If there were a roll call for the founding
fathers of sex myths for men, a couple of no-brainers would surely make the
list: porn legend John Holmes, whose yule-log-size penis still casts a shadow
over anxiety-prone males. Ditto NBA-great Wilt Chamberlain, whose claim of
having slept with 20,000 women makes Don Juan look monastic.
And then there's purveyor-of-sex-myths Walt
Disney.
"I think Walt Disney creates a lot of
mythology," says Seth Prosterman, PhD, a clinical sexologist and
licensed marriage and family therapist practicing in San Francisco.
"In Disney movies, people fall in love and walk into the sunset, and you
get this myth that intimacy is a given once you fall in love, and
sexuality is natural and follows that."
In reality, says Prosterman, "Sex is
something that we learn throughout a lifetime."
If sexuality is a continuing education, a
lot of us are scrambling to make up course credits. And in a realm that's
clouded by ego, myth and advertising that preys on anxieties, getting the facts
about sex can be difficult. What is the average size of the male penis? How
long do most men last during intercourse? Can men have multiple orgasms? Does
the G-spot exist, and if so, how do I find it?
Penis Size: The Hard Facts
"Drastically enlarge the penis length
and width to sizes previously thought impossible!" reads a website for the
Penis Enlargement Patch. (One envisions a lab-coated mad scientist pouring
chemicals on his own penis, then shouting "Eureka!" and phoning
the Guinness Book.) Almost anyone with an email account has been
deluged by spam for such miracle-growth patches and pills, and the endurance of
sex myths may explain the pervasiveness of such ads.
"We equate masculinity and power with
penis size," says Ira Sharlip, MD, clinical professor of urology at the
University of California at San Francisco and president of the International
Society for Sexual Medicine. "Of course, there's really no
relationship." Still, Sharlip says, "all" of his patients want
to increase their penis size.
The idea that bigger is better is "not
just total mythology," says Seth Prosterman, who has counseled couples
since 1984 and notes that some of the women he's worked with do prefer a bigger
penis -- aesthetically or "fit-wise." But, he adds, "For the
vast majority of partners, penis size doesn't matter."
So what, exactly, constitutes a big penis?
Let's whip out some data:
The average penis size is between five and
six inches. That's for an erect penis.
The flaccid male organ averages around
three and a half inches.
Sex Fact: We Are Not Our Penises
If you had an anxiety hiccup before you
read the "erect" qualifier, consider it a metaphor for the danger of
jumping to conclusions about penis size -- or about the primacy of the penis
altogether.
"The idea that the penis is the most
important part of your body underlies so many of men's sexual problems,"
says Cory Silverberg, a sexual health educator and founding member of
Come As You Are, an education-based sex store in Toronto. "One of the
biggest sex myths for men is the notion that we are our penises, and that's all
that counts in terms of sex."
"It's a myth that using the penis is
the main way to pleasure a woman," says Ian Kerner, PhD, a sex and
relationships counselor in New York City whose book She Comes
First offers a guide to "female orgasms and producing them
through inspired oral techniques." In his book, Kerner cites a study that
reports women reaching orgasm about 25% of the time with intercourse, compared
with 81% of the time during oral sex.
Just the Facts on the G-Spot
If sex myths have such power over men's
thinking about their own anatomy, they have even more sway
when it comes to female partners' bodies -- especially the much-debated G-spot.
Named after a German doctor, Ernst
Gräfenberg, who first wrote about an erogenous zone in the anterior vaginal
wall, the G-spot was popularized by a 1982 book called ... The G-spot.
This region behind the pubic bone is often credited as the trigger for a
vaginal (vs. clitoral) orgasm, and even a catalyst for female ejaculation.
At the same time, the G-spot is commonly
derided as perpetuating the myth ensconced by Sigmund Freud -- namely, that the
clitoral orgasm is a "lesser" form of climax than the vaginal orgasm,
which requires penile penetration. As Ian Kerner summarizes, "In Freud's
view, there were no two ways about it: If a woman couldn't be satisfied by
penetrative sex, something must be wrong with her."
The G-spot's existence is still debated,
and whether it's fact or fiction depends on whom you ask.
"The G-spot exists," says Seth
Prosterman. "It's a source of powerful orgasm for a percentage of
women."
"I don't think the G-spot
exists," says Ira Sharlip. "As urologists, we operate in that area
[where the G-spot should be] and there just isn't anything there -- there's no
anatomical structure that's there."
Prosterman and others point out the
importance of thinking of the G-spot in context -- that it may be an extension
of the clitoral anatomy, which extends back into the vaginal canal. Kerner
writes that the G-spot may be "nothing more than the roots of the clitoris
crisscrossing the urethral sponge."
In the end, whether this debated locus of
pleasure is fact or fiction may not matter that much. O'Connell, who is also
co-author of a 2005 Journal of Urology study on the anatomy of
the clitoris, says that focusing on the G-spot to the exclusion of the rest of
a woman's body is "a bit like stimulating a guy's testicles without
touching the penis and expecting an orgasm to occur just because love is
present." She says focusing on the inside of the vagina to the exclusion
of the clitoris is "unlikely to bring about orgasm. It is best to think of
the clitoris, urethra, and vagina as one unit because they are intimately
related."
How Long : How Premature Is Premature Ejaculation?
The possibilities for exploring a woman's
erogenous zones may be tremendously exciting -- which leads to another source
of sex myth and male anxiety: How long can I last? And how long should I be
able to last?
Premature ejaculation is "the most common
form of sexual dysfunction in younger men" according to Ira Sharlip, and
its prevalence is around 20% to 30% in men of all ages.
The medical method of determining premature
ejaculation is called "intravaginal ejaculatory latency time" (IELT),
a stopwatch-timed duration measured from the beginning of vaginal penetration
until ejaculation occurs. However, Sharlip adds, this quantitative measure
doesn't tell the whole story: "There are men who ejaculate within a minute
but say that they don't have premature ejaculation. And then on other end of
spectrum, there are patients who are able to last for 20 minutes, and they say
they do have premature ejaculation."
A study in the Journal of Sexual Medicine found " a median IELT of 5.4 minutes". Ian Kerner says a common cutoff time used to define premature ejaculation is 2 minutes, but he adds that many of the men he works with "are not guys who can last a few minutes; they're having orgasms during foreplay, or immediately upon penetrating. They have a hard time lasting past 30 seconds".
But on the other hand, if guys took an hour to ejaculate, we'd be a much smaller planet.
A study in the Journal of Sexual Medicine found " a median IELT of 5.4 minutes". Ian Kerner says a common cutoff time used to define premature ejaculation is 2 minutes, but he adds that many of the men he works with "are not guys who can last a few minutes; they're having orgasms during foreplay, or immediately upon penetrating. They have a hard time lasting past 30 seconds".
But on the other hand, if guys took an hour to ejaculate, we'd be a much smaller planet.
In other words, the definition of
"premature" may be largely in the eye (or mind) of the beholder, and
depends on a man's sexual satisfaction and his perception of his ability to
control when ejaculation occurs.
And, contrary to the common
perception that distraction or decreasing stimulation is the answer (slow down,
think about baseball), some say that giving in to sensation can help address
the issue as well. "The way to learn [to last longer] is by getting used
to intense stimulation," says Prosterman, "to increase the frequency
of intercourse, and feel every sensation of being inside your partner and enjoy
it."
Come Again? The Mythical Multiple Orgasm
for Men
While multiple male orgasm is possible
anywhere two or more men are gathered and talking, actual male multiple orgasm
is another story. Unlike the more established phenomenon of female multiple
orgasm, men's claims of successive climaxes can stray into the realm of sex
myth. At the very least, male multiple orgasm is difficult to verify and may
depend on the definition of orgasm.
Prosterman says that the book The
Multi-Orgasmic Man popularized "an Eastern meditative process
that involves wrapping the PC [pubococcygeus] muscle around the prostate.
There's a valve on the prostate that switches on and off before urination and
ejaculation. The PC muscle stops this valve from opening, allowing an orgasm
without ejaculation. The idea is to keep doing that five or six times in a row.
"Out of hundreds of guys I know who've
tried this," says Prosterman, "I know only one who's been able to do
it."
Is this man Mr. Lucky, or just prone to
poetic license?
A 1989 study in the Archives of
Sexual Behavior recorded the testimony of 21 other men who claimed to
be multi-orgasmic, but Ira Sharlip says "that doesn't happen,"
referring to the phenomenon of "multiple orgasms in succession over a
short period of time -- like minutes." And there's no such thing as separating
ejaculation and orgasm, he says.
Orgasm or Orgasm-esque?
What may be at issue here is the definition
of orgasm -- which, according to a 2001 Clinical Psychology Review article,
has been strikingly inconsistent. "Many definitions of orgasm "depict
orgasm quantitatively as a 'peak' state that may not differentiate orgasm
adequately from a high state of sexual arousal," the study's authors
wrote.
In other words, those men who report
multiple orgasms may be able to achieve orgasm-esque states before they hit the
point of ejaculatory no-return. And many men report that strengthening the PC
muscles through Kegel exercises allows them to edge closer to this "point
of inevitability" without cresting the mountaintop of ejaculation and descending
into the gentle valley of the flaccid and the "refractory" period,
where the penis is temporarily unresponsive to sexual stimulation.
This refractory period -- commonly 30
minutes or more -- is an unfortunate reality. While you're
"waiting," spending that time caressing, kissing, massaging, and
nuzzling isn't so bad. If you are trying to have a second round because your
partner wants it, keep sex toys in mind.
And if that recovery period isn't super
quick, you can still enjoy multiple orgasms -- you may just need to cancel your
afternoon appointments.
It's Not Always about the Numbers
In the end, there seems to be a recurring
theme in moving beyond sex myths: Don't get too hung up on the numbers.
So often the key to sexual satisfaction is
not about penis size, stamina records, or a technical isolation of the G-spot.
Rather, it's about understanding yourself and your partner's desires and
recognizing that, unlike those Disney characters, real people aren't born with
a perfect, divinely granted understanding of sex.
Kindly
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courtesy webmd
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