Bringing a Rabbit Into the Bedroom: How Couples Are Using Dual-Action Toys to Reconnect
Somewhere along the way, the idea of bringing a toy into a partnered relationship picked up the wrong reputation. "If you need a toy, the relationship isn't working." Tired logic, and not true. The couples we hear from most often — the ones who say things are good and they want them to stay good — are the ones reaching for tools that add to what's already there, not patch what's broken.
A rabbit vibrator is, quietly, the most welcoming toy you can introduce into a shared bedroom. Dual-action design means it's not a single-purpose device with an obvious "who gets pleasure" answer baked in. It's a layered experience that can sit at the centre of a slow evening or become a small surprise in the middle of a regular Tuesday. And the modern, app-controlled generation — toys like AVERY — opens up something even bigger: the ability for a partner to be present in your pleasure even when they're not in the room.

This is a no-pressure guide to bringing one in. Whether you've been together six months or sixteen years, the principles are the same.
The first conversation
The hardest part isn't the toy. It's the moment before. Bring it up in a low-stakes setting — over dinner, on a walk, anywhere that doesn't feel like a performance. Avoid leading with "I want to try something new" because that lands as a critique. Lead with curiosity instead: "I read something interesting about couples toys and I'd love to hear what you think." You're inviting a conversation, not handing over a solution. If your partner takes the bait, brilliant. If they need to sit with the idea for a day or three, that's also a healthy response. The toy can wait. The relationship can't be rushed.
Choosing the toy together
This is where it gets fun. Browsing a curated, premium catalogue together — at home, on a couch, no fluorescent retail lighting — turns the decision into a shared one. You're not selecting a "her toy" or a "his toy." You're selecting something both of you will participate in. A rabbit is a natural choice for a first shared toy because it has two zones working at once. There's something to do for both partners. The dual-action design means hands are free, mouths are free, eye contact is free — the toy supports the choreography rather than centring itself. AVERY's app-controlled mode adds a layer most rabbits don't offer: one partner holds the phone, the other holds the experience. Roles can swap. The dynamic isn't "one of us is performing on the other" — it's "we're conducting this together."
Setting the scene the first time
You don't need candles and rose petals. You do need to remove the parts of the room that pull attention away. Phones face down (except the one running the app). Notifications off. Door closed, lights low or warm. Start slow. Let the toy be one ingredient in a longer evening, not the headline. Use it during a part of the experience you're already enjoying — not as the opening act, not as the grand finale. The middle is where new things tend to land most gracefully. A first-time tip almost every couple confirms in retrospect: keep things lower-intensity than you think you want. The novelty does a lot of work on its own. You can build up the next time.

What changes when there's a third object in the room
The first few times, both people will notice something interesting: the toy makes it easier to say what you want. There's a new vocabulary suddenly available — "softer," "a little to the left," "try that pattern" — and because the requests are about the device, they're less loaded than they used to be. Couples often report this is the most quietly meaningful change. The toy didn't replace anything. It opened up communication that had been waiting for an excuse. Over time, the rabbit becomes one of several options in the rotation. Some nights it leads. Some nights it sits in the drawer. It stops being an event and starts being a tool.
The app and the distance question
For couples who travel for work, live apart, or simply don't see each other on weeknights — AVERY's app pairing is genuinely a different conversation. The partner not in the room can take control of the rhythm, the pattern, the intensity. It's not a substitute for being together. It's a different mode of being together, with the same intentionality and the same focus on the other person's experience. Use it sparingly at first. The novelty is high; the temptation is to use the feature every night until it stops feeling special. Reserve it for the moments when distance is hardest and it becomes the bridge it was designed to be.
Aftercare matters more than you think
Once the moment passes, the toy goes back in the drawer and the two of you are still in the room. Hold each other. Talk about what worked. Talk about what didn't. Laugh about the bit you didn't expect. The post-experience conversation is what locks in the closeness; without it, even the best new addition can quietly drift to "we tried it once."
The quiet truth about couples and toys
The data is consistent. Couples who use toys together report higher communication satisfaction, more frequent intimacy, and more honesty about what they want. Not because the toy did something magic, but because choosing one together, using it together, and talking about it together is itself an act of investment. A modern rabbit like AVERY is one of the gentlest ways to start. It looks beautiful on the nightstand. It's quiet enough to keep things private. It's flexible enough to fit different bodies and different moods. And it's built to support the relationship, not steal the spotlight from it. If you've been waiting for a sign, this is the warm, no-pressure version of one.
Shop AVERY at Svakom — https://svakom.com.au/products/thrusting-rabbit-vibrator
















