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Rwandan women And Gspot

I was concerned to read in 'New Scientist' Issue 2644 Emmanuele Jannini, a researcher from the
University of L'Aquila in Italy say that it might be possible soon to test if a woman has a G spot
or not using an ultrasound probe, however much this might cost. Jannini goes on to say that those
women who suspect they may not have a G spot need not despair. "They can still have a normal
orgasm through stimulation of the clitoris."

It does not take vaginal ultrasound to find a G spot, just a plastic speculum bought over the
counter at the chemists. G spots come in many different colours and these colours are sometimes
mistaken by surgeons as diseased tissue and removed. (Yes there is genital mutilation in the
UK.) G spots can be found at the front of the vagina, at the back, one either side, all four
positions together, or none at all in which case the whole vagina is more sensitive than ones the
ones with G spots to stimulation. When there is two together at the sides, in a few cases, the G
spots can be a bit smaller than average. Some women do not achieve vaginal orgasm in the
experiments and this is due to primary orgasmic dysfunction. A page on a low tech cure for this
problem can be seen on my website.

'New Scientist' goes on to the work of social scientists Marian Koster and Lisa Price who
examine inner labia stretching in Rwandan women who say that they can ejaculate. Their study
misses the crucial point of how Rwandan women learnt how to ejaculate and how they do it and
so women from other countries miss out on this opportunity.

Yes, all women can ejaculate. To explain, a clitoral orgasm takes three and a half minutes to
achieve whilst a vaginal orgasm takes five minutes. This can be seen in female ejaculation which
is achieved after five minutes of pulling gently downwards on the inner labia. (Which is what the
Rwandan women have been doing with their stretching routine.) After three and a half minutes
the pleasurable sensation goes, but when it is carried on the pleasurable sensation comes back
shortly before five minutes and female ejaculation occurs on five minutes, which is the length of
time needed for a G spot orgasm.

Women who suffer from diabetes are the exception to the norm and need to take a little longer.

Rwandan Women Elongate Their Labia

In Rwanda women practice stretching & pulling their labia minora to

elongate them. Marian Koster MSc & Dr. Lisa Price of Wageningen Uni,

Netherlands, emphasize that Rwandan women experience their elongated labia

as positive & a positive impact on their sexual pleasure & that of their partner

viewed by Rwandan women as facilitating female ejaculation

& orgasm. In western countries, labiaplasty (labia reduction & beautification)


is becoming increasingly popular as a form of female cosmetic surgery.

Koster & Price note that while practices that aim to reduce, enlarge or otherwise

beautify the external female genitalia are influenced by cultural aesthetics they are

nevertheless highly controversial.

Koster discovered this practice while conducting field research in Rwanda surrounding

the effects of genocide on rural livelihoods and life-ways. Girls start

pulling their labia during puberty & use local medicinal plants to facilitate the pulling.

After learning how to pull the labia from female relatives or friends, girls & women

continue to pull their own labia through to adulthood & marriage.

The practice is of particular interest because it opens the door to understanding the

intimate relationship between women's views on sexual pleasure & sexuality which

are little documented outside of the Western context. Koster & Price suggest it equal interest
because

of the biomedical properties of the plants women

actually use in the elongation process. Price says the study illustrates a woman

centered area of ethnobotanical knowledge embedded in practice.

The evidence suggests Solanum aculeastrum Dunal & Bidens pilosa L., 2

species the women apply externally, have antibacterial, antimicrobial, antiseptic,

anti-inflammatory & analgesic properties.

The World Health Org classifies the elongation of the labia minora as a

form of female genital mutilation. Mutilation, however, carries powerful negative

connotations. Koster and Price find such a classification problematic because

mutilations generally have the effect of reducing women's sexual pleasure and

violating women's integrity and rights. This does not appear to be in evidence
from their study. Thus, Koster and Price question the use of the term mutilation

and propose that the term female genital modification may better capture the reality

of this practice in the context of Rwanda.

The World Health Organization is scheduled to release an amendment later this

month where labia elongation will be treated differently.

Rwandan Women View The Elongation Of Their Labia As Positive

In Rwanda women practice the stretching and pulling of their labia minora in order to elongate them.
Marian Koster MSc and Dr. Lisa Price of Wageningen University, Netherlands, emphasize that Rwandan
women experience their elongated labia as positive and as having a positive impact on their sexual
pleasure and that of their partner. The elongated labia are viewed by Rwandan women as facilitating
female ejaculation and orgasm. In western countries, labiaplasty (labia reduction and beautification) is
becoming increasingly popular as a form of female cosmetic surgery.

Koster and Price note that while practices that aim to reduce, enlarge or otherwise beautify the external
female genitalia are influenced by cultural aesthetics they are nevertheless highly controversial.

Koster discovered this practice while conducting field research in Rwanda surrounding the effects of
genocide on rural livelihoods and life-ways. She found that girls start pulling their labia during puberty
and use local medicinal plants to facilitate the pulling. After learning how to pull the labia from female
relatives or friends, girls and women continue to pull their own labia through to adulthood and
marriage.

The practice is of particular interest because it opens the door to understanding the intimate
relationship between women's views on sexual pleasure and sexuality which are little documented
outside of the Western context. Koster and Price suggest that it is of equal interest because of the
biomedical properties of the plants women actually use in the elongation process. Price says the study
illustrates a woman centered area of ethnobotanical knowledge embedded in practice. The evidence
suggests that Solanum aculeastrum Dunal and Bidens pilosa L., two species the women apply externally,
have antibacterial, antimicrobial, antiseptic, anti-inflammatory and analgesic properties.

The World Health Organization classifies the elongation of the labia minora as a form of female genital
mutilation. Mutilation, however, carries powerful negative connotations. Koster and Price find such a
classification problematic because mutilations generally have the effect of reducing women's sexual
pleasure and violating women's integrity and rights. This does not appear to be in evidence from their
study. Thus, Koster and Price question the use of the term mutilation and propose that the term female
genital modification may better capture the reality of this practice in the context of Rwanda.

The World Health Organization is scheduled to release an amendment later this month where labia
elongation will be treated differently.
Female ejaculation is considered rare in the west, and even, by some, abnormal. In Rwanda,
however, it is the norm.

Social scientists Marian Koster and Lisa Price of Wageningen University in the Netherlands
interviewed 11 women and two men in Rwanda about “gukuna imishino”, which is the practice
of elongating the labia minora, the inner vaginal lips. “The Rwandan women and men we
interviewed were clear in their opinion that all Rwandan women are able to ejaculate, the
ejaculation being different from the mere squirting of urine,” Koster says. “Elongated labia are
seen as crucial in this respect.”

From around puberty onwards, Rwandan girls start stretching the labia minora using plant
extracts with antiseptic and anti-inflammatory properties, with the aim of achieving a length of
about 5 centimetres. The WHO considers this practice as a form of genital mutilation, but Koster
and Price argue that it should be reclassified as genital modification. “We believe that there are
cultural practices that are not harmful to women’s integrity and rights,” says Koster.

Their interviewees reported, and Koster and Price speculate, that labial elongation increases the
sexual pleasure of both sexes. “Since the labia minora swell during sexual excitement, there is a
larger surface area for penile friction during coitus,” they write

Kunyaza, the secret to female orgasm

Nsekuye Bizimana throws light on a revolutionary ancestral sexual practice

Experts confirm that 70% of women do not achieve orgasm from vaginal penetration alone. To help
them achieve sexual satisfaction, Nsekuye Bizimana has decided to bring an african ancestral practice,
known as “kunyaza”, to light. In “Le secret de l’amour à l’africaine » [the secret of african lovemaking] he
reveals this ancestral sexual practice from the Central and Eastern African regions.

Nsekuye Bizimana is persuaded that Africa holds the key to female sexual orgasm. His passion
for African sexuality has led him to the study of an ancestral sexual practice in his homeland,
Rwanda, as well as Burundi, Eastern parts of Democratic Republic of Congo as well as the
western parts of both Uganda and Tanzania. Having survived by virtue of oral tradition,
“Kunyaza” is said to be so effective that most women do not only experience multiple orgasms
but also ejaculation. Nsekuye Bizimana gives a detailed account of Kunyaza with illustrations in
his book Le secret de l’amour à l’africaine published in Germany where he is based and soon
available in the United States. Nsekuya Bizimana, also the head of a kunyaza research institute,
hopes that his book will shed more light on the “magical caress” around the world. Men have
now no excuse to escape the total satisfaction of their female partners, 70% of whom - according
to research – do not attain orgasm only by vaginal penetration.

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