Good Adult Content Hints And Tips

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It doesn’t take much to convince someone masturbation has at least one upside: Experience one orgasm, and the majority of people are likely to want another (and another, and another…). But while pleasure is arguably worth it strictly for its own sake, masturbation has a whole lot more to offer than toe-curling orgasms. Despite a cultural failure to take self-love seriously, it turns out that regularly getting it on solo may be good for our physical and mental health, our relationships, and our overall happiness.

Masturbation Nation-The Need-to-Know
As outlined by some researchers, up to 95% of men and 89 to 92 percent of women throughout the country report having masturbated (i.e., having touched one’s self for sexual pleasure), and 52 percent of women have used a vibratorTrusted Source. But while nearly equal rates of males and females get down with their own selves, it appears men do so a lot more frequently. Forty-six percent of women report masturbating less than once a month each year, while their male counterparts engage in regular monthly (or maybe more frequent) masturbation sessions at rates nearly 3 times as high.

Even though nearly all American adults have rubbed one out eventually or another, cultural attitudes toward masturbation remain a lot less universally accepting. A Google search for “psychological effects of masturbation” turns up 10 pages almost exclusively devoted to sources claiming that masturbation is a terrible sin and promising to help masturbators “cure” themselves. While these sources are hardly the only sort of masturbation education around, they represent a more general cultural failure to take seriously masturbation’s role in sexual health.

Historically, masturbation has been stigmatized as being both a sign and great adult content (Additional Info) a cause of mental health issues. While modern cultural attitudes make masturbation slightly less taboo, Sexologist and Sexuality Educator Megan Andelloux often sees history repeating itself. “As children, lots of people were shamed or chastised when caught masturbating,” says Andelloux. “If they don’t get taught that sexuality and masturbation are common as well as can be healthy, then they can’t have those conversations with their very own children down the line.” People may also be uncomfortable speaking about masturbation because it’s a non-public, vulnerable activity, says Sex Therapist and Greatist Expert Ian Kerner.

Cultural discomfort with the topic of masturbation is further exacerbated by some wild myths, among them the (false) ideas that masturbation will stunt growth, cause blindness or deafness, cause stuttering, cause hair to grow on the palms, make someone “promiscuous,” and even kill people (If that have been true, the world wouldn’t have a population problem).