I Love Orgasms Audiolibro Por Dorian Solot, Marshall Miller, Maybe Burke arte de portada

I Love Orgasms

A Guide to More

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The back-cracking, toe-curling, spine-tingling guide to orgasms that will have you saying, “Let’s do it some more-gasms!”

Whether you’re looking to have your first orgasm, learning to squirt, or hoping to turn up the heat for a partner, I <3 Orgasms is the book for you. Drawing on their over twenty years of experience teaching audiences about sexual pleasure, plus the voices of thousands of survey-takers who share their experiences in these pages, sex education experts Dorian Solot and Marshall Miller help you find the pleasure they know is within your reach. In this fully revised and updated edition, they’ve crammed in even more info about the big O for aficionados and beginners alike, including: 

  • How to have an orgasm during penetration
  • The newest research on squirting
  • Directions on finding your way to the G-spot
  • Detailed advice on how to have your first orgasm
  • The best advances in sex toy technology
  • New and expanded content on penises, prostates, and pegging
  • Glimpses of what 3,525 survey respondents are doing in their bedrooms (and elsewhere!)

Solot and Miller have collaborated with Maybe Burke of the Transgender Training Institute to create the most inclusive book on sexual pleasure available today. Whether you’re looking to orgasm or just looking for a pleasure boost, seeking info for yourself or to thrill your partner, this new edition of I <3 Orgasms is for you. No shame, no secrecy—just straightforward guidance for healthy sex that feels great.

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It's really distracting that the book refuses to use the word "woman" and continually calls women "people with vulvas", "clitoris owners", etc. I get that they're trying to be inclusive, but erasing the word "woman" from a book that's supposed to about women's sexuality (a topic that's long been ignored or censored) comes across as insulting. I don't think treating the word "woman" like it's a dirty word that can't be said actually does anything to help women, and terms like "people with a vagina" are both clunky and demeaning. Women don't like being reduced to our body parts or bodily functions. It feels like the same old sexism but with a progressive veneer. Maybe the authors can figure out a way to read about female sexuality in a way that doesn't erase the word "woman" but also feels inclusive. Until then, I'm regretting my purchase.

Disappointing (and kind of insulting)

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