Adventurous

Northern Wind

A cool, brisk, awakening pose.

Gentle10–15 minAdventurous

Climax intensity

High intensity — explosive potential with stamina and pacing.

Step-by-step

  1. 1Stand close, near an open window.
  2. 2Anchor hips together firmly.
  3. 3Move with brisk, alive tempo.
  4. 4End with a warming embrace.

Communication tips

  • Name the wind's chill.
  • Trade who is the wind.
  • End with a warming hug.

Health benefits

  • Awakening and bright.
  • Builds standing strength.
  • Energizing and fresh.

Body adjustments

  • Wall as a third partner: brace one back against the wall to share the load — the wall takes the weight, the legs only steer.
  • Soft knees: keep a 5–10° bend in the standing knees; locked knees collapse the pelvis and kill rhythm.
  • Heel-to-toe weight: rock weight to the front of the foot on the inhale, back to the heel on the exhale to find a natural sway.
  • Hip-height mismatch: if one partner is much taller, the shorter partner can stand on a folded blanket or a low stair to align hipbones.
  • Pelvic rotation: subtle figure-eight rotations from the standing partner change depth and angle far more than thrusting from the legs.

Partner cues

Receiver

  • Push the wall away with your shoulder blades to keep your chest open and your breath low in the belly.
  • Wrap one leg around the partner's hip and let them carry that leg's weight — opens the angle without flexibility strain.
  • Stay on flat feet, not tip-toes — flat feet anchor the breath and the rhythm.

Giver

  • Bend your knees and use your legs like a slow piston; never thrust from a locked spine.
  • Brace one hand on the wall above the partner's shoulder for a stable third point of contact.
  • If you lift the receiver, lift with the legs and breath, not the lower back — and only as long as breath stays easy.

Props & setup

  • A bare wall at least shoulder-wide.
  • A non-slip rug under the feet.
  • Optional: a folded blanket for a height-matching step.

Safety & comfort

  • Avoid if either partner is dizzy, fatigued, or has knee or low-back injury.
  • Never lock the standing knees.
  • Stop and reset if any joint reports a sharp or sudden pain — sharp pain is information, not weakness.
  • Empty pockets, remove jewelry, and trim nails before close contact positions.
  • Use lubricant generously; friction is the most common reason a position 'doesn't feel right'.
  • Reset every 5–10 minutes: shake out the hands, roll the shoulders, hydrate.

Private note