How to Increase Your Sex Drive
She also
claims some women are incapable of orgasming
Some people
are, ahem, in the mood all the time. Others, well, aren’t. And differing sex
drives can be an issue in relationships.
There could,
however, be one simple way to make yourself want to jump into bed with your
partner though: go for a run.
According to
neuroscientist Dr Nicole Prause, this is a way of almost tricking yourself into
feeling like you can’t resist your partner.
“Generally
speaking, if your heart rate is increased and you see your partner, you’re more
likely to interpret your excitement as due to your partner. Even if it’s not,”
Dr Prause told The Times.
She also
revealed that there’s no such thing as an aphrodisiac and recommends sexting
while at work: “Starting to be sexual and talking about fantasies. That may
help get things started.”
What’s more,
the 38-year-old believes arousal has become more responsive and less
spontaneous than it used to be, which means you might sometimes have to start
engaging in sexual stimulation before you really want it: “You start hugging,
you kiss… you start to have those urges,” she says.
Dr Prause is
a female orgasm expert based in Los Angeles, who spends her days measuring the
brain responses of patients while they orgasm.
She believes
the UK is more open than our more prudish American neighbours across the pond,
and concedes that there’s still a lot more scientific research to be done into
orgasms.
And the
female orgasm in particular.
“The male genitals are just easier to measure.
We already understand quite a lot about how the penis works, because it is so
accessible,” Dr Prause says.
“It is
literally just harder to study the vagina because it’s internal. The types of
imaging, when you can get access to them even, aspects are blocked by the
bladder.”
However she
concedes that there are other reasons we know less about female sexuality such
as: “guy stuff, basic sexism issues, seeing male sexuality as more important.”
Dr Prause
believes that relaxing is key to orgasming: “You have to release control. So if
you’ve got the laundry list going through your head, ‘I’ve got to pick up the
kids soon, before I get the car, I’ve got to do the oil change’, there will be
no orgasm in your life.”
Disappointingly,
Dr Prause claims that 15 to 20 per cent of women are physically unable to
orgasm, which is known as being “anorgasmic”.
It’s not all
bad news though, as women are apparently having much better sex than we were
decades ago. Dr Prause says women are: “More desired, less functional, more
likely to initiate sexual encounters, more likely to report orgasms from sexual
encounters.”
What’s more,
our ability to orgasm is actually hereditary, Dr Prause reveals: “Orgasm is
heritable; that means that, genetically, people whose mums had orgasms and
orgasmed more consistently are more likely to orgasm themselves.”
Whether you
feel bold enough to ask your mother about her orgasmic history is your call.
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