Come as you are review

This book help you understanding female sexuality and that book clear your all kind of doubts and myths about sex like lots of people have 2 huge myths first is size matters but this is not size doesn't matter men have orgasms during penis-in-vagina sex (intercourse), women should have orgasms with intercourse, too, and if they don’t, it’s because they’re broken.In reality, about a quarter of women orgasm reliably with intercourse. The other 75 percent sometimes, rarely, or never orgasm with intercourse, and they’re all healthy and normal. A woman might orgasm lots of other ways—manual sex, oral sex, vibrators, breast stimulation, toe sucking, pretty much any way you can imagine—and still not orgasm during intercourse. That’s normal.each has an organ that is soft, stretchy, and grows coarse hair after puberty. On female bodies, it’s the outer lips (labia majora); on male bodies, it’s the scrotum and the second huge myth about virginity about female sexuality virginity” (itself a biologically meaningless idea). Such a weird idea could have been invented only in a society where women were literally property, their vaginas their most valuable real estate a gated community Even though the hymen performs no physical or biological function, many cultures have created myths around the hymen so profound that there are actually surgeries available to “reconstruct” the hymen, as if it were a medical necessity. (Where is the surgery to perfect men’s nipples?) In a sense, the hymen can be relevant to women’s health: Some women are beaten or even killed for not having a hymen. Some women are told they “couldn’t have been raped” because their hymen is intact. For them, the hymen has real impact on their physical wellbeing, not because of their anatomy but because of what their culture believes about that anatomy and Reading this book will expand your knowledge, challenge your assumptions, and foster respect for women's experiences. I highly recommend it for educational purposes."