Have you ever wondered why it is really
hard for some women to reach org asm during se x? You will need not
bother anymore after this.
A new study has tackled the myth that
some women cannot achieve orgasms because of their attitude towards s*x,
by highlighting that anatomy plays an important role.
The ability of a man to experience an
org asm comes down to a balancing act between the parasympathetic
nervous system, which controls the body when it is resting, and the
sympathetic nervous system, which triggers the “fight or flight”
mechanism, according to researchers.
But for females, the composition of her
body and how the p*nis, or other stimulant, enters the body is more
important, explains Dr Elizabeth Emhardt, based at the Indiana
University School of Medicine, and lead author of the study published in
the journal ‘Clinical Anatomy’.
“S*xual
experiences are assumed to be in your control based on your attitude:
your confidence, your ability to trust, your openness,” she argued.
Instead, the study showed that differences in sexual anatomy are the “foundation for differences in sexual experience.”
Dr Emhardt went on to suggest that people may not be “control of our s*xual experiences as much as we once thought.”
She concluded: “Orgasms are complex phenomena involving psychological, physiological, and anatomic variation.”
Further research is now needed to investigate how such issues can be treated, she added.
The team from the Indiana University and
the Mayo Clinic made their findings by reviewing existing research on
the sexual anatomy.
The research follows a recent study which highlighted gender inequality in attitudes towards oral s*x.
Young women are more likely than men to perform oral s*x on their partner even if they don’t want to, according to researchers.
Despite many of the 71 teenagers they
interviewed saying that there was equality in giving and receiving oral
s*x, both groups agreed it was more distasteful and a “bigger deal” for
men to perform oral s*x than women.
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