Skip to main contentdfsdf

Home/ xprattmarkussen63's Library/ Notes/ The following documentary segment provides a synopsis of labiaplasty. It subsequently discusses how magazines in Australia are driven to censor / augment women's vulvas to be able to get a particular acceptance rating from the Classification Board. This b

The following documentary segment provides a synopsis of labiaplasty. It subsequently discusses how magazines in Australia are driven to censor / augment women's vulvas to be able to get a particular acceptance rating from the Classification Board. This b

from web site

nude beach beaches family nudism sex spy young nudist voyeur fuck famil

Coincidence? Hmmm
milf on beach may be thinking that "These are men's magazines. I do not read them, nor do I watch pornography. Why would I and other non-porn-viewing girls be changed by this?" Studies have demonstrated that most regular consumers of porn are indeed men and 1 out of 3 visitors to all mature sites are women.
So how can porn impact women who don't view pornography consistently?
Although girls and women don't see pornography often, they are still just as likely to be exposed to at least soft-core porn, at a youthful age. Whether it is in a magazine or online, "Soft-core porn" can be as simple as the bare Playboy model above (presumably supposed to titillate guys).
If that is basically girls' only exposure to nudity, then it is just natural that they'll necessarily compare themselves to these nude models (and as a result, they will reason that their vulva is strange). In reference to their genitals, the message they'll get is that they need to shave their pubes and get labiaplasty. Otherwise they will not be normal, nor will they be sexually desirable to men.
In researching labiaplasty, I Have also encounter several accounts of girls and young women who claimed they were getting teased by friends, family, guys or boyfriends about their protruding labia! This sort of intimidation must be coming from young individuals who have no ideathat the female vulva is as varied as the number of girls who have them.
They are as exceptional as someone's face. The Museum of Sex now has a large display entitled "The Sex Lives of Animals," which includes a section about animal genitalia. I found this quotation which exemplifies my point: T here isn't any one right' shape for a member or for a vulvaamong people and throughout the animal kingom. Few, if any, arrangements reveal more variation than the genitals.
As numerous naturists have found, the current style for pubic hair is to go totally naked. Naturally, porn is generally seen as the driving force behind this tendency. The overall dearth of pubic hair now is also cited as leading factor in the recent labiaplasty tendency. Since naked vulvas are so widespread in mainstream pornography, it allows producers of porn to show even more genital element and to make the labia that much more observable.
In 2011 some British feminists staged "The Muff March." It was a demonstration against the negative influences of porn which make girls feel the need to shave their pubes or get vaginal cosmetic surgery. This post about the demonstration states that from 2007 to 2008 labiaplasty operations rose by 70% in the united kingdom.
Sex Education
Many people are not too quick to pin the blame entirely on pornography. Some believe the issue stems directly from sex education - or lack thereof.
In a Huffpost Live segment entitled Designer Vaginas, sex-positive teacher Carlin Ross says:
The number one problem, worldwide, with men and women, girls and boys, is genital shame. And http://www.artensoft.de/go.php?url=https://xelyd.com believe it is because we don't teach that there's a variety of genital styleseveryone is different and exceptional..You can see penises in pop culture but when do you see a woman kind of spread open? You don'tas much as from an educational standpoint, at what point does a young girl see 10 or 12 images of a range of what a vulva can seem like? the average vulva has dangling inner lips.
Right! A typical sex-ed course in America will reveal girls a simple (medical journal sort) illustration of a vulva. It will have the names of all the various parts, but that is it. That is all I saw in my 6th grade sex ed course.
Ross, together with famed sexologist Betty Dodson, runs a sex ed website, dodsonandross.com. Dodson has frequently said that up until the age of 35, she thought her vulva was deformed. She felt this way because she had no other visual benchmark of what the average vulva resembles.
Sex-positive activists like Dodson and Ross, Laci Green and others supply some wonderful online resources and information on sex and sexuality. But how about sex ed in American schools? Are educators moving beyond textbook illustrations and minimal advice?
xprattmarkussen63

Saved by xprattmarkussen63

on May 23, 20