The Gentleman’s guide to Vajayjay, The winter mitten roll, The happy beaver, The lovepocket,- Pussies that hold mega strength, beauty and power!
We all come from the hairy muffin, so it’s only natural that we speak about this feminine power house, this cave of life and sweet wonder?
Biology and Anatomy of the most beautiful thing in the world <3
What is the female reproductive system?
The female reproductive system is the body parts that help women or people assigned female at birth (AFAB):
- Have sexual intercourse.
- Reproduce.
- Menstruate.
What are the parts of the female reproductive system?
The female reproductive anatomy includes both external and internal parts.
External parts
The function of your external genitals are to protect the internal parts from infection and allow sperm to enter your vagina.
Your vulva is the collective name for all your external genitals. A lot of people mistakenly use the term “vagina” to describe all female reproductive parts. However, your vagina is its own structure located inside your body.
The main parts of your vulva or external genitals are:
- Labia majora: labia majora (“large lips”) enclose and protect the other external reproductive organs. During puberty, hair growth occurs on the skin of the labia majora, which also contains sweat and oil-secreting glands.
- Labia minora: labia minora (“small lips”) can have a variety of sizes and shapes. They lie just inside labia majora, and surround the opening to vagina (the canal that joins the lower part of your uterus to the outside of your body) and urethra (the tube that carries pee from your bladder to the outside of your body). This skin is very delicate and can become easily irritated and swollen.
- Clitoris: Two labia minora meet at the clitoris a small, sensitive protrusion that’s comparable to a penis in men or people assigned male at birth (AMAB). Clitoris is covered by a fold of skin called the prepuce and is very sensitive to stimulation.
- Vaginal opening: vaginal opening allows menstrual blood and babies to exit the body. Tampons, fingers, sex toys or penises can go inside your vagina through vaginal opening.
- Hymen: hymen is a piece of tissue covering or surrounding part of the vaginal opening. It’s formed during development and present during birth.
- Opening to your urethra: The opening to the urethra is the hole pee comes from.
Internal parts
- Vagina: vagina is a muscular canal that joins the cervix, the lower part of uterus to the outside of the body. It can widen to accommodate a baby during delivery and then shrink back to hold something narrow like a tampon. It’s lined with mucous membranes that help keep it moist.
- Cervix: cervix is the lowest part of your uterus. A hole in the middle allows sperm to enter and menstrual blood to exit. cervix opens (dilates) to allow a baby to come out during a vaginal childbirth. Cervix is what prevents things like tampons from getting lost inside your body.
- Uterus: uterus is a hollow, pear-shaped organ that holds a fetus during pregnancy. Uterus is divided into two parts: the cervix and the corpus. Corpus is the larger part of your uterus that expands during pregnancy.
- Ovaries: ovaries are small, oval-shaped glands that are located on either side of your uterus. ovaries produce eggs and hormones.
- Fallopian tubesThese are narrow tubes that are attached to the upper part of uterus and serve as pathways for egg (ovum) to travel from ovaries to uterus. Fertilization of an egg by sperm normally occurs in the fallopian tubes. The fertilized egg then moves to the uterus, where it implants into the uterine lining.
The hymen is a remnant tissue just inside the opening of the vagina that’s left over from how the vagina forms during embryonic development.
It’s commonly seen as a small amount of extra tissue in a crescent-shape or ring-like configuration around the edge of the vaginal opening. Many people might be surprised to learn that the hymen has no proven medical or physiological purpose.
For some women, there’s practically no tissue at all. For others, it’s a membrane covering the vaginal opening. That situation is rare, and it can interfere sex or tampon usage, but it can be removed surgically.
The most common myth around the hymen is that it remains “intact” until it’s broken during vaginal penetration, which renders it a physical marker of virginity. Though there are many instances where AFAB do experience a small amount of bleeding from hymenal tearing at first intercourse, this is by no means a universal experience, as there are many AFAB who have very little tissue there in the first place.
Another common myth is that the hymen is rigid and penetrable. The tissue is actually stretchy and flexible, which means it does not necessarily tear with penetration. In many cases, some tearing or stretching occurs over time from tampons, gynecological exams or vigorous exercise.
Because of these factors, it’s impossible to tell by examining AFAB if they are a virgin.
The idea that virginity can be measured or verified is perhaps the most harmful and damaging myth. Assuming that AFAB’s sexual behavior can be inferred from her appearance is demeaning, and cultures that suggest the use of a hymenal exam to test for virginity invite incorrect and unfair judgments about AFABS.
In reality, the only way to find out if an AFAB has had sex is to ask them.
For the most part, the size and shape of AFABS (both outer and inner) are determined by genetics — not hormone levels or their sexual activity. Mother Nature just gave you what they got.
The vagina is on average about 3 inches long from the cervix (the neck of the uterus) to the vulva. No two are the same: Every vagina ranges in shape and color. Because it’s highly elastic, the vagina is designed to stretch and accommodate a penis during sex and a baby during birth.
That said, the hormonal and physical changes that happen during pregnancy and childbirth can cause vagina and labia to change, sometimes temporarily and sometimes for the long term.
During foreplay the whole vulva changes and expands to get ready for penetration. Organs will move higher to stretch out the vaginal canal. It can expand usually up to from 10-15cm. This expansion is caused by hormonal coctail that comes from AFABS face, neck and breast area with bloodstream. This usually takes about 5-15 minutes depending on the person.
Foreplay literally gets the juices flowing by increasing sexual arousal — which isn’t to be confused with sexual desire, though it can do that, too.
Sexual arousal causes a number of physical responses in your body, including:
- an increase in the heart rate, pulse, and blood pressure
- dilation of the blood vessels, including genitals
- more blood flow to the genitals, which causes the labia, clitoris, and penis to swell
- swelling of the breasts and erect nipples
- lubricating of the vagina, which can make intercourse more enjoyable and prevent pain
What happens during the menstrual cycle?
Women or people AFAB of reproductive age usually beginning anywhere from 8 to 16 years of age experience cycles of hormonal activity that repeat at about one-month intervals. (The wordls youngest mother has been 5 years 7 months.) With every cycle, the body prepares for a potential pregnancy, whether or not that’s the intention. The term menstruation refers to the periodic shedding of uterine lining when pregnancy doesn’t occur that cycle. Many people call the days that they notice vaginal bleeding their “period.”
The average menstrual cycle takes about 28 days and occurs in phases. These phases include:
- The follicular phase(the egg develops).
- The ovulatory phase (release of the egg).
- The luteal phase(hormone levels decrease if the egg doesn’t implant).
There are four major hormones (chemicals that stimulate or regulate the activity of cells or organs) involved in the menstrual cycle. These hormones include:
- Follicle-stimulating hormone.
- Luteinizing hormone
- Estrogen
- Progesterone
Follicular phase
This phase starts on the first day of your period. During the follicular phase of the menstrual cycle, the following events occur:
- Two hormones, follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) and luteinizing hormone LH are released from the brain and travel in the blood to the ovaries.
- The hormones stimulate the growth of about 15 to 20 eggs in your ovaries, each in its own “shell,” called a follicle.
- These hormones (FSH and LH) also trigger an increase in the production of the hormone estrogen.
- As estrogen levels rise, like a switch, it turns off the production of follicle-stimulating hormones. This careful balance of hormones allows the body to limit the number of follicles that will prepare eggs to be released.
- As the follicular phase progresses, one follicle in one ovary becomes dominant and continues to mature. This dominant follicle suppresses all of the other follicles in the group. As a result, they stop growing and die. The dominant follicle continues to produce estrogen.
Ovulatory phase
The ovulatory phase (ovulation) usually starts about 14 days after the follicular phase started (the exact timing varies). The ovulatory phase is the second phase of your menstrual cycle. Most people will have a menstrual period 10 to 16 days after ovulation. During this phase, the following events occur:
- The rise in estrogen from the dominant follicle triggers a surge in the amount of luteinizing hormone (LH) that the brain produces.
- This causes the dominant follicle to release its egg from the ovary.
- As the egg is released (a process called ovulation) it’s captured by finger-like projections on the end of the fallopian tubes, fimbriae. The fimbriae sweep the egg into the fallopian tube.
- For one to five days prior to ovulation, many women or people AFAB will notice an increase in egg white cervical mucus. This mucus is the vaginal discharge that helps to capture and nourish a sperm on its way to meet the egg for fertilization.
Luteal phase
The luteal phase begins right after ovulation and involves the following processes:
- Once it releases its egg, the empty ovarian follicle develops into a new structure called the corpus luteum.
- The corpus luteum secretes the hormones estrogen and progesterone. Progesterone prepares your uterus for a fertilized egg to implant.
- If intercourse has taken place and sperm has fertilized the egg the fertilized egg (embryo) will travel through your fallopian tube to implant in your uterus. This is how pregnancy begins.
- If the egg isn’t fertilized, it dissolves in your uterus. Not needed to support a pregnancy, the lining of your uterus breaks down and sheds. This is when your period begins.
Okay, then the mental effects on these phases.
The Follicular Phase
A lot is going on in the body during this point of your cycle, AFAB are probably feeling pretty good despite it. Rising estrogen levels can cause a spike in energy for many, so if AFAB is looking for a time to increase productivity, this is THE week.
How the ovulation phase makes you feel
Estrogen and testosterone rise to peak levels, boosting the effects of the follicular phase. AFAB People feel more energy, more sex drive, and often they notice surge of being more confident, more assertive and driven. The chemistry of the body is preparing for reproduction, so it makes sense that chemically one starts feeling more inclined to have sex and be more dominating towards that goal.
Luteal phase
How your body reacts during the luteal phase depends on whether or not pregnancy has occurred. If you have not conceived, the rapid decrease in progesterone levels can leave you feeling slugging—physically and mentally.
Those pesky PMS symptoms may also begin popping up, making you feel more inclined to curl up on the couch than hit the ground running.
Why do ladies Crave Sugary Foods and Carbs
Increases and decreases in progesterone and estrogen have been shown to increase cravings for carbohydrate-rich and sugary foods. Cortisol also plays a role in your affinity for sweets.
Getting your period comes with a host of uncomfortable symptoms like bloating, irritableness, extra tiredness, cramping, headaches, breast tenderness, back pain, etc.
Consuming foods high in sugar and starch that causes the body to release serotonin is a neurotransmitter that helps you feel good, increases happy feelings, and boosts your mood. It’s no wonder your lady is tempted to eat a gigantic bowl of pasta, a plate of fries or a basket of bread when Aunt Flo comes to visit. So go ahead and be a sweetheart and make it easy for her. Prepare something nice, buy what she likes,- she will surely notice your efforts!
The magical and mystical Clitoris and Skene Glands and the art of Squirting!
The clitoris is an erectile tissue of the AFABS located at the junction of the inner lips of vulva and immediately above the external opening of the urethra. The clitoris is responsible for feeling sexual sensations upon stimulation, and in many women, its proper stimulation facilitates orgasm.
Cultural perceptions of the clitoris have had significant impact on the research and knowledge about the clitoris in comparison with the penis, its male counterpart.
The clitoris is an erectile structure, homologous to the male penis It is located inferior to the mons pubis at the anterior end of the vulva where the two labia minora meet. Similar to the penis, it is composed of paired crura, a body and a glans.
Unlike its male counterpart however, the clitoris is not circumscribed by a foreskin nor is it perforated by the urethra and, therefore, has no urinary role. Instead, urethra opens separately, just posteriorly to the clitoris. In addition, most of the clitoris is internal; only its glans measuring an average length of 5 to 8 mm is externally positioned. This is why the clitoris is informally described as having two parts: the internal and external.
During sexual arousal, the clitoris, along with the entire AFAB genitalia, fills with blood. This is due to the muscles contracting and compressing the clitoral veins while the arterial blood flow remains; this increased blood then fills the venous spaces in the corpora cavernosa of the clitoris, leading to its ingurgitation. As the clitoris is richly innervated by sensory fibers, stimulation of the clitoris either direct physical stimulation or mental simulation may lead to female orgasm.
AFABS do usually need clitoral stimulation in order to get sexual satisfaction and orgasm.
What is the Difference Between a Squirting Orgasm, Female Ejaculation, and Sexual Incontinence?
All three of these phenomena involve fluid coming from the bladder during sex. Squirting is the expulsion of urine during an orgasm. Female ejaculation is a release of both urine and a substance from the skene’s glands. Sexual incontinence — also called coital incontinence — is when someone loses control of their bladder during sex.
Ejaculation in people with vaginas may include a small release of a milky white liquid that does not gush out. Squirting, on the other hand, is usually a higher volume. It is possible to squirt and ejaculate at the same time.
Squirting is real. In fact, scientists have documented the phenomenon. However, more research is needed to determine the exact causes of squirting and female ejaculation.
Part of the ambiguity about squirting is that the skene’s glands vary from person to person. Some people with vaginas don’t have any, while others have very small ones.
Each person’s experience with squirting is different. While some methods can make people squirt more than others, there is no one proven method that makes every person with a vagina squirt. This is because each vagina is different. As mentioned, some vaginas lack the skene’s glands which are thought to create the fluid released during ejaculation in people who have vulvas.
Squirting isn’t always a high volume event that soaks the sheets. Sometimes it is a small trickle or a stream of fluid.
The depiction of squirting in porn movies often shows large gushes of squirting liquid. Porn producers fake some of these depictions for dramatic effect. All volumes and forms of squirting are valid. Squirting at different volumes is a normal occurrence during sex for many people.
Some people can squirt or ejaculate before or after an orgasm. Squirting can also occur at the same time as an orgasm. Some people also have multiple spurts of squirting spread over a few minutes.
Explore squirting by yourself or with a partner to find out what works for you.
Some sex experts recommend stimulating the skene glands to achieve a squirting orgasm. Either by yourself or with a partner, take some time to find the skene glands with your fingers and/or sex toys. Pressure on the skene glands may make you feel the need to urinate.
Experiment with different methods of bringing yourself or your partner to a squirting orgasm with skene-gland aka G-spot stimulation. Some ideas include:
- Using sex toys specifically designed to stimulate the g-spot aka skene glands
- Combining clitoral stimulation with g-spot aka skene glands stimulation
- Using lots of lubrication
- Bearing down on your (pelvic) muscles when nearing orgasm
- Strengthen the vaginal muscles with kegel exercises
- Urinate before trying to have a squirting orgasm
For some people, putting too much pressure on the g-spot can feel uncomfortable. Listen to the body and do what feels good. If you are too tense it may be harder to orgasm or squirt.
The last part of this discussion is not suitable for people who are sensitive about learning horrible medical history facts about female medicine practices that still continue in some forms today.
But in order to understand the present time, we must understand the past, for us to make better choices in the future.
Gynecology is the area of medicine that involves the treatment of people with vulvas, especially those of the reproductive organs. It is often paired with the field of obstetrics forming the combined area of obstetrics and gynecology OB-GYN.
Medicine is a practice that is full of opposites. Many absolutely horrible tests, workings that would make people shiver in their spines today, have helped humanity to evolve in the long run. I wholeheartedly agree that there would have been better and humane ways to deal with them and such testings and working methods should never ever have existed.. But human beings are very inventive and sadistical animals. And can and will explain their misconduct with higher purpose. But the end does not justify the means, not even if it costs a lump sum of human lives in the process to save millions.
Because of Nazi Germany and Japanese ruthless and super sadistical experimentations, we have some of ”the benefits” of modern day medicine. We should definitely give thanks to the forced victims of their ”sacrifice”. Medicine is truly the practice of life and death and it´s holy face is coverd in blood of the innocent.
And thus I give you DR.James Marion Sims the creator of gynecology.
James Marion Sims January 25, 1813– November 13, 1883 was an American physician in the field of surgery. He is also remembered for inventing Sims Speculum, Sims sigmoid catheter, and the Sims position.That are still in use today. Against significant opposition, he established, in New York, the first hospital specifically for women. He was forced out of the hospital he founded because he insisted on treating cancer patients; he played a small role in the creation of the nation’s first cancer hospital, which opened after his death.
Because it was not proper to go and ask white ladies (of any social class) to partake in risky, usually deadly and wildly painfull experiments, he used slave women. These women usually died on the operating table while their insides were torn to shreds with multiple different styles and tools.
He has been called a ”butcher” and compared to Nazi physician Josef Mengele. Sims’ practices were defended as consistent with the US in the era in which he lived by physician and anthropologist L. Lewis Wall, and other medical historians. According to Sims, the enslaved black women were ”willing” and had no better option. Witch is kinda true yeah..
One year before he started these experiments, USA medical society had introduced an effective and inexpensive anesthesia called diethyl ether and it was very common amongst doctors. James decided that the ladies did not need such things and operated on them in this fashion.
Now that’s kinda hard core huh, guys? Imagen your penis sliced open without any anesthesia? Stuff for some horror gore films.. idea huh?
That leads me to the paintreatment of people with vulvas today. Most commonly the female experience of pain is usually heavily discarded and usually mistreated in various cases, not only in cases of gynecology stuff but in general in medicine practice.
seksuaalisuus:Dan Apter, Leena Väisälä, Kari Kaimola,
Vau mikä Vagina!:Nina Brochmann, Ellen Stokken Dahl