
Desire is never as simple as we imagine. Behind the most widespread fantasies sometimes hide much more unexpected attractions, revealing all the richness of intimate imaginations. Through the behavior of its users, Wyylde highlights sometimes little-known fetishes, far from the usual clichés. These practices tell another way of approaching desire, between sensations, curiosity and singularity. Here are five examples that are clearly off the beaten track.
Hygromania
Hygromania is based on an attraction to bodily secretions such as sweat, tears or saliva. What, for some, is everyday life here becomes a powerful sensory trigger, capable of transforming an ordinary situation into a moment charged with intensity.
Tricophilia
Trichophilia is attached to the hair. Their texture, smell or appearance become central elements of desire. A seemingly innocuous detail can thus arouse real, almost hypnotic, fascination.
Pedal pumping
Pedal pumping is part of a very specific imagination. Excitement arises at the sight of a foot, whether wearing stiletto heels or not, pressing an accelerator pedal. A simple scene that takes on a totally different dimension in this context.
The nasolingus
The nasolingus explores an area rarely associated with pleasure. Here the nose becomes the center of attention, stimulated by caresses with the lips or tongue. A practice which may surprise, but which illustrates the diversity of erogenous zones.
Bouboupism
Bouboupism, finally, is based on the pleasure of touching or manipulating the breasts or nipples of one’s partner. More widespread than it seems, it is part of a tactile dimension of desire, often associated with a form of relaxation and play.
For Jill Lecours Grimard, CMO of Wyylde, these practices fully participate in the construction of desire: “Desire is not an automatic reflex, it is a living dynamic that builds and evolves. He can reinvent himself at each stage as long as we give him space to express himself. Fetishes, specific to each person, are an integral part of our identity and tell something of our imagination and our desires. Giving them a place is often a way of knowing oneself better and nourishing a freer and more living desire.“.