Tuesday, 7 October 2014

The vaginal orgasm doesn't exist - it's the clitoris that holds the key to female pleasure!


For years, women have often declared they can either orgasm through sex or foreplay.
But new research suggests we may all have been wrong.
For there is no such thing as a vaginal orgasm, a clitoral orgasm or even a G-spot, new research claims.
Instead, the umbrella term 'female orgasm' should be used, the study authors argue.  
They maintain that like 'male orgasm', 'female orgasm' is the correct term.
Historically, it was believed that women could orgasm through penetrative sex, and that G-spot, vaginal or clitoral orgasms were all different types of orgasm.
But writing in the journal Clinical Anatomy, the authors say the majority of women worldwide do not have orgasms during penetrative sex.
The size and distance of the clitoris from the vagina is paramount as to whether a woman can achieve orgasm, according to  U.S. researchers who scanned the pelvic areas of 30 women as part of a study
As a result, women have been labelled with sexual problems that are based on something that doesn’t exist: the vaginal orgasm.
The clitoris is the key to all female orgasms, the review found.
The clitoris, is the human female’s most erogenous zone, often called the ‘female penis’ because it is made from the same material as the male penis.
It is possible for all women to orgasm if the female erectile organs are effectively stimulated, the researchers added.
The female erectile organs include the clitoris, the vestibular bulbs – also known as the clitoral bulbs – which are found on either side of the opening of the vagina and the pars intermedia, a thin band that joins the two vestibular bulbs.
The size and distance of the clitoris from the vagina is paramount as to whether a woman can achieve orgasm, according to  U.S. researchers who scanned the pelvic areas of 30 women as part of a study

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