Look here Ma, that durn POKO has started up a blog on this here internet thingamabob.
BillyBob, have you done finished milking the cows? You know reading that tripe POKO writes wont get the chores done!
Okay Ma, I'll do my chores now and read the blog after I feed the pigs. That durn POKO, he's always up to something...






It's More Than A Blog    -  no need to add water and stir, just take it straight up

Came to life: on December 31, 2004 23:59 PM      Not a journalist, but highly opinionated

BlogMmmmmyasssss is more than just a blog - BlogMmmmmyasssss is full of yummy stuff.

BLOGmmmmmyasssss

To All The Women I've Loved Before

Before what you ask? Nevermind, just read the link below.

According to a study published this week, up to 45% of the differences between women in their ability to reach orgasm can be explained by their genes. Despite decades of surveys and conjecture about the role of culture, upbringing and biology in female sexual function, from Freud in 1905 to the Hite report in 1976, this is the first study of the role of a woman’s genes.

Its findings suggest there is an underlying biological basis to a woman’s ability to achieve orgasm. Whether that basis is anatomical, physiological or psychological remains uncertain, says Tim Spector of the twin research unit at St Thomas’ Hospital in London, UK, who carried out the study.

'But it is saying that it is not purely cultural, or due to peer pressure, or to differences in upbringing or religion,' he says. 'There are wide differences between women and a lot of these differences are due to genes.'

Spector's team asked more than 6000 female twins to fill out a confidential questionnaire about how often they achieved orgasm during intercourse and masturbation. They received 4037 complete replies, which included answers from 683 pairs of non-identical twins and 714 pairs of identical twins. The women’s ages ranged from 19 to 83, and about 3% were lesbian or bisexual.

Only 14% of the women reported always experiencing orgasm during intercourse. Another 32% of the women reported that they were unable to achieve orgasm more than a quarter of the time, while 16% never achieved it at all. Comparing the results from identical and non-identical twins suggests that 34% of this variation in ability to orgasm during intercourse is genetic.

The idea behind twin studies is that pairs of twins grow up in similar environments. So if identical twins are more similar in some way than non-identical twins, then that similarity must be down to their identical genes rather than the environment.

Unsurprisingly, more women were able to achieve orgasm through masturbation, with 34% saying they could always do so. However, the figure for those who could never achieve it was only slightly lower, at 14%. The analysis suggests that 45% of this variation is genetic.

Catallarchy says 'blame it on Darwin'. All I know is it wasn't me afterall ladies. Yes! I'm still a man's man. I stand up to pee, I leave the toilet seat down only so the dogs don't drink there, I got a hairy chest, and most important - if you don't reach an orgasm it ain't my fault.

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