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By (user no longer on site) OP   
over a year ago

does anyone know when swinging started and where the name came from also was it only couples that took part.

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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago

Usual rumour is it was US bomber pilots flying out of East Anglia on daylight raids to Germany in the latter stages of WW2. The idea of being dead tomorrow, so party today - bring the local girl you're going with and swap all night.

Try the OED - its a common enough word in the English language, they might have traced an earlier use for it

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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago

1960`s

Legality

Swinging is illegal in some countries.[citation needed] In May 2010, Ma Yaohai, a 53-year-old Chinese computer science professor, was jailed for three and a half years after being found guilty of arranging swingers parties.

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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago

Research

Research has been conducted in the United States since the late 1960s. One study, based on an Internet questionnaire addressed to visitors of swinger-related sites, found swingers are happier in their relationships than the norm,[2] which is not statistically valid.

60% said that swinging improved their relationship; 1.7% said swinging made their relationship less happy. Approximately 50% of those who rated their relationship "very happy" before becoming swingers maintained their relationship had become happier. 90% of those with less happy relationships said swinging improved them. Almost 70% of swingers claimed no problem with jealousy; approximately 25% admitted "I have difficulty controlling jealousy when swinging" as "somewhat true", while 6% said this was "yes, very much" true. Swingers rate themselves happier ("very happy": 59% of swingers compared to 32% of non-swingers) and their lives more "exciting" (76% of swingers compared to 54% of non-swingers) than non-swingers, by significantly large margins. There was no significant difference between responses of men and women, although more males (70%) than females completed the survey.

This study is of limited use due to self-selected sampling. Self sampling procedures create a potential for bias. For instance, swinging couples who had stronger relationships may have been more motivated to complete the questionnaire. Alternatively, because swinging may cause stress on a marriage, perhaps only those with higher than average commitment are able to remain married. Couples who have jealousy or strife issues caused by swinging might not persist in the activity and could therefore be less likely respondents. Additionally, couples that would be negatively affected by swinging may be less likely to try swinging in the first place.

ABC News reporter John Stossel produced an investigative report into the swinging lifestyle. Stossel reported that at that time, more than four million people were swingers, according to estimates by the Kinsey Institute and other researchers. He also cited Terry Gould's research, which concluded that "couples swing in order to not cheat on their partners." When Stossel asked swinging couples whether they worry their spouse will "find they like someone else better", one male replied, "People in the swinging community swing for a reason. They don't swing to go out and find a new wife;" a woman asserted, "It makes women more confident - that they are the ones in charge." Stossel interviewed 12 marriage counselors. According to Stossel, "not one of them said don't do it", though some said "getting sexual thrills outside of marriage can threaten a marriage". Nevertheless, swingers whom Stossel interviewed claimed "their marriages are stronger because they don't have affairs and they don't lie to each other."

According to economic studies on swinging,[18] the ICT revolution, together with improvements in medicine, has been effective in reducing some of the costs of swinging and hence in increasing the number of swingers. And the economic approaches which seem best suited to capture the empirical data are those based on the concept of hedonic adaptation. These approaches suggest that it is consistent with maximizing swingers’ strategy to begin from "soft" swinging and only later engage in "harder" swinging, and that also the search for ever new sexual experiences delays long-period hedonic adaptation and hence increases swingers’ long-period wellbeing. Both these theoretical predictions seem to find confirmation in the empirical data on swinger behaviour.

[edit]

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By *rs Sugar Mr SpiceCouple
over a year ago

We are about 15 mins outa Pontypridd and we do go to Crawley in west sussex 2-3 times a year so get in touch !!

So wen and wehere did it start ,wasnt it the 60s in america????

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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago


"So wen and wehere did it start ,wasnt it the 60s in america????"

Doubt it - just because someone produces a study on it doesn't mean it originated quickly! Especially something as culturally subversive as swinging - Joe McCarthy would have had a field day if he added this to his anti-communist agenda...

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By *ev and TrevCouple
over a year ago

cardiff

A formal arrangement was signed by John Dee, his wife Jane, his scryer, Edward Kelley and Kelley's wife Joanna on 22 April 1587, whereby conjugal relations would be shared between the men and their spouses. This arose following seances which apparently resulted in spirits guiding Dee and Kelley towards this course of action.

The only group that was known to openly practice wife-swapping was European intellectuals, most notably Mary Shelley, the author of "Frankenstein", and her husband Percy Shelley. Even to this day, Europeans and American intellectuals try to find instances of open extra-marital sex of religious groups of the Abrahamic faiths.

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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago


"A formal arrangement was signed by John Dee, his wife Jane, his scryer, Edward Kelley and Kelley's wife Joanna on 22 April 1587, whereby conjugal relations would be shared between the men and their spouses. This arose following seances which apparently resulted in spirits guiding Dee and Kelley towards this course of action.

The only group that was known to openly practice wife-swapping was European intellectuals, most notably Mary Shelley, the author of "Frankenstein", and her husband Percy Shelley. Even to this day, Europeans and American intellectuals try to find instances of open extra-marital sex of religious groups of the Abrahamic faiths.

"

Interesting - but did any of the above refer to their activities as swinging? Think its gone off topic now, so I predict someone will doubtless mention the bisexual orgies of the Spartans next. Leonidas probably treated Thermopylae as a gangbang

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