orgasm with other stimulations such as having their nipples sucked, but that’s rare . The clitoris needs stroked, rubbed, or sucked, just as a man needs stimulation on the head of his penis to reach satisfaction.
Just imagine for a moment, how it would feel to you if you only had the shaft of your penis stimulated during sex. While it might be pleasant, could you reach orgasm? Even if you could, wouldn’t you desperately need the head touched, stroked, rubbed, or sucked? That’s how a woman feels. And all the vaginal stimulation in the world, as depicted in Triple X-rated movies, won’t bring her to orgasm if the clitoris is ignored.
Sex movies are fun to watch—for a while, but then they get tedious-and boring. But it’s interesting to watch all the contortions the couple goes through. Just remember, however, that’s just for the camera. While some men may like them, most women do not. Oh, we’ll go along to please our mate, but we like romance with sex, and we can’t escape into our fantasies if we’re trying to stay upright while hanging onto the chandelier.
Physically, it might be fun to explore - when you first start the sex play. But a woman builds to orgasm, and if she’s started to build in one position, changing that position usually halts any progress you or she has made in achieving orgasm.
A certain amount of exploration is fun - for both of you, and it usually takes exploring to see which position offers the best clitoral contact. But again, as in everything,
pay attention to your lady and her reactions. If you do, you’ll be able to recognize what’s enjoyable for her. After all, you want her to feel as much pleasure as you. If she feels pleasure, she’ll be willing to give it as well. And, she’ll remember the next time you have that look in your eye.
The Vagina:
Vagina is a Latin term for sheath, and it’s a tubular-shaped structure of about three to five inches from a woman’s cervix - the mouth of the womb/uterus - to the exterior of the body.
Also known as the birth canal, the vagina is an extremely elastic muscle, and it stretches to many times its normal size during birth. It also expands during sexual arousal to
accommodate the male penis. Because of its elasticity, the vagina doesn't stay open. When nothing is inside, the walls sit closed, yet it expands to fit whatever is put inside it, whether it’s a tampon, a baby, or a finger. When it’s emptied, it closes again.
And each month, the vagina provides a passageway for menstrual blood to exit the woman’s body.
Each month during a woman’s fertile years, her left and right ovaries take turns producing an egg. When that egg is released, it travels to the uterus through the fallopian tubes. Pregnancy occurs when a live sperm that has traveled through her cervix joins the egg. The egg remains fertile only for about two days. If fertilization doesn’t occur, the lining of the uterus passes through her vagina as menstrual flow. If she does become pregnant, the lining nourishes the fetus.
During intercourse, certain glands, the Bartholin’s glands, near the vaginal opening and the cervix, provide moisture and lubrication.
A woman’s sexually responsive nerve endings in the vagina are located in the first couple of inches, known as the ‘orgasmic platform.’ When the lady has an orgasm, the muscles contract and expand in waves. Beyond the first couple of inches, the nerve endings taper, so the size of a penis is irrelevant.
Hear that? The size of a penis is irrelevant to a woman’s sexual pleasure.
So if you have a large penis, you may crow to your friends and impress them because it’s still a myth that size matters. The advertisers love to perpetuate that myth because it’s more money in their pockets. But the informed know better. A ‘real man’ learns what pleases his lady and uses that knowledge.
Another myth concerns the female