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Safferz

What Muslim women really want in the bedroom

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Khayr   

On the authority of Abi Mas’ud Uqbah ibn Amr al-Ansari al-Badree (may Allah be pleased with him) who said: The Messenger of Allah (may the peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) said: “From the words of the previous Prophets that the people still find are: If you feel no shame, do as you wish”

 

Reported in Bukhari

 

حياء (shyness/modesty) is a charateristic of تقوا (piety).

When a heart becomes rusty with forgetfulness of one's self, it loses piety. When piety is lost, then shyness and modesty are forgetton. There is a lack of sense of accountability and maturity in Saff's post. Not every ludacrious idea that emerges in our heads needs to become a post.

There are limits and there is xiishood that a young lady like yourself should practice. After all,

it is the quality of shyness that is admired in a women's feminine beauty.

 

Sexuality is to be discussed in private and not in the publiv domain and just because they discussed it in the miyi does not make such a topic acceptable for public discussion.

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Safferz   

Khayr;988956 wrote:

When a heart becomes rusty with forgetfulness of one's self, it loses piety. When piety is lost, then shyness and modesty are forgetton. There is a lack of sense of accountability and maturity in Saff's post. Not every ludacrious idea that emerges in our heads needs to become a post.

There are limits and there is xiishood that a young lady like yourself should practice. After all,

it is the quality of shyness that is admired in a women's feminine beauty.

 

Sexuality is to be discussed in private and not in the publiv domain and just because they discussed it in the miyi does not make such a topic acceptable for public discussion.

This is dumb, sexist and repressive BS Khayr, and you know it. Sexual education is not against Islam, in fact it is encouraged, and sex is discussed openly and candidly in the Quran and Sunnah, as well as in Islamic scholarship as a whole. Clearly neither the Prophet nor the Sahaba (male and female) found anything shameful or immodest about discussing an aspect of human life, in the public domain.

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