Friday, November 11, 2011

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Friday, November 4, 2011

Does The G-Spot Exist?

Myth 1: The G-Spot Doesn’t Really Exist.

A recent study found physical evidence of this elusive erogenous zone: women who were able to achieve vaginal orgasm had thicker-than-average tissue between the vagina and the urethra. Whether this area is a magic orgasm-inducing button for you depends on your sensitivity, says Dr Beverly Whipple, co-author of The Orgasm Answer Guide.

"Lie on your back and have your partner (or yourself) use one or two fingers to stimulate the upper front wall of your vagina with a 'come here' motion,” she says. Hit the right spot and within 10 seconds, you'll know it. During vaginal intercourse, try rear entry or woman on top – both put his penis in a position to hit the jackpot.


Myth 2: Men Can’t Have More Than One Climax

Myth 3: Size matters

A bigger penis doesn't necessarily make sex more mind-blowing. For one, it won't help a guy reach your G-spot, and it could actually be painful if his penis hits your cervix during sex. If his length is lacking, stick to positions that keep you close together (such as missionary), have him use a grinding rather than thrusting movement, and wrap your legs around him for extra clitoral stimulation. Got a bigger boy? Woman-on-top positions (like reverse cowgirl) let you control the depth of his stroke.