between us.

Later, she shook her head as she tried to describe how it felt.

“You know how sometimes, when we fuck, you finger my arse?”

“Yeah.”

“And you know that night when you used the butt plug on me, then fucked my arse with that big dildo?”

“Yeah.”

“Well it was nothing like either of those things. I could feel the throb in my cunt and my clit each time you moved inside me, and my whole body felt limp and weak, but in just the most incredible way. I don’t know: it was just…different.”

~

Years later, on another warm, spring afternoon, I find myself thinking about that difference. I have a post in the works about curiosity, though it’s been stubbornly refusing to write itself for a good two months now. I want to look at what it is that shapes and motivates our desire to explore, and to seek out new sexual experiences; or to look at what shapes and motivates my desire to do those things, at least.

Sometimes, though, it’s pretty easy to trace the link. “It was just…different,” she said, and I felt my skin prickle with the need to know more. I wanted someone to tell me, to show me, till the why and the how made my eyes go as wide and wild as hers did, that day when she looked back at me over her shoulder.

In the weeks that followed, I got hard every time I thought about it. I would lie back on my bed and push a toy inside my arse, as deep as I could, then I’d squeeze tight around it and try to imagine how a real cock might feel; how it would be different.

At some point, I’m sure I’ll find out.

Categories
Sex

Q&A with Gaby Dunn (part two)

If you haven’t yet read the first half of my interview with the monumentally cool Gaby Dunn, of Buzzfeed and YouTube fame, you can check it out here. In part two, we continue to explore her views on feminism, and talk some more about the role men should (and shouldn’t) play within it. We also discuss dick pics, fan fiction, Ghostbusters, and why there need to be more female comedy super groups…

Gaby was a great person to interview, and incredibly generous with her time and opinions: I hope (and think) that comes through loud and clear in the text below.

Right, I’m off to dip my typing fingers in a bucket of ice water…enjoy!

Categories
Sex

Q&A with Gaby Dunn (part one)

Over the last 12 months or so, I’ve had the chance to do various cool things on/with my blog. Things that have made me happy. Things like short story competitions…and guest posts from fucking amazing writers…and audio excerpts from stories of mine that someone has actually chosen to publish.

None of those things were really planned. They sort of happened organically, either because I was struck by a sudden idea, or because someone nudged me to get off my arse and do them.

At the start of 2015, I had an idea for another cool thing. What if I could persuade some of the people whose stuff I really admire – people beyond the circle of friends I’ve made in the blogging/writing community – to come on here and talk about their work? Or about their politics, or their sexuality, or their experiences, or…really just anything? That would be pretty great, right?

Right.

I didn’t do much about that idea till a couple of weeks ago, when I started to put together a list of people I could call, or email, or DM. People who might be kind enough to give up their time and answer my questions, or tell me about their lives.

Top of that list was comedian, writer, blogger, and Buzzfeed Video superstar, Gaby Dunn. As a huge admirer of her blog, her various writing projects, and Just Between Us, her YouTube show with the equally talented Allison Raskin, I knew that there was a shitload of stuff I’d love to ask her.

One slightly gushy series of DMs later – and much to my surprise and delight – that shitload of stuff turned into a list of 20 questions. After we both concluded that writing out answers to all of them would take forever, I found myself calling Los Angeles, and what was meant to be a simple, email-based Q&A suddenly became 75 minutes of full-on awesomeness.

Part two of the interview will be posted over the weekend, once my fingers recover from transcribing the first 40 minutes. For now, check out Gaby’s thoughts on comedy, feminism, sex-positivity in the media, and a host of other topics…

Categories
Sex

Verbal Limits

I’ve been thinking a lot lately about the verbal side of D/S play. I am not, for the most part, a pain enthusiast. I have a low tolerance for it when I’m being dominated – low enough that including spanking or other impact play as a central part of what we’re doing barely seems worth it. When I’m topping someone, I’m more enthusiastic about wielding a flogger or a belt, or just rolling up my sleeves and putting my hands to work, but it’s still something I get pleasure out of largely because my partner does. I’m not instinctively or intrinsically aroused by administering pain.

I’m much keener on verbal domination and especially on verbal submission. I like the back-and-forth nature of it; the call-and-response, as one of you issues commands that the other feels compelled to obey. It also provides an opportunity to weave together both the experience we’re having and any fantasies that might enhance it; and again, there’s a clear rhythm to that dance, with the dominant creating a scenario and leading the submissive through it.

Maybe we were in a pub earlier, and you thought the barman was hot. Maybe you’re thinking about that as I wrap your hair around my fist and move your mouth up and down my cock. And if you are thinking about it, maybe you’ll get even wetter when I tell you to spread your legs as you suck me, and to imagine the clink of his belt behind you; the sound of him spitting on his palm and slowly pumping his hand along his stiffening length, as he watches you suck me off like a good little whore.

Or maybe you won’t.

Most of us with even a basic level of BDSM experience know our physical limits and triggers, in part because that sort of pain is fairly easy to measure and articulate. It’s also predictable. I know what I can take and what I can’t, and that doesn’t vary from one day to the next unless I have an injury of some kind. Spank me too hard and I’ll tell you; likewise, I’ll respond quickly and to any distress in your voice when I overstep the mark, or to safewords that we’ve agreed beforehand. When done properly, impact play is safe because it’s structured, and because most of the language used to describe it is clear and well-defined.

If physical domination is a piano concerto, verbal domination – and especially verbal humiliation – is often treated more like experimental jazz. Touch and feel, not rules and discipline. Blurred lines. Intuition. It’s natural to see it that way, but it can also be risky, because unlike when you’re whacking my arse with paddle, the pain isn’t always so obvious; so easy to measure and articulate.

In November 1999, I was four months into my first proper relationship and, like most 18 year olds, riddled with insecurities. My girlfriend had opted to take a gap year before university, and had got a job in the centre of Oxford at my dad’s company, 15 miles from where she lived and just a ten-minute walk from my college accommodation. It meant that we spent a lot of time together in my room, but very little at her place, a small gardener’s cottage on a country estate, where she lived with her parents and twin sister.

If the cottage was small, my girlfriend’s bedroom was positively tiny, and with so few opportunities to spend time there, I was always incredibly curious about everything whenever she did invite me over. I would study the posters on her wall as if they contained tiny, precious nuggets of insight into her hopes and dreams. I would sit on the edge of her bed and leaf through the novels on the shelf opposite, because to know Laura’s books was to know her – or so I thought at the time. And every now and then, my gaze would flick down to the bottom of the bookcase, where she kept the biggest treasure of all. Her diary.

Only a complete arsehole reads his girlfriend’s diary. At 18, I was that arsehole. I could call it a moment of weakness, and in one sense it was, but it was also the product of overwhelming insecurity. I spent most of my time back then worrying that she was about to dump me, because that’s what you do when you’re a teenager, experiencing the pleasure and pain of love and intimacy for the first time. I hoped to find reassurance somewhere in the neat, familiar cursive; instead, as is invariably the case when breaching someone’s privacy in such a terrible way, I got exactly what I deserved – a slap to the face that couldn’t have stung more if she’d come striding out of the bathroom and hand-delivered it.

‘I don’t know how I feel about this relationship any more . . . For one thing, he’s just not very attractive…’

It was both a complete shock and a confirmation of all my worst fears about myself. Too many spots, crooked teeth, greasy hair, weak jaw: I’d spent most of my teenage years hating what I saw in the mirror, and right there, in clear black-and-white, was proof that the girl I was in love with hated it too.

I put the diary back on the shelf. I scrunched up all that shock and pain and sadness into a little ball, and pushed it deep down inside myself, where she could never hope to find it. I fixed a smile on my face, ready to carry on as if nothing had happened.

Two months later, we tried to have sex for the first time. I couldn’t get it up. She left the following week for Hungary, where she taught English for six months. I flew out to visit in April and she dumped me. Twice. By the time two mutual friends went inter-railing with her in July, she’d acquired a new boyfriend.

“I never thought Laura would be so loud in bed,” one of them declared, to widespread laughter, at a party later that summer. “I’m pretty sure the whole Youth Hostel heard them.”

I pushed the ball down even further. I didn’t stop smiling.

We don’t always know which traumas will stay with us over the years, and which will slough off like dead skin, forgotten even before they’ve drifted down to the ground.

Some time ago, I was talking to someone who’d expressed an interest in topping me. She was into verbal humiliation, and between us we started to explore what that might involve.

“Your cock really is pathetically small. Useless in fact. Not like a real man’s.”

“No.”

“Is it ok to laugh when I tell you how small your cock is?”

“Yes.”

“Good. And is it ok if I tell you that your last girlfriend probably left you because she couldn’t stand being fucked with such a tiny dick?”

“I…well…yes. I think. Let me get back to you on that one.”

I went away, gave it some thought, and decided that yes, I was ok with that. It was part of the scenario, and existed within a framework that she’d created. However, in the moment my first instinct had been to push back; suddenly I was 18 again, and sitting on my girlfriend’s bed, my fingers moving up involuntarily to feel the spots on my face and press my overlapping teeth apart. I was back at that summer party, listening to them laugh.

I hadn’t thought about either evening for years and years – not consciously, anyway. But apparently there they were, still balled up in my stomach; diminished in size, perhaps, by the passage of time, but stubbornly refusing to disappear completely.

That sort of gut-twisting pain is far harder to communicate to a partner – especially one who doesn’t know you very well – than the sting of a crop or a whip. I don’t know what my response would have been if she’d just said that in bed without any prior discussion, when I was naked and vulnerable. Maybe I would have been fine – I’m not insecure about cock size more generally, which is why we’d incorporated it into the role-play in the first place, and why I’ve written it into stories that focus on verbal domination – but then again, maybe I wouldn’t have been. And that’s kind of the point.

Without talking about verbal limits as well as physical ones, we won’t learn that a particular partner loves to be called a slut or a bitch, but hates the word whore, and can’t stand hearing it in a sexual context. We won’t learn that ‘useless’ and ‘dirty’ are fine, but ‘ugly’ isn’t, because ugly is what he or she has been hurt by before. We won’t learn that cuckolding is hot, but abandonment is problematic.

Wider context is also important. Because actually, ‘useless’ might be fine one day –most days – but if I’ve just lost my job, or cocked up an interview, it’s probably not what I want to hear, even if I am still in the mood to be dominated in that sort of way.

Beyond the specifics, having a conversation about verbal limits prior to any play helps you both to be more sensitive to the impact words can have once you’re actually in the bedroom, especially if you’re planning to explore darker fantasies and fetishes. It makes the jazz that little bit less experimental. Bounded creativity actually encourages a deeper, richer form of expression, because you know you’re exploring areas that you’re both comfortable playing in.

Responsible kinksters talk about physical and psychological limits in BDSM; the more I explore that side of myself, the more I think it’s just as important to be aware of what your partner doesn’t like to hear, as it is to know how hard they do and don’t like to be spanked.

Categories
Sex

Interviews, flirting, and why so many people get them wrong

In the last week, I’ve had two first-round job interviews, with a third looming this afternoon. I’m good at first interviews – I’d go as far as to say I’m a bit of an expert – and having sat on both sides of the table many times over the years, I have a pretty well-rounded view of what good (and really, really bad!) looks like.

In the context of this blog, I find first interviews interesting because they share a number of obvious features with flirting – right down to the mistakes people make when conceptualising, characterising and conducting them.

The biggest of those is to view both interactions as one-dimensional and goal-orientated; and on top of that, to buy into a narrow, conventional view of what that goal should be. If you go into a first-round job interview thinking that your main – or only – objective is to sell yourself to the company you’re seeing, you’re missing the point; likewise, if you can’t see flirting as anything other than the intermediate step between meeting a potential partner/bedmate and ‘sealing the deal’, you not only reduce your chances of achieving that objective, you take a whole load of other possibilities out of play at the same time.

Let me be clearer: the aim in both situations is not simply to impress the other person. Take that approach, and you set up an immediate power imbalance that just shouldn’t exist. You put yourself in the position of having to do all the legwork; you imply that you’re the one who has to convince them, because your mind is already made up. It’s like playing a hand of heads-up poker and showing your opponent both of your cards before the betting starts.

This isn’t about being coy, or playing hard to get. I’m not saying that you shouldn’t be direct and up front with the person interviewing you; nor that you should hide your attraction to someone when you flirt with them. Bluffing is an overrated skill at the poker table, and it’s even less useful when talking about your CV or chatting someone up at the bar. Just as you can represent your hand in an honest way and still make your opponent think about how to engage with it, so you can be yourself in an interview, or during playful conversation, without ceding control of the outcome to the other person.

That’s especially true when neither of you has a particular outcome in mind. When I sit down with an interviewer for the first time, I usually have no idea whether or not I want the job; in fact, sometimes I know for certain that I don’t. Those meetings should be treated as exploratory conversations; a chance for both of you to get a feel for whether there’s a ‘spark’. I do little in the way of preparation, because the aim is not to show off how much I know about the company. I’m not there to jump through hoops, I’m there to have a chat to someone who I may or may not want to talk to again further down the line. As far as I’m concerned, the onus is on them to impress me – to give me a reason to want to work with them – just as much as it is on me to impress them.

And you know what? Taking that approach can be really fucking hard sometimes. In January 2013, I’d been out of work for over four months, and was starting to get desperate. I was miserable, I was running out of cash, and all I wanted was for someone – anyone – to give me a job. Rather than playing it cool in interviews, I felt like getting down on my knees and begging the other person to help me out. With every passing day, the stakes got just a little bit higher, along with my anxiety levels; as they rose, so did the volume of the voice in my head, whispering “don’t fuck this up” over and over again.

It’s both fine and natural to feel that way…but it’s even better if you can stop it translating into actions and behaviour. That’s exactly why I make myself go to interviews for jobs I neither want nor need. Honing your technique when the pressure’s off is ultimately the key to overcoming interview nerves, and to maintaining a calm, conversational approach even when chasing the job of your dreams. It’s Malcolm Gladwell’s 10,000 hours rule in miniature: practice hard enough, build up your muscle memory, and your chances of success increase accordingly. Beyond that, you also give yourself a chance to play around with different (and hopefully better) ways of representing yourself, or your skills and experience.

Flirting works in a very similar way, albeit usually with less at stake. It’s also why it ought to be viewed more as a recreational activity – an end in itself – rather than as part of a wider process. I flirt frequently, casually, and – some have said – incorrigibly. I flirt that way mainly because I enjoy it, but also because I don’t see it as something that’s goal-orientated. It’s fun, pressure-free conversation, and if it turns into anything more, that should be seen as a bonus.

Drawing parallels between first-round job interviews and flirting is easy, obvious…and frequently, dishearteningly wrong. Yes, both require eye contact, and smiling, and confidence, and all the rest of it, but to focus on those things is to miss the more fundamental key to success: namely to approach each activity not as if you have to make a sale at the end of it, but instead as a pleasant, initial conversation that’s a good worth having in its own right.