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TMN: Which brings me to my next question. Why doesn’t intercourse lead to orgasm?
IK: The interior walls of the vagina have comparatively few nerve endings. On many women, you can rub them all day without much happening. Look, 1 in 10,000 women are born with a condition called vaginal agenesis, which means that they literally don’t have a vagina. And they can’t have children without surgery, but they can still have orgasms through the clitoris.

TMN: Orgasms are orgasms.
IK: Just use Occam’s razor: ‘Entia non sunt multiplicanda necessitatem.’ ‘One should not make more assumptions than are absolutely necessary.’ Eliminate the concepts that aren’t needed to explain the phenomenon. There’s no need to quibble over semantics when it comes to identifying orgasms. The clitoris encompasses them all. The tongue is far better used to produce orgasms than waste time naming them.

TMN: And are people doing it? By doing it, I mean clam lapping.
IK: I surveyed a lot of people for my book, and while there’s some truth in the stereotypes, there were also a lot of surprises. As an example, there are still guys out there who are freaked out by cunnilingus and maintain a double standard when it comes to oral sex – no quid pro quo. But surprisingly, or not surprisingly when you consider that our culture is insanely fixated on body image, women seem to have the worst problems with it – they feel that their genitalia are ugly, or they have this stereotype that men don’t like it. But a lot of men, most men I spoke with, they love to go down, love to give and move beyond their penises. And women have these messed-up body images.

TMN: Sex and the City didn’t change all that, huh?
IK: Even on that show, the women still exist primarily, sexually, within the context of the male gaze. The cues as to what’s desirable still come from men. The idea is that men have to be pleased, and women create their sexual identities in response to that. I’ve heard over and over from women about cunnilingus that they’re worried that they’re taking too long, worried he finds it distasteful. Plus we have a media that focuses on genital hygiene, menstrual symptoms. You’ll still find that most women prefer to have sex in the dark or candlelight because they think their bodies are ugly. So sometimes, as a man, you have to assure your partner that this is something you want to do, that it’s OK if it takes a while.

TMN: Sometimes it can be a little ripe. Not at all in my current relationship, of course, because my girlfriend is like a daisy. But in the past.
IK: Yes. Gertrude Stein aside, a rose is a rose isn’t always a rose. Usually a bad scent or taste is a sign of an imbalance. Women’s genitals are a self-cleaning system. Cleaner than most other parts of the body, including the mouth. If there’s an imbalance, yogurt and antibiotic treatments can help. One other thing about odor is, sperm is highly alkaline. So if a woman is promiscuous, and has frequent unprotected sex with different partners, the pH level of the vagina rises and unhealthy bacteria can gain an advantage for a time, until things balance out again.

TMN: What about menstruation? Yea, or nea?
IK: That’s appendix six in the book, ‘The Scarlet Kiss.’

TMN: And your verdict? All systems go? Earn your redwings?
IK: Absolutely. You want to use a fresh tampon and a washcloth. The tampon not only restricts any blood flow, but also applies pressure against the clitoral cluster (what’s typically known as the G-spot, but please would you want a part of your sexual anatomy named after a dead German physician?), which enhances sensation. This can be a great thing. But watch it if you’re practicing safe sex – there’s an increased rate of STD transmittal when a woman is menstruating.

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