Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
Life

Women Fake Sexual Pleasure To End 'Bad' Sex

The Canadian Press, 09 Jul, 2016 01:31 PM
    When talking about troubling sexual encounters some women mention faking sexual pleasure to speed up their male partner's orgasm and ultimately end sex that they do not enjoy.
     
    For the study, the researchers interviewed a small group of women (aged 19 -28) who had been sexually active for at least one year.
     
    "While some women spoke about faking orgasm in positive ways, for instance, as a pleasurable experience that heightened their own arousal, many talked about feigning pleasure in the context of unwanted and unpleasurable sexual experiences,” said one of the researchers Emily Thomas from Ryerson University in Toronto, Canada.
     
    "Within these accounts, we were struck by the degree to which women were connecting the practice of faking orgasm to accounts of unwanted sex," she noted.
     
    Despite being recruited to talk about consensual sex, all women spoke explicitly of a problematic sexual experience. 
     
    Interviews were analysed to explore how these women negotiate and account for experiences of problem sex in the context of exaggerating sexual pleasure and faking orgasm.
     
     
    Analysis showed that the women never used terms such as rape and coercion to refer to their own experiences - despite their descriptions of events that could be categorised as such.
     
    Instead, women described their experiences of unwanted sex in indirect ways. For example, women used the term 'bad' to describe sex that was both unwanted and unpleasurable.
     
    The women spoke of faking orgasm as a means to ending these troubling sexual encounters.
     
    In other words, faking orgasm provided a solution for ending sex where, culturally, not many options are available.
     
    The findings were presented at the British Psychological Society's Psychology of Women annual conference in Windsor, Berkshire, Britain.

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    Men get more upset by sexual than emotional infidelity

    In the largest such study on sexual and emotional infidelity, researchers from Chapman University have learnt that men and women are different when it comes to feeling jealous.

    Men get more upset by sexual than emotional infidelity

    Weight-loss Resolutions Go For A Toss After New Year Begins

    Weight-loss Resolutions Go For A Toss After New Year Begins
    Resolutions to eat better and lose weight soon lose relevance as people end up buying the higher levels of junk food after the New Year begins, a study says.

    Weight-loss Resolutions Go For A Toss After New Year Begins

    Rape? No, It's Hypermasculinity, For Some Men On Campus

    Rape? No, It's Hypermasculinity, For Some Men On Campus
    Some men who do not have feelings of hostility toward women can still engage in sexual assaults on the campus, researchers report, adding that they consider their behaviour as an achievement rather than rape.

    Rape? No, It's Hypermasculinity, For Some Men On Campus

    Mindless Chatter Better For Improving A Child's Communication Skills Than Bedtime Reading

    Mindless Chatter Better For Improving A Child's Communication Skills Than Bedtime Reading
    Absent-minded conversations with your infants work much better at improving their communication and problem-solving skills than reading a book to them or showing them pictures, says a study.

    Mindless Chatter Better For Improving A Child's Communication Skills Than Bedtime Reading

    Falling In Love Tops New Year Resolutions

    Falling In Love Tops New Year Resolutions
    Attaining a fit body and happy life are common New Year resolutions, but in 2015, many seem to be pledging to fall in love, according to a study by dating site 

    Falling In Love Tops New Year Resolutions

    5 Things To Know: Americans' Sense Of Civic Duty Is Slipping, Especially Among The Young

    5 Things To Know: Americans' Sense Of Civic Duty Is Slipping, Especially Among The Young
    An Associated Press-GfK poll found that the sense of duty has slipped since a similar survey three decades earlier. Civic virtues such as staying informed or serving on a jury don't seem as important as they once did — especially among the younger generation.

    5 Things To Know: Americans' Sense Of Civic Duty Is Slipping, Especially Among The Young