7 Reasons To Have More Sex (as proved by Science)
Have more sex… because science told you to!
- Sex is Relaxing
- Sex is Exercise
- Sex Makes you Smarter
- Sex Makes you Stronger
- Sex Keeps you Healthy
- Sex Makes you Snuggly
- Sex Keeps your Heart Strong
Have more sex… because science told you to!
Maximize Bliss and feel the amazing feeling of being together, of being in a relationship, of being in love.
By extending and expanding the body’s capacity for pleasure, we celebrate the sacred in others and ourselves. Erotic feeling is a vehicle for exploring ecstatic states and deepening intimacy. Tantra invites us to transform sexual experience by seeing ourselves and our partners differently – releasing cynicism and judgment, and honouring the spirit within.
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16 Naughty Facts about Sex
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When love is new, everything is exciting, including making love. It’s partly why that first few months of married bliss is called the “honeymoon stage”—everything is great, wonderful, and thrilling. However, over time and throughout the years, you may feel a little less energetic about getting intimate with your better half. Here’s how to boost sexual energy.
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When it comes to answering questions about sexual pleasure, Dr. Lori Buckley of the Sinclair Institute knows it all. This time around she discusses the G-Spot and the best sex position to orgasm.
Quotes for long distance relationship lovers. Don’t worry the only thing you need to care about is your faith and trust on each other. A loving relationship will build with time.
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Trying to flirt with the hottie at the bar? Guys list flirting tactics that should be avoided:
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A girl’s dream date may be a guy’s nightmare. In the classic he said, she said comedy form, two women and their men recount the unexpected pleasures and pain of the night before.
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Love can be broken down into three categories; passion, intimacy and commitment. But what comes first and what leads to what? If you can’t choose to be intimate with someone, how can you make sure it sticks around? This week we meet real couples and investigate the secret behind intimacy.
Why do we crave love so much, even to the point that we would die for it? To learn more about our very real, very physical need for romantic love, Helen Fisher and her research team took MRIs of people in love — and people who had just been dumped.
Goooaaaalll…. And you thought the World Cup couldn’t get any sexier.
Tim and Sarah McEown never saw their 22-year age difference as an obstacle in their relationship, until Tim had a heart attack.
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Anthropologist Helen Fisher takes on a tricky topic – love – and explains its evolution, its biochemical foundations and its social importance. She closes with a warning about the potential disaster inherent in antidepressant abuse.
Are you tripping into infatuation or allowing time for real love to develop? Infatuation involves a projection of own needs, hopes, and dreams. While real love cares about the well being of others and not just their own desires.