Pelvic floor
The Pelvic Floor is composed by different interconnected muscles (nerevs and tendons) shaped as an hammock. This terms seems funny but it's actually the best one, as the Pelvic Floor, as the hammock, holds up everything above it. It has been divided into three different sections: the inner one, known as levator ani, is the one we should know better. We use it when we want to hold pee or when we do Kegel exercises. Above this level there is the second section that involves the area of the vaginal opening and the urethra opening. The last one, shaped ad...
Anal beads
Anal Beads are sphere connected together - can also have graduated size- which intensify the penetrative feeling.
Penis
Male sexual organ is composed by 10 different main parts. Going from the inside and invisible parts to the outside, we find the bladder, which is connected to the urethra (the little tube through which pee and sperm come out), the prostate gland (in charge of producing a fluid that protects sperm from the acid reaction of the vagina but also a pleasurable area) and the seminal vescicles (the producer of seminal liquid). This last one is connected, through the vas deferent, with the testicles so that, through the vas deferent, sperm is carried to the seminal vescicles. Among the...
Love eggs
Usually shaped as eggs, these vibrators are for internal stimulation. They look like Kegel Balls but are not the same thing (don't have weight and are better for play than training). Some models have remote control for better fun.
G spot
There are all sorts of mythes and discussions around the G Spot. It's been named after the German gynaecologist Ernst Grafenberg, who first officially discovered it in 1940s. The G Spot is an area located at the entrance of the vagina, almost 1.5in in, on the anterior vaginal wall. When aroused it's easier to identify this area as it feels like a sponge. What we know for sure is that, if stimulated correctly, this can bring us to climax. Recent studies, in fact, stated that area on the vaginal wall is the closest one to the inner part of the...
Vagina
The vagina is the muscular tube that connects the outer part of the vulva with the cervix of the uterus (which is almost a closed end). It's involved into sex, menstruation and giving birth. This tube is normally compressed, to avoid anything unwanted to get in, but it had amazing stretching capabilities. The vagina is normally 7-10cm long, but when you are aroused it expands is all directions, length- and widthwise. Normally the vagina is a strong muscular tube, thanks to the support of pelvic floor muscles (that's why we have to keep them in good shape), and it gets...