Authors: Debby Herbenick,Vanessa Schick
ANOTHER V WORTH CELEBRATING: VIBRATORS!
Many women are curious about vibrators. In fact, according to research that our team published in 2009, 53 percent of women and nearly half of men have used a vibrator. Most men who had used a vibrator had done so with a partner, though nearly one out of five had tried vibrator play alone.
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Here’s your opportunity for a crash course on vibrators for vivacious vaginal and vulvar play (how’s that for a bunch of Vs?), including how to choose vibrators and other sex toys and how to put them to good, and possibly orgasmic, use.
In her work as a sex educator and columnist, Debby is often asked how to choose a vibrator that’s good for beginners. While there is no one vibrator that will be right for everyone, here are a few things to keep in mind. A woman who is new to vibrators and other sex toys might be best served to choose one that:
If you have one of the following sex toys (some of which are vibrators, though not all are), consider these tips on pleasurable vulva and vagina play.
TEST YOUR VQ
1. The clitoral complex is composed of all of the following EXCEPT the
a. vagina
b. urethra
c. labia
d. clitoris
2. A woman may experience orgasm as a result of sensory information from which of the following nerves:
a. pudendal nerve
b. pelvic nerve
c. hypogastric nerve
d. vagus nerve
e. all of the above
3. According to data from the National Survey of Sexual Health and Behavior (NSSHB), approximately how many women experienced difficulty with lubrication during their most recent experience having sex?
a. 5 percent
b. 10 percent
c. 30 percent
d. 50 percent
Answers
1. c
2. e
3. c
• 4 •
How Do I Look?
How We Come to Think and Feel the Way We Do about Our Vulvas
I’LL SHOW YOU MINE IF YOU SHOW ME YOURS
As a young child, did you ever play “doctor”? Or games like “I’ll show you mine if you show me yours”? If so, you’re not alone. A number of research studies—including a study that Debby worked on years ago when she first began working at The Kinsey Institute— have found that young children (both girls and boys) play games like this.
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It’s a common way that girls and boys learn about their bodies and explore the world around them.
A particularly interesting study on this topic was conducted in Germany by Dr. Bettine Schuhrke.
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She studied children at age two and again at age six to understand how they came to learn about their genitals. Specifically, she asked one parent of each child in the study (typically she asked the mother) to answer questions about the various ways that their child had indicated an interest in their own or another’s genitals. She found that, at the age of two, over 90 percent of the children had behaved in a way that indicated an interest in another person’s genitals (e.g., the genitals of the child’s mother, father, brother, sister, etc.). In her research article, Dr. Schuhrke provided an example of a toddler who noticed her father’s penis as he was changing one day. The toddler asked to touch it and her father allowed her to. The toddler continued to ask every day for about a week and a half before she lost interest in her father’s penis. Although this is an example of a girl learning about male genitals, the young girls in the study were equally as interested in learning about the vulva.
Another interesting finding is that children in this study typically only began to explore and ask questions about other people’s genitals after they had already explored their own. Why is this important? First of all, if you have or care for children now or in the future, we want you to feel prepared for some very common situations of general exploration. There’s no reason to feel alarmed if, for instance, your child points to your genitals or asks questions about your genitals while you’re going to the bathroom, taking a shower, or changing clothes. Second, and more importantly, we want to reassure you that this is totally and completely 100 percent normal. Genital curiosity begins at a stage before most children are even able to contemplate the complications of playing doctor or house. And if children are exposed to family members of another sex, then they often want to know why their private parts look different from their own. All of this is a normal part of how young humans learn about bodies.
Cunt-parisons
Given how common it is for children to explore their own genitals and those of other children, you might wonder what happens to this genital curiosity as children get older. Some children don’t do much exploring for years. They may be satisfied with having learned about the differences between boys’ bodies and girls’ bodies, or they may have been scolded for touching their own genitals or those of a friend and feel scared or embarrassed to touch themselves or ask to see another child’s body again. Other children continue their exploration. As children become more “sex-segregated”—meaning that girls tend to play mostly with other girls and boys tend to play mostly with other boys—some of this genital curiosity turns into genital comparison. Women in our research studies have talked about comparing their vulvas, and specifically their labia, with their friends. Also, in her book
Chelsea Chelsea Bang Bang
, comedian and author Chelsea Handler wrote about learning to masturbate at a sleepover at a childhood friend’s home.
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Like teenagers and adults, children compare bodies and genitals both because they are curious and also because they want to know if they are “normal.”
As a professional dancer early on in my career (I was perhaps 20), I was in a show where everyone was super comfortable and we were always naked in our dressing room. I remember some of my friends comparing labia one day and for me, I had never stared so closely or had such an up close look at a vagina other than mine. I found it fascinating. I loved seeing how different they all were. I haven’t had much opportunity since then (aside from porn) as my partners have all been men.
—
K
ATE,
28, Canada
For many other body parts, the “am I normal?” question is an easy one to answer. If we want to know whether our ears are large or small, all we have to do is look around at other people’s ears. After all, ears are everywhere and easily seen. The same is true for noses, butts, and even—to some extent—breasts (though it’s not always so easy to tell what’s real or not due to padded/enhanced bras and breast implants). From these comparisons, we can usually identify where we fit along the spectrum of height, weight, breast size, nose size, ear size, and so on. We may not be thrilled with what we notice, but at least people have a sense of where they belong and the knowledge that others are like them.
Vulvas are an entirely different story. How are girls or women supposed to know what other vulvas look like? Vulvas are not noses or even breasts. Even in leggings or bathing suits it can be tricky to see any genital detail. When we’ve asked this question to groups of men, they often are quick to suggest that there are plenty of opportunities for women to compare and contrast genitals, frequently citing the locker room as a good place to get a sense of what other women’s genitals look like. Those of us who spend time at the gym know that’s not the case, though. First, it feels creepy and inappropriate to stare at other women’s genitals when uninvited. Second, few women parade around the gym completely nude. In our gym experiences, women seem to spend only a short amount of time naked before putting their clothes back on. And third, even when women are nude, there’s rarely much that one can see. Pubic hair, for those who keep it, conceals some parts of the vulva. Also, unless a woman parts her legs, there’s not often a lot to see. Vulva parts are naturally kind of “hidden” between a woman’s legs.
The first real one I saw was my sister’s—when she needed me to help her apply some medication. I was surprised, and I think pleased, that hers and mine looked so similar.