Sexual desire

sexual desire

Kinsey shocked the world in the 1950s with his revel­a­tion that SOME women exper­i­ence orgasm. The popular message became: all women ‘natur­ally’ orgasm during sex. But this was never true.

“In the later teens, when… the average male was at the peak of his sexual capa­city and activity -, there was still nearly a half (47 per cent) of the females who had not had their first orgasm.

With this relat­ively limited back­ground of exper­i­ence and limited under­standing of the nature and signi­fic­ance and desirab­ility of orgasm, it is not surprising to find that a goodly number of the married females never or rarely reach orgasm in their marital coitus.” (p373 Sexual beha­vior in the human female 1953)

Women, who know how to achieve true sexual arousal, commonly orgasm through masturb­a­tion or oral sex because both of these include the clit­oral stim­u­la­tion needed for female orgasm.

BUT first a woman must know how her sexual arousal works. How can all women orgasm during sex without the orgasm tech­niques or famili­arity with orgasm from masturb­a­tion that men have?

Equally how can women’s sexual desire and ease of arousal equal men’s when they need mech­an­ical assist­ance (vibrators) to orgasm? Why do only women need G-spot stim­u­la­tion for orgasm? John Gray states his view (my emphasis): “Biolo­gic­ally and hormon­ally, men are MUCH MORE driven to be sexual than women are.” (p86 Mars & Venus in the Bedroom 1995)

Frankly, regard­less of their orgasmic ability, you have to be pretty naïve to believe that women get as much out of sex as men do. Not only is female sexual arousal much more obscure than male but also women are not motiv­ated by sex in the way that men are. So even young women’s magazines discuss rela­tion­ship issues rather than provide women with sexual turn-ons.

Women do not have the same drive to orgasm during sex

Of course, women can enjoy sex. But any woman who suggests that women’s sexual desire is as strong as men’s throughout their lives is not only exposing her inex­per­i­ence but also her ignor­ance of the facts. Women do not achieve sexual arousal or orgasm nearly as easily as men do. Many women are not even inter­ested in these aspects of their sexuality.

As Sheila Kitzinger points out, for many women, orgasm is simply not a priority: “For most women orgasm does not have this central role in life. And if it does, it tends to be for a small part of their lives, and often to melt into the back­ground against other signi­ficant exper­i­ences and other expres­sions of their sexu­ality.” (p80 Woman’s Exper­i­ence of Sex 1983)

This is simply about balan­cing EFFORT versus REWARD. Firstly a woman has to make much more conscious effort to engage on her sexual arousal and secondly the rewards of orgasm are funda­ment­ally just not as crit­ical to women as they are to men.

The film ’40 days and 40 nights’ (2002) suggests that men cannot cope without orgasm even for 24 hours. The other facts that indicate that men have a stronger sexual desire or sex drive than women include:

  • men’s greater will­ing­ness to initiate sex with a partner;
  • men’s much more evident interest in erot­i­cism and almost any aspect of sex;
  • the fact that men masturbate much more frequently than women; and
  • men’s will­ing­ness to pay for sex.

Never­the­less a woman can enjoy sexual pleasure espe­cially if she is willing to explore sex beyond inter­course. Ways Women Orgasm discusses how women’s sexual arousal works and explores tech­niques that might make female orgasm more likely.

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