Thursday, May 31, 2012

Orgasm History Revealed by the Way You Walk!

By Jerry Kennard, Health Guide Friday, September 19, 2008
The way a woman walks says volumes about her sex life and orgasmic ability. Psychology professor Stuart Brody, of the University of the West of Scotland and colleagues at the Catholic University of Louvain in Belgium, report an 80 percent success rate in determining the history of vaginal orgasm in w...
Oral Sex & Herpes Transmission
Anonymous
Vincenzo Puppo
10/ 5/08 6:41am

This is not a scientific article (of opportunist sexologists...)! Orgasm is a normal function of all women: it is possible in every woman because it's caused by the female erectile organs. Vaginal orgasm is a term invented by Freud in 1905, it is only a theory: vagina is a reproductive organ with little sensitivity. Sexologists don't study on specialist textbooks: Female sexual physiology was described in Dickinson's textbooks in 1949 and by Masters and Johnson in 1966... sexologists should define as "complete sexual intercourse" (in other words "making love") the case in which the orgasm happens in both partners with or without a vaginal intercourse, and it is possible stimulate the clitoris during the vaginal/anal intercourse with fingers, and during "first time" it is not obligatory to have a vaginal intercourse... Sexologists should spread certainties for all women not hypotheses without scientific bases (Vaginal orgasm and G-spot don't exist: Every sexologist should read Grafenberg's original article... Mass media and people who believe in a "vaginal spot" should not use Grafenberg's name yet)... See video in it.youtube.com/ newsexology

1/28/09 5:47pm

Vincenzo: I agree that this is not a scientific article. I mean, please, models on the catwalk--that's anyone's idea of a natural gait? I don't think so. Sounds more like someone has an infatuation with Heidi Klum to me. Which is perfectly understandable--lol!

 

However, vaginal orgasms do in fact exist. And if (as I'm assuming from your name) you happen to not be a woman, you'll just have to take my word on it!

 

Kinda reminds me of my (male) obstetrician who insisted (while I was pregnant with my second child) that it was impossible to tell the difference between uterine contractions and intestinal contractions. Trust me on this: there's a difference!

Anonymous
Vincenzo Puppo
1/28/09 6:31pm

Please, how many women, in percentage, have the "vaginal" orgasm?... For you, all women have the right to sexual pleasure?... Vaginal orgasm is a wrong term from scientific point of view: say you how many woman cannot to have orgasm?... Few women have a "vaginal" orgasm, why it should be the normality for all? Please, certainties (orgasms) for all women: orgasm (and multiple orgasms and "vaginal" orgasm) it's caused by female erectile organs (clitoris, vestibular bulbs and corpus spongiosum, labia minora and corpus spongiosum of the urethra: the erectile structures are the same in female and in male!). Sexologists must to use a correct scientific terminology describing female sexual anatomy and physiology (G-spot, bulbs of clitoris, clitoris-urethrovaginal complex, periurethral glans, urethrovaginal space, they are not terms used in anatomy. Please, see: Dickinson's textbook, Masters and Johnson's textbook): Please, see videos in youtube/newsexology

1/28/09 7:39pm

PGF: Let me try and break my response down for you.

 

Vincenzo: Please, how many women, in percentage, have the "vaginal" orgasm?...

 

PGF: No idea. I was merely pointing out that it does exist and was speaking only from personal experience which I (as a woman) have and you (still assuming you're not a woman) do not.

 

Vincenzo: For you, all women have the right to sexual pleasure?...

 

PGF: Oh, absolutely. Catholic upbringing notwithstanding.

 

Vincenzo: Vaginal orgasm is a wrong term from scientific point of view

 

PGF: Well, a rose is a rose is a rose, is it not? Scientific or not I think we all know what we're talking about when we speak in terms of a vaginal orgasm, so why not call it that?

 

Vincenzo: Few women have a "vaginal" orgasm, why it should be the normality for all?

 

PGF: Never said it was or had to be 'the normality'. What is 'normal' anyway?

 

Vincenzo:  the erectile structures are the same in female and in male!

 

PGF: Which, apparently, leads many men to believe they're experts in female orgasms. They're not. If you're a man (speaking to the general populace here) please do not feel free to co-opt my orgasms. And I won't try and tell you about yours. That's fair, right?

 

Anonymous
Vincenzo Puppo
1/29/09 4:20am

"please do not feel free to co-opt my orgasms"

My apologies! You have different sensations and orgasms: I happy for you.

I am a physician and sexologist, sexual education expert: in schools I must spread certainties for all girls and women, not hypothesis... (and I have a teenage daughter...). I am also a researcher: see my videos from sexology congress... Orgasm is a normal function of all women (G-spot is only a business of opportunist sexologists: see g-spot augmentation... and vaginal orgasm is a term invented by Freud in 1905, see also clitoridectomy he had recommended for women without orgasm...): the meaning of words is important in sexual education, for this they must be corrected from scientific point of view!

"Orgasm History Revealed by the Way You Walk" It is not a scientific study; and in Jannini's article there is no figure that shows a G-spot (Jannini's article it is not scientific article: it really has been overhauled and checked by the Reviewers selected by the Journal of Sexual Medicine?... see in youtube/newsexology).

Thanks for this debate, Vincenzo

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By Jerry Kennard, Health Guide— Last Modified: 09/28/10, First Published: 09/19/08