When I first heard folks were trying to set a world record for, well, different ways people connect intimately, I thought it was a joke. Seriously? Someone keeps track of this stuff? But curiosity got me good. I decided I wanted to know the real stories behind it, straight from the people who supposedly knew their way around.

How It Started Wasn’t Pretty
Honestly, it felt like trying to unlock a secret club. Finding actual “experts” who’d talk wasn’t easy. I spent weeks just poking around online forums and weird social media groups, feeling kinda awkward. Messaged maybe twenty or thirty people claiming to be gurus. Most ignored me. A few sent back automated garbage trying to sell me something. Felt like hitting a brick wall.
I almost gave up until this one guy, let’s call him ‘Mike from Montreal’, actually replied. Said he wasn’t a record holder, but knew some folks who’d been part of those circles years back. We hopped on a call – shaky connection, bad coffee on my end – and he started sharing names and whispers of events that weren’t exactly on public calendars.
The Digging Got Real
Following Mike’s leads was like detective work, only way more awkward with my partner asking why I was whispering on the phone at midnight. I finally managed to connect with three people who had legit knowledge:
- ‘Greta’: Organized some of these gatherings back in the 90s. Sharp lady, swore half the stories floating online were pure fantasy.
- ‘Carlos’: Claimed he participated in an official attempt in Europe. Sounded more like a wild party gone too far to me.
- ‘The Archivist’: A researcher type buried in obscure organization records, trying to figure out what was myth and what was documented.
The stories weren’t glamorous. Talking to them involved a lot of:
- Double-checking ethics – everyone needed anonymity, some needed convincing I wasn’t writing trash.
- Untangling wild claims from actual confirmed events (turns out the Archivist was a saint, sorting through piles of old faxes and handwritten notes).
- Hearing about logistics that sounded like a nightmare – setting timers, bringing in referees, figuring out consent on the fly. Greta described it like organizing the world’s most stressful potluck.
What I Actually Found Out
Forget the hype. The reality was messy, sometimes funny, often just plain weird:

- Records Are Fleeting: Most attempts weren’t officially sanctioned by any big name group you’d recognize. Rules changed constantly. Carlos showed me a ‘certificate’ that looked like it was printed on a dying inkjet.
- It Wasn’t About Skill: According to Greta and the Archivist’s records, the ‘record’ usually meant doing the same specific thing with as many partners as possible in a set time. More about logistics and endurance than creativity.
- Human Error Galore: Stories of timers failing, judges getting distracted, participants wandering off mid-event. Carlos laughed about someone ordering pizza halfway through.
- Ethics Were… Retro: Hearing how consent was handled back then made me cringe. Greta admitted it was often a rushed ‘sign this vague paper’ situation, nothing like we’d expect today. This part took effort to document respectfully without sounding judgy.
Putting it all together meant sifting through hours of rambling interviews, cryptic notes from the Archivist, and conflicting online legends. I filled notebooks trying to match names to events, dates to blurry photos people sent me. My living room floor looked like a conspiracy theorist’s dream for weeks.
So, The Big Conclusion?
The “World Record” idea feels mostly like a weird slice of human history – people pushing boundaries, maybe for glory, maybe just to say they did it. It was less about ‘top experts mastering methods’ and more about chaotic group efforts that barely stayed organized long enough to count something. Digging this up was way more work than finding the perfect mattress, and honestly? The stories are better than any record number could ever be. They’re messy, human, and kinda ridiculous. Makes you wonder who’s keeping the real records of these stories, because the official ones sure weren’t doing it right.