Cars are designed to be attractive for their drivers and passengers. They have sleek bodies, sexy curves, shiny metals, and cool technologies. There is an appeal to touching these cars too. Some people can feel sexual arousal when they operate a car's controls. This includes buttons, knobs, dials, levers, gears, wheels, pedals, switches, wires, hoses, pins, cables, sensors, batteries, lights, gauges, handles, locks, seats, mirrors, windows, motors, engines, transmissions, exhaust pipes, suspensions, brakes, steering systems, shock absorbers, tires, wheels, hubcaps, fenders, grills, headlights, taillights, trunks, and bumpers. The tactile feedback from all those parts may evoke sexually stimulating feelings.
The horn button is one example. It has been placed within easy reach of the driver's hand since the first cars were invented. Many cars still have large ones that require several pounds of pressure to sound. Some newer cars have smaller buttons or voice commands that can make sounds in different pitches, lengths, and volumes. These electronic sounds may add a layer of complexity to the feeling. When pressing a button with your fingers or palm, you may experience friction, resistance, vibration, compression, expansion, heat, cold, or electrical energy flowing through the metal or plastic components.
The button itself moves or changes shape as it presses down into its housing. That movement and deformation are also part of the tactile feedback. Your brain interprets these signals from touch receptors on your skin, which send messages about pressure, force, texture, temperature, speed, position, direction, size, weight, and time to your muscles and nerves. This information gets processed by your nervous system and interpreted as pleasure, pain, or sexual arousal.
If you want to increase sexual pleasure when driving, try moving your hands more slowly over car controls. Take time to feel each part carefully. Experiment with different levels of pressure, movement, and contact. You may find ways to enhance your sensations and become more aroused. If you feel uncomfortable, stop. If you feel distracted or unsafe, focus on driving. Only use this technique in private places where there are no other drivers around. Do not operate a vehicle while under the influence of alcohol, drugs, medication, fatigue, stress, or emotions. Drive responsibly at all times.