Baseball metaphors for sex
Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - Cite This SourceThe game of baseball is often used as a euphemistic metaphor for physical intimacy in the United States and other places the game is played, especially to describe the level of sexual intimacy achieved in intimate encounters or relationships.
History
In the baseball metaphor, sexual activities are described as if they are moves in a game of baseball. In the United States from the end of World War II to present, adolescent boys would sometimes use this competitive analogy to describe, usually to boast about, their successes in "making it" with girls..List of sexual metaphors
Although details vary, the most broadly accepted description of what each base represented is as follows:- First base is commonly understood to be French kissing, but can also mean any mouth-to-mouth kissing, or to an established romantic relationship in general.
- Second base usually refers to fondling or groping, especially of the breasts, and possibly stimulation of the genitals from outside of the clothing.
- Third base means oral sex, fingering or giving a handjob.
- Scoring a Run, Hitting a Home Run (or "scoring", "going all the way", "coming home", "beyond bases" etc.) is sexual intercourse.
Other baseball sexual metaphors:
- Fifth Base or "scoring in the dugout" refers to anal intercourse.
- Striking Out is often used to describe rejection and sexual frustration.
- Pitcher and Catcher are used to describe the participants in male homosexual anal intercourse.
- Switch Hitter refers to bisexuals, while a "switch" may refer to someone who takes both a "top" or "bottom" role in domination play.
- Grand Slam is used to refer to a pregnancy resulting from that sexual encounter.
- Balk refers to premature ejaculation.
- A night game refers to necrophilia.
- A no hitter refers to abstinence.
- A designated hitter refers to a go-to casual sexual partner.
- A ninth inning refers to a sexual encounter with the elderly.
- Bat Boy refers to someone who has never done anything sexual with a partner and/or someone who frequently masturbates.
- Walk refers to getting to first base with one who is sexually promiscuous.
- Batting Gloves are condoms or other contraceptives.
- Sacrifice Fly is a male getting vasectomy.
- Sacrifice Bunt is a woman getting her tubes tied or hysterectomy.
- Pinch Hitter refers to having an affair.
- Pinch Runner refers to going to the sperm bank to get pregnant.
- Double Play refers to a three-some.
- Triple Play refers to an orgy.
- Ground Rule Double refers to a man being flashed by a woman or vice versa.
- Inside the park Homerunrefers to oral sex on first time
Recent changes
This sequence of "running the bases" is often regarded as a script, or pattern, for young people who are experimenting with sexual relationships. The script has changed slightly since the 1960s. Kohl and Francoeur note that with the growing emphasis in the 1990s on safe sex and efforts by the feminist movement to expand sex beyond phallo-vaginal intercourse, the "home run" has taken on the additional dimension of oral-genital sexual intercourse. Richters and Rissel similarly point out that "third base" has since become seen, by some people, to comprise oral sex as part of the accepted pattern of activities, as a pre-cursor to "full" (i.e. phallo-vaginal) sex.Mullaney reports the idea that the introduction of oral sex is in fact a "new teen model", that is replacing the "traditional base system", in part as an "unintended offspring of 'abstinence-only' education". In this new model, sex acts, including many that were not included as part of the traditional "base" system, are classified in a wholly different way. The acts that count as "sex" (i.e. what would in the traditional system have constituted a "home run") are distinguished from those that do not count as "sex" according to whether it is possible to become pregnant, or lose one's virginity, from them. Thus oral sex, anal sex, and "a variety of other acts" are reclassified in the new model as "not a big deal" and "part of the realm of abstinence". Mullaney states that "obviously, not all teens subscribe to this revised model of classification".
Educators have found the baseball metaphor an effective instructional tool when providing sex education to middle school students. Levin and Bell, in their book A Chicken's Guide to Talking Turkey With Your Kids About Sex, make use of it to aid parents in the discussion of puberty with their children, dividing the topics into "first base" ("Changes from the neck up"), "second base" ("Changes from the neck to the waist"), "third base" ("Changes from the waist down"), and "home plate" ("The Big 'It'").
References
External links
- David Dale "Strike me lucky, it just isn't cricket". The Sun-Herald. .
- Nikki Sen Moving Beyond First Base. Lifestyle. Indiainfo. .
Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia © 2001-2006 Wikipedia contributors (Disclaimer)
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
Last updated on Saturday July 26, 2008 at 10:48:05 PDT (GMT -0700)
View this article at Wikipedia.org - Edit this article at Wikipedia.org - Donate to the Wikimedia Foundation