the Communist manifesto
from each according to their abilities, to each according to their needsthe Cunnilinguist manifesto
to her according to your abilities, from you according to her needs
Caligynephobia – fear of beautiful women
Confucius - 4 galloping horses cannot overtake the tongue
The complete clitoris consists of 18 parts:
- the clitoral junction (or front commissure, the point where the outer lips meet at the base of the pubic mound, marking the upper extent of the visible clitoris)
- the glans
- the inner lips, or “labia minora”
- the hood
- the bridle, or frenulum, the point where the outer edges of the inner lips meet just below the glans
- the fork, or “fourchette”, the membrane stretched above the point where the lower edges of the inner lips meet below the vaginal opening, marking the lower extent of the visible clitoris
- the hymen, or its remnants, which are visible just inside the vaginal opening
- the shaft, which connects the glans and the legs
- the legs, or crura, 2 elongated bodies of erectile tissue shaped like a wishbone
- the bulbs, 2 large bodies of corpus cavernosum erectile tissue corresponding to the single bulb of the penis
- the urethral sponge, a body of corpus spongiosum erectile tissue surrounding the urethra
- the paraurethral glands; the female prostate glands
- the vulvovaginal, or Bartholin’s glands, which produce a small amount of lubrication outside of the vagina
- the perineal, or perineal, a dense network of blood vessels that lies underneath the perineum
- the pelvic floor muscles: a. the bulbocavernosus (BC) muscle, which lies underneath the bulbs of the clitoris and the anal sphincter (AS) muscle, b. the ischiocavernosus (IC) muscles, which outline the triangular pelvic opening, or outlet, and are attached to the bones we sit on, c. the transverse perineal (TP) muscles, the broad band of muscles that outlines the bottom of the pelvic opening and is interwoven with the intersection of the bulbocavernous muscle and the anal sphincter muscle, d. the urogenital diaphragm (UD), the flat, triangle-shaped muscle that lies under the pelvic opening, e. the levator ani (LA) muscle, a part of the pelvic diaphragm, the broad, flat, funnel-shaped muscle that is the bottom of the pelvic floor
- the suspensory ligament and the round ligament
- the nerves: the pudendal nerve, (or the genital nerve complex) and possibly the hypogastric nerve, which carries messages back and forth from the uterus
- the blood vessels, which bring a greatly increased blood supply to the pelvis during sexual response
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