Now, I know what you may have been thinking of, and in fact you're not too far off the mark. In more ways than one, a woman's clitoris is her own version of a penis.
Like the penis, the clitoris is the best way to warm up a woman's sexual anatomy and deliver her to orgasm. In fact, two-thirds of women require some form of clitoral stimulation when they're in search of climax.
The clitoris is also made up of the very same erectile tissue as the penis. As embryos, we all start out with the same undifferentiated sex anatomy. Around the seventh week of development, a boy's erectile tissue develops outward (as a penis and testes), while in girls the majority of tissue remains inside the body. As a result, what we think of as the clitoris — the little bump, or glans, toward the top of where the labia minora meet — belies its true internal magnitude. Turns out the clitoris is quite a force to be reckoned with.
It was just a few years ago — in 1998 — that an Australian researcher named Helen O'Connell discovered the vast structure within. The little bump you see externally is connected to a clitoral shaft. Two legs extend from the shaft backward into the pelvic cavity. Two additional bundles of tissue — the clitoral bulbs — reach down to wrap around the vagina. That's why a well-stimulated clitoris helps arouse other parts of a woman's sexual anatomy.
So, long story short: Pay attention to it!
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