
A woman’s right to orgasm
This blog provides tips how to give women orgasms, reveals different female orgasm techniques and makes sure women get good orgasms every day.
study carried out on 16 female Belgian university students revealed the trained sexologists can tell how orgasmic a woman is just by observing her walk.
The participants completed a questionnaire on their sexual behaviour and were then videotaped from a distance while walking in a public place. The videotapes were then rated by two professors of sexology and two research assistants trained in the functional-sexological approach to sexology, who were had no idea about the women’’s orgasmic history. It was found that the appropriately trained sexologists could correctly infer vaginal orgasm through watching the way the women walked over 80 percent of the time.
Also, on further analysis, it was discovered that the sum of stride length and vertebral rotation was greater for the vaginally orgasmic women. “This could reflect the free, unblocked energetic flow from the legs through the pelvis to the spine,” noted the authors.
Out of many plausible explanations for the results, once could be that a woman’’s anatomical features may predispose her to greater or lesser tendency to experience vaginal orgasm. “Blocked pelvic muscles, which might be associated with psychosexual impairments, could both impair vaginal orgasmic response and gait,” said the leader of the research.
Besides, vaginally orgasmic women may feel more confident about their sexuality, which might be reflected in their gait. “Such confidence might also be related to the relationship(s) that a woman has had, given the finding that specifically penile-vaginal orgasm is associated with indices of better relationship quality,” stated the authors.
This study has linked vaginal orgasm to better mental health. The study provides some support for assumptions of a link between muscle blocks and sexual function, according to the authors. The authors concluded that it might support the idea of incorporating training in movement, breathing and muscle patterns into the treatment of sexual dysfunction.
Source: Times of India
The G Spot goes in and out of fashion with sex experts. Some claim it exists, some deny.
The G Spot is really the underside or root of the clitoris and its nerves, which can be stimulated from inside the vagina, though women vary far more in their response to this type of stimulation than they do in their clitoral responses.
Some women feel it’s the greatest turn-on ever, some hate it, some feel it’s a pleasurable variation, others find it irritating.
There are no rights and wrongs. What matters is for both partners to feel free to experiment and give feedback on what feels good to them. Because the G Spot can be so sensitive and its effects unpredictable, it’s often a good idea for the woman to explore for herself first and then later share the knowledge with her partner.
Fingers are usually going to be more effective than a penis, by the way, and you’re more likely to find the G Spot if the woman is already well aroused. There is a special sex toy designed to help – the Rock-Chick - which stimulates the clitoris and the G Spot simultaneously. See www.rock-chick.com for details.
Most women are more responsive to clitoral stimulation and need clitoral stimulation if they are to climax during intercourse.
What often intrigues people about the G Spot is that it’s said to be linked with female ejaculation – women producing fluid on climax just as men do.