Can high heels affect a woman's
orgasm?
Why is emotional connect as important
to women as reaching orgasm?
Is coffee more important than sex in
the morning?
Is sex addiction worse than drugs or
booze?
Can kissing help you find the right
partner?
Shocking sex facts revealed
Wearing
high heels can negatively affect a woman's orgasm, a study has revealed.
Dr Eden Fromberg and Naomi Wolf's
recent book, Vagina: A New Biography has revealed that women can get pregnant
five to eight days after having sex and even sitting in chairs can arouse
women, but sitting for a long span of time can also dampen their orgasms, Time
Magazine reported.
The book also suggests that orgasms
can make women more creative and being well hydrated enhances orgasms.
Other shocking facts about sex
revealed that birth control pills dampen the libido and nerve endings are
distributed differently in every woman's vagina.
The research also broke the common
myth that all women can't achieve orgasms, and revealed that women have the
innate machinery programmed to have orgasms but not everybody learns how to use
that machinery well.
What
sexual satisfaction actually means to women
A new poll has revealed that women
feel the emotional connection with their partner as important as reaching
orgasm.
According to Huffington Post, couples
who communicate about sex while in bed are more likely to experience sexual
satisfaction.
One of the respondents said that
sexual satisfaction is conversation of love, as a man needs to make sure that
he is aware what his partner likes and what makes her feel good.
She added that being considerate about
letting your woman reach her climax as well and saying that you love is very
important.
Another respondent said that sexual
satisfaction is not sexual act itself, but more what leads up to it and how
that makes her feel, like touching, caressing, slow kisses and so on.
One more respondent said that
exploring each others' physical desires with respect and reciprocation is
sexual satisfaction, whereas some women even like to be thrilled physically,
emotionally and even spiritually, and there needs to be a connection of the
souls.
One respondent said that sexual
satisfaction refers to being able to get to "that point" and feeling
good about oneself and their partner.
Coffee
more important than sex in morning
A new research has revealed that
people prefer to have a cup of coffee over sex when they first wake up in the
morning.
The study, conducted by Le Meridien
hotel group, found that over 5 percent of their guests would rather have their
caffeine fix than sex to start the day, News.com.au reported.
The findings showed that people are so
addicted to coffee that they would give up alcohol, social media and sex for a
year rather than miss out on coffee for the same amount of time.
For the research, the French-based
hotel chain questioned regular travellers in 6 countries, including the USA and
China.
While a quarter of those surveyed said
that without coffee they felt less creative, 22 percent said that they could
not even get out of bed.
And 16 percent respondents claimed
that they could not talk to other people without their coffee fix.
One
in 16 people 'addicted to sex'
One in 16 people in the UK are
addicted to taking part in sexual acts every day, a new study has revealed.
According to some experts, sex
addiction is now worse than drugs or booze, the Sun reported.
The study by scientists at Belgium's
Liege University found that men are three times likelier than woman to be
addicted.
They told the publication that
compulsive flirting, addiction to porn, phone-sex, sex on the internet,
addiction to drugs and toys used for pleasure can be signs of excessive
sexuality.
Kissing
may help you find right partner: study
PTI
Ladies, you do have to kiss a lot of
frogs before you find your prince!
Kissing helps us size up potential
partners and, once in a relationship, may be a way of getting a partner to
stick around, a new Oxford study suggests.
"Kissing in human sexual
relationships is incredibly prevalent in various forms across just about every
society and culture," said Rafael Wlodarski, from the Department of
Experimental Psychology at Oxford University.
Wlodarski and colleagues set up an
on-line questionnaire in which over 900 adults answered questions about the
importance of kissing in both short-term and long-term relationships.
"There are three main theories
about the role that kissing plays in sexual relationships: that it somehow
helps assess the genetic quality of potential mates; that it is used to
increase arousal; and that it is useful in keeping relationships together. We
wanted to see which of these theories held up under closer scrutiny,"
Wlodarski said.
The survey responses showed that women
rated kissing as generally more important in relationships than men.
Furthermore, men and women who rated
themselves as being attractive, or who tended to have more short-term
relationships and casual encounters, also rated kissing as being more
important.
Previous studies have shown women tend
to be more selective when initially choosing a partner.
Men and women who are more attractive,
or have more casual partners, have also been found to be more selective in
choosing potential mates.
As it is these groups which tended to
value kissing more in their survey responses, it suggests that kissing helps in
assessing potential mates, researchers said.
It has been suggested previously that
kissing may allow people to subconsciously assess a potential partner through
taste or smell, picking up on biological cues for compatibility, genetic fitness
or general health.
"Mate choice and courtship in
humans is complex," said Professor Robin Dunbar.
"Initial attraction may include
facial, body and social cues. Then assessments become more and more intimate as
we go deeper into the courtship stages, and this is where kissing comes
in," he said.
In the current study, the team found
that kissing's importance changed for people according to whether it was being
done in long-term or short-term relationships.
Particularly, it was rated by women as
more important in long-term relationships, suggesting that kissing also plays
an important role in mediating affection and attachment among established
couples.
The researchers report their findings
in the journals Archives of Sexual Behaviour and Human Nature.
Source: Shocking sex facts revealed
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