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Twyla LaSarc wrote:I got some possible sketches for the 'Clit Dancers' costume floating in the 'wings' if it gets that far. I found the Fremont Parade to be somewhat inspiring...
Project Willow wrote:Well, I did indeed take the time to write to Tom Tomorrow. I've always liked his work.
I respectfully do not agree. Be bold, Ms. West, be the leader of the new vulvolution! Vulvolujah! Which reminds me, I clitored up my place today, it needs some editing.
Project Willow wrote::bigsmile
Joe, I think that's every man's line at some point.
Burnt Hill wrote:I look foward to your findings.
Becky Chalker wrote:The clitoris is a powerful organ of sexual pleasure. The tip or glans alone has more than 8,000 sensory nerve endings-more than any other part of the human body.
Because the shaft and the glans of the clitoris have no subalbugineal layer between the erectile tissue and the tunica albuginea the organ becomes tumescent or swollen with effective sexual stimulation but does not become erect or rigid. Nevertheless, human clitoral erectile tissue has the capacity to develop drug-induced priapism which responds by detumescing following administration of a-adrenergic agonists. The earliest attempt to characterise the possible mechanism(s) by which the crura and vestibular bulbs changed from the flaccid to the tumescent state was published first in diagrammatic form by Danesino & Martella in Italian. Their working hypothesis, based on the early mechanisms suggested for penile erection, was that during sexual excitement smooth muscle polsters (“cushions”) in the arteries supplying the two vestibular bodies became relaxed. Those polsters in the draining veins became contracted as did those in the a-v anastomoses. This diverted blood into the lacunae, filling them and creating tumescence. For detumescence, the arterial polsters contracted while those in the veins and a-v anastomoses relaxed, reducing the flow to the lacunae and allowing the blood restricted in them to flow away. Despite this mechanism being published in English for over 23 years, no independent confirmation of either the mechanism or the polsters in the female arteries and veins have yet appeared. It must be regarded as a speculative working hypothesis.
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Unlike the clitoral glans the male glans is pierced by the urethra. It has been suggested that there are really two glans in the female, a clitoral glans) and a glans that surrounds the urethra (periurethral glans). The periurethral glans is defined as the triangular area of mucous membrane surrounding the urethral meatus from the clitoral glans to the vaginal upper rim or caruncle. The periurethral glans is mobile and has been shown to be pushed into and pulled out of the vagina by penile thrusting during coitus.
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