OK, this is a man on a mission! I gotta respect that!
The 2-and-1 corkscrew, as I have learned it, can be done from any convenient position that gives one free access and range of motion to pleasure your girl with your hand. Personally, I favor the old-fashioned method of cuddling her close in prime make-out proximity while reclining naked, one arm around her, one hand free to work it.
Having suitably warmed up your girl in whatever fashion works well for you, tease your girl by stroking the very opening of her pussy with your ring finger: in doing so, get your ring finger good and wet with her juices, and use said finger to work those juices down to her ass (if your girl is not naturally plentiful with juices, lube everything well at this juncture with your favorite lube). This done, slowly work your index and middle fingers into her pussy. Remember to curl and stroke up and backward to hit her g-spot! After she has become happily accustomed to your double-digit attentions, begin to work your ring finger into her ass. That done, establish a rhythm by rocking your hand, so that you're pushing your fingers deep, first front and then back. Be sure that as you rock your hand, you're pressing the heel of your hand against her clit, adding a circular motion to the rocking. The tricky part, demanding a little dexterity, is that while you're rocking and slightly circling, try to get your index and middle fingers swirling around clockwise, and your ring finger swirling around counterclockwise (or, if you're British, anticlockwise) inside her. If you can do this, then play with alternating speeds of movement.
This move has only failed me once, and she turned out to be a lesbian. Every other girl I have used it on has come, and a couple liked it well enough to be provoked to screaming multiple orgasms.
I often find that a mix of making out and talking dirty while you're doing this move improves its efficacy. Boob suckage is also generally a pleaser in combo with the 2-and-1 corkscrew.
__________________
Dull sublunary lovers love,
Whose soul is sense, cannot admit
Absence, because it doth remove
That thing which elemented it.
(From "A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning" by John Donne)
Last edited by levite; 08-04-2008 at 09:24 AM..
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