Sexual Health
What should couples call sexual intercourse? Wushan Yunyu may be the most artistic one
Since ancient times, the use of clouds and rain to suggest sexual love has been common in novels, notes, poetry, and sanqu throughout history. In "Dream of the Red Chamber", it is once written that Jia Baoyu made his first attempt at Yun Yuqing. Baoyu had sex and had sex with a close girl. So, where did the origins of clouds, rain, and sex begin?
The earliest record of cloud and rain is the noun bestowed on Song Yu in the late Warring States period. In the preface to the Gaotang bestowal, it tells the story of mythological charm.
According to records, Song Yu and King Xiang of Chu visited Mount Wu together. The distant peaks were like Dai, filled with clouds and mist, constantly changing. King Xiang of Chu said, 'What kind of cloud is that?'? Song Yu said, 'This is Chaoyun.'. When King Huai of Chu visited here, he said he was too tired to sleep. In the dream, Nana's daughter drifted in, claiming to be the goddess of Wushan. King Huai of Chu was here, admiring others and wanting to recommend a pillowcase. King Huai of Chu was naturally happy, and the two of them felt sad overnight. At dawn, the goddess advocated to go. When she was about to leave, she told King Huai of Chu that she lived in a dangerous place on a high hill south of Wushan. In the morning, it turned into morning clouds, and in the evening, it turned into rain. After selling his soul overnight, King Huai of Chu was disappointed and did not wake up when he saw the beautiful woman go away. Afterwards, when he saw the cloud, it was still said by the goddess.
Later researchers have different opinions on the original intention of Song Yu in writing this text, but the allusions of Yun Yu have been followed. The goddess is shrouded in clouds and rain, mysterious and unpredictable. Clouds and rain have become obsessed with the goddess, increasing future generations' thoughts on the strange beauty of Wushan Yunyu. Gradually, later literati began to use clouds and rain to replace the love of fish between men and women. The Tang Dynasty poet Yuan Zhenyou wrote a brilliant quatrain that once experienced the vicissitudes of the sea and was difficult to turn into water. Wu Mountain is not a cloud, used to express condolences and attachment to his deceased wife. Expressing sexual love through clouds and rain is implicit and gentle, which is very in line with the psychological characteristics of ancient people and fully reflects the profound and ambiguous sexual psychology of refined people.
In sexual intercourse, both men and women are comfortable, and the deep fusion of water and milk is also very consistent with the word 'cloud and rain'. Especially when sexual intercourse reaches its climax, it roams like clouds and sky. Therefore, modern people also like to express sexual love through ups and downs and Mount Wu.