Want him to go down on you in bed? Or maybe you’d rather he didn’t go there. If you don’t say so, chances are he’ll never know. When it comes to getting head women are comfortable with different things, a US study found.
Does the G-spot really exist? Of course, says Dutch sex writer Marianne Ras – she can tell you from personal experience. The G-spot can give most women a more intense sensation than the clitoris, she says.
Women who orgasm through vaginal stimulation get a bigger rush of love for their partners, according to Venezuelan sexologist and psychiatrist Dr Rómulo Aponte.
Squirting and female ejaculation are two different things, according to a study at Guadalajara University, Mexico. It’s a controversial topic. Does female ejaculation really exist? What actually comes out?
Most men have had a wet dream at some point in their lives. What’s less well known is that women can also come in their sleep, says Dr Ellen Laan, a psychologist at the University of Amsterdam.
The Orgasmic Woman is a self-help programme that can train women to have more sexual pleasure, says its developer, Swiss psychotherapist Annina Sartorius. She devised the sexuality course together with a tantric guru.
If you want to make your man happy, kiss, cuddle and caress him more, say US researchers. Physical intimacy is one of the most important parts of a happy relationship and satisfying sex life for men, the study on long-term relationships found.
Amsterdam’s AMC university hospital is testing a unique way of bringing women to orgasm in the lab. The volunteers watch erotic films while a special device stimulates their clitoris. If that doesn't work, they get a quick dose of testosterone.
Love matters
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