Sunday, 14 December 2014
MUST SEE:FIVE SURPRISING FACTS ABOUT MASTURBATION YOU DIDN'T KNOW!!!
1. People who have s3x regularly m@sturbate more than those who don't. Weird, right? Well, not really. If you m@sturbate, you're more likely to be sexually open, and therefore, you know, have s3x. Also, as I said above, if you know what you like when you're solo, it will enhance your sexual experience with your partner.
2. More women m@stur*bate than are willing to admit. Actually, this fact shouldn't be very shocking, but perhaps the percentages will astonish you. Most teenagers are already going at it with themselves: Surveys show that before both genders have reached 18, 80 percent of males and 59 percent of females have given m@sturbation a whirl. As far as people over 18, the numbers get a bit shady. Some research shows that as many as 92 percent of women "admit" to it, while surveys from Kinsey put that percentage anywhere between 50 and 70.
3. Older women m@sturbate, too. Your s3x drive just gets more revved up as you get older. A2010 Kinsey study found that roughly 30 percent of women in relationships between 60 and 69 years of age had "recently" double-clicked their mouse. For those over 70, "solo m@sturbation was reported by more than half who were in a non-cohabitating relationship, compared to 12.2 percent among married women."
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4. Some countries encourage daily m@sturbation for their teenage population. In 2009, the U.K. government got on the bandwagon with other European nations to encourage teenagers to m@sturbate at least once a day. Not only was m@sturbating defined as a "right" in health pamphlets, but it was also touted as helping to reduce STDs and teen pregnancy. Smart thinking!
5. M@sturbation wasn't always taboo. Why do we love the early Romans? Because they were open about their sexuality! Even as early as the 4th millennium BC, a clay figurine depicted a woman touching herself, and obviously enjoying it. All was great until the early 1700's when an anonymous pamphlet entitled Onania was published and put an end to all the fun. Calling masturbation
a "heinous sin" of "self-pollution," and depicting archaic devices to prevent this "pollution," it gave m@stur*bation a bad rap for centuries to come (no pun intended). This mentality continued through the 16th and 17th century, when those who did masturbate were regarded as mentally ill. Over 60 percent of mental and physical illnesses were blamed on m@sturbation.