No orgasm? Blame anatomy, not the attitude, says a new study.
Debunking the myth that some women cannot achieve orgasms because of their attitude towards sex, a new study has highlighted that anatomy plays an important role.
For males, the most important aspect of achieving an erection and of ejaculating appears to rely on a proper balance between the parasympathetic nervous system that controls the body at rest and the sympathetic nervous system that controls the body's "fight or flight" response.
For females, physical anatomy plays more of an important role, with migration of the clitoris toward the anterior vaginal wall and the angle of entry of the penis being important.
"Sexual experiences are assumed to be in your control based on your attitude: your confidence, your ability to trust, your openness. What if variations in sexual anatomy actually set the foundation for differences in sexual experience, and we aren't in control of our sexual experiences as much as we once thought?" questioned lead author Dr Elizabeth Emhardt from the Indiana University School of Medicine.
The study is published in the journal Clinical Anatomy.
Lead image used for representational purposes only. Image: Joey Yee/Creative Commons
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