Tag Archives: virginity

When sex is a pain

Simple solution … sexual discomfort can be alleviated with counselling and exercise. Photo: Stock image

Some months ago an article on this page called Virginity’s Unwitting Casualties, author Luke Malone quoted my statement that saving oneself for marriage can bring on an unexpected condition called “vaginismus”. This syndrome drew a lot of interest and some confusion. in today’s column I will explain exactly what vaginismus is and how it can be treated.

Women who suffer from vaginismus find that attempts at sexual intercourse are very painful or unsuccessful. This involuntary contraction of the muscles surrounding the entrance to the vagina, makes the muscles around the vagina shut down and prevents her partner from penetrating, it feels like he has hit a brick wall.

Vaginismus is not due to a physical abnormality. some women wonder if their vagina is too small or they have no vaginal opening at all and that is the reason why sex is so difficult. But in most cases the vagina is perfectly normal and would be capable of intercourse without pain, if the pelvic floor muscles could be relaxed.

As this often will be experienced on, or after, the wedding night one can imagine how distressing this is for a couple who just can’t understand what is happening to them. they waited so long and now sex is impossible and they are not able to consummate their marriage. also the women often believe it is their fault and blame themselves or their partner who will then feel frustrated, rejected or inadequate

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It is also such a taboo topic that they often are too embarrassed to discuss the issue with their family or friends and suffer in silence. some couples take years before they finally look for help.

My research tells me that primary vaginismus affects at least two per cent of women in Australia, who due to religious or cultural reasons have developed an overriding fear of penetrative sex. This was also confirmed in the article by retired Australian obstetrician and internationally noted sexologist Dr Jules Black who in his long career saw many patients who he says, were misdiagnosed by medical professionals.

Dr Black mentioned that some of his patients were advised by their physicians to undergo hymenectomy or a “Fenton’s procedure”, which is an operation to widen the entrance to the vagina. I was under the impression this procedure is obsolete. But two months ago I saw a client in my practice to whom the Fenton’s procedure had been recommended – urgently – by a well-known Sydney gynecologist.

My client is a 21-year-old girl who comes from a strict religious back ground. She visited her GP after she found out that it was impossible to have penetrative sex with her boyfriend. This GP, who obviously did not recognise the nature of her problem, referred the young woman to a gynecologist. my client was devastated, the thought of having an operation at “that part” of her body made her petrified. Only after reading Luke Malone’s article some days later, did she realise that she was probably suffering from vaginismus and contacted me. She was not alone, after reading this article another four women discovered they were suffering from it.

Both sexually experienced and inexperienced women can develop vaginismus. Primary vaginismus occurs when a woman has never, at any time, been able to have pain-free intercourse. they often are unable to insert anything: the doctor’s finger or speculum, when they need a Pap smear or vaginal examination; their own or partner’s finger; or even a tampon.

Secondary vaginismus occurs when a woman who previously has enjoyed intercourse without pain, develops the condition later. it can be triggered by a traumatic experience like a difficult child birth, sexual assault or painful experiences with intercourse due to underlying conditions such endometriosis, pelvic or vaginal infections, low sexual arousal with lack of lubrication, menopausal dryness or other vulval conditions.

Vaginismus is treated by counselling, education, anxiety reduction, pelvic floor exercises and retraining of the pelvic floor muscles. Psychosexual education is important as it is essential that the woman gains knowledge of her sexual anatomy. Women who suffer from vaginismus are often raised in moral or religious homes, schools or institutions and, after a childhood of anti-sexual messages, it can be very difficult to face sexual interaction and accept sexual pleasure, even within a loving relationship.

Through counselling by an experienced sex therapist, the sufferer is able to free herself of the negative moral understandings that contribute to her condition. Post counselling I refer my clients to an experienced pelvic floor physiotherapist who specialises in this area. The treatment of vaginismus involves unlearning the fear-contraction reflex and learning to keep the pelvic floor muscles relaxed during intercourse.

Successful treatment does not require drugs, surgery or any complex invasive techniques. some plastic surgeons have been injecting Botox, a procedure that none of my clients ever contemplated and, in my opinion, should be regarded as a last resort.

I would like to make the public and the media aware of this condition as I realise that very few people know about it.

I also would like to hear from women who have had bad experiences.

Next time when you have an appointment with your GP or gynecologist, ask them if they know what vaginismus is!

Matty Silver is a Sydney-based sex therapist.

When sex is a pain

Sex and the Newspaper – Analysis – DNA

Why are newspapers so full of filth and wrong information when it comes to sex?

Owing to the necessities of its very nature (salacious) a newspaper constantly struggles with a restlessness that isn’t immediately recognised as innate and is often mistaken for genuine innovation. seen in the context of the multitude of meanings that erupt the moment one opens a newspaper, it is this restlessness, this knowing without really knowing, we end up with every time we stare down the deep Beckettian void in the heart and mind of the modern newspaper reader.

If you think I am bullshitting, you are right. in newspapers, sex and bullshit go hand in hand. Fact is sex and sleaze is now widely recognised as an important desk in any respectable and family-oriented newsroom. every page has ample scope for sex. Page one is reserved for sex of the freak show kind: basically news that shocks us: Two-year-old girl raped; man, 80, married 18th time, becomes father; Grandma gets surgery, gifts grandpa her virginity; Shanghai sells more sex dolls than sanitary napkins, etc.

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Page two onwards, sex gets less shocking. It becomes clinical and criminal. We read of sex in crime and medicine. We read about rape and sex education. The world pages are dedicated to sex of the scientific and salacious nature: technological breakthroughs in fertility and how latest research shows that two of every three women is bisexual and how four out of every four men would want that ratio to be three out of three.

I have not collated facts personally or done any physical research, but I think it’s fair to assume that on any given day a newspaper is most likely to have at least two to three stories on sex and as a rule of thumb the stories will have conflicting moral stands which essentially exploit the sex-is-sin complex and strengthen it in the process.

One story says this is the best time to find one’s true love; another story says every fifth married man cheats on his wife. how can the best time to find true love also be the time when most people are cheating on their partners? On page four, one reads about a seminar decrying plastic surgery and on page five there is a story on the five top plastic surgeons in Bandra.

Sometimes, when I feel bored or low or in need of some laughs, I pick up a well-known afternoon tabloid and go through its column on sex problems. Most writers are male and nine times out of ten the men are either too scared to masturbate or cannot control their habit. I don’t laugh at the problems, I laugh at the answers. to the novice the doctor says it’s okay to be with yourself every once in a while, to score a century one must be good at the nets; to the rabid the doctor advises caution: too much net practice may wear you out.

A few months back, a highly suspicious scientific finding was published in almost all national dailies, with page one display in the serious papers. The purpose of the study was to find out why women tell their husbands that their child looks like him. The reason, according to the study, was to convince the dad of the child’s paternity and secure their future. Not one letter was published the next day questioning the scientific basis of the study or the misogynistic leanings of the newspapers. how should a family of four with two middle school children react to such stories?

The reader is bound to feel neurotic. how do you reconcile two opposing moral positions without coming across as completely shallow and superfluous? Words like fling, scandal, adultery, womanising, etc have lost their moral rigidity in the same way as words like kindness, marriage, sacrifice, gratitude, duty, etc have lost theirs. The only moral truths on which there is seldom any conflict in popular media are corporate truths, the proof of which is provided on a quarterly basis by the markets.

Over the years, I have developed a theory: most newspaper editors do not get enough action. Funnily enough, the only lesson I learnt in journalism school from my professor (who was a veteran edit page hand) was that people who have sex in their mind don’t have it in the right place. When I walked into my first newspaper job and attended a news meeting, I put two and two together. One of the high points of my stint there had been to walk into a shop, buy a sex toy and write about it.

When I was in school, it was believed that a good newspaper is like a society talking to itself; a good newspaper today, in my opinion, is like a society having sex with itself. I am not against writing on sex; I am only opposed to bad writing, especially of the form that celebrates the new openness as an excuse to write anything about sex, quoting anyone from a sexologist to a school girl depending on the personal curiosity of the correspondent.

When I was growing up, there was a problem with sex: some of us grew up thinking sex is a sin. every generation suffers from it and (depending on individual resilience) passes it on to the next all the time hoping they do not make the mistakes their parents did because their parents did not bring them up the way their grandparents brought their parents up. Sex is still a sin, but the message from the medium is sharper: sex is sin; sin is fun.

Alas, politics for the sake of politics and sex for the sake of sex is not the same as art for the sake of art or writing for the sake of writing, which is why I think newspapers devote so much space to sex and politics: if sex and politics are no longer cheap, what will the poor public do for its daily fix?

Mayank Tewari is a writer.

Sex and the Newspaper – Analysis – DNA

Link Between Watching Pornography And Having Sex Younger

The internet is bad! before it came along and opened up the eyes of youngsters everywhere to online porn, little boys had to steal from their fathers’ secret stash of Playboy, or, at the very least, the swimsuit of Sports Illustrated. but a study published in CyberPyschology and Behaviour revealed that men between 12 and 17 who regularly viewed porn had sex at an earlier age and were more likely to initiate oral sex. Women who watched pornography at younger age also lost their virginity earlier. “The internet is having some kind of accelerant effect, influencing and changing behavior,” said Shane Krauss, a psychologist from Castleton State College in Vermont, who performed the survey. “Males are having oral sex and losing their virginity much younger when they are exposed to pornography, sometimes by a good three or four years for oral sex or two years for their virginity.” In short, make sure your kids stay on the Disney website, rather than clicking over to X Tube if you want them to remain chaste longer. [Sunday Herald (Scotland)]

<a href="http://www.thefrisky.com/post/246-morning-quickies-091311/tag:news.google.com,2005:cluster=http://www.thefrisky.com/post/246-morning-quickies-091311/Tue, 13 Sep 2011 14:25:18 GMT 00:00″>Link Between Watching Pornography And Having Sex Younger

I am ugly and have a big nose. Is plastic surgery the answer?

Can plastic surgery make me "good looking" or at least "less ugly".

Seriously I am 24 never had a g/f and I had to get a prostitute to lose my virginity.

I know it's expensive but can you put a price on happiness?

Surgery isnt always the answer, because it can absolutely go wrong. however, if you're extremely unhappy right now with the way you are, then it can provide a solution. If you consider your nose to be a birth defect that you can't work around, then it's not wrong to consider plastic surgery; lots of people with similar problems do, and it helps them a lot with insecurity or personality problems.
Just be careful with it, because you can't always have a quick fix for everything that you dont like about yourself. in this case, though, I would most likely go through with it myself.
Hope that helps!

you cant put a price on happiness but if you really feel that your nose is the down point and making you so unhappy then check one out. Make sure it is a reputable one and they will answer your questions etc on how it makes you feel and why you believe you want it done.because you have low self esteem and believe that surgery is the only way to go then by all means it would not hurt to look into it. Alot of pple have had the surgery and it does make them feel so much better about themselves good luck besides you are the one that has to face the world with what you have. and if it makes you so unhappy give it ago and keep your options open :)

it really doesnt matter about looks much with girls what you really need to have is game!, some spice! and know how 2 talk to them trust me girls arent all about looks guys are luck cus i see ugly dudes with pertty As! gurls! soo they myst be doing something right? what you need to do is get a make over and if that doesnt work then yeah i guess as long as your happy, but also surgery can make you look worse than wat you expected and they can leave your nose crukid if they mess up hope your lucky (sorry ofr my spelling)

You are ugly because you say you are. you create your own reality and because you see yourself as such, so does everyone else. Learn to love yourself and not succumb to desperate measures such as surgery. maybe one day we will all walk around like clones and not really know what anyone really looks like!

girls arn't after your looks so much. It's so much more about personality. Just accept your self the way you are. Well, i don't know unless you think the nose job will help YOU gain confidence in yourself so you have a easier time approching girls.

. Hell..look at Owen Wilson..his nose is crooked all the way to the bank

I am ugly and have a big nose. Is plastic surgery the answer?