Sexy Man Dick

Sexy Man Dick




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Explainer
The best sex positions if he has a big dick
Sex needn’t be hard just ’cause he’s hung – trust us and read on.
Sometimes described as the worst problem to encounter in a partner, there is a misconception that guys with big dicks can be impossible to have sex with – but well hung guys really don’t need to be an issue for you or your sex life.
Penises come in all different shapes and sizes, and it’s true that some people sit quite happily at the larger end of the penis length spectrum.
There’s a lot to cover when it comes to penetrative sex, so this article will only cover what to do when there are two (or more) penises in the bedroom.
If you’re looking for more general sexual health advice, we’d recommend checking out the sexual health charity Brook.
Penis length is sadly a cause of anxiety for men, especially those who worry about how their penis measures up to the rest.
There’s no hard and fast rule about what is classified as a ‘big’ penis and, of course, it’s not always about length either.
Penis girth or width is also an important thing to take into consideration.
But generally speaking, it’d be wrong to assume that the positive messaging surrounding having a big dick equates to an easy or healthy sex life.
Porn gives off the idea that having a large penis is something to be celebrated, putting men who have them at the top of the sexual food chain.
So we might not always consider how having a big dick could be a barrier to someone’s sex life, especially when it comes to penetrative sex.
You or your partner may be anxious about having penetrative sex, through fear of it being painful or uncomfortable, so we’ve put together some ideas to try out together.
You will have heard this one before, but let’s just say it again – lube is very important when it comes to anal sex.
Your anus will thank you for providing it with plenty of lube before any form of penetration, since the anus isn’t self-lubricating.
If your partner has a big dick, however, you’re going to want to use an extra special amount of lube to help him get in through your back door.
Getting your engine warmed up before anal sex is important, so ask your partner to give your anus some attention with his fingers.
Once you’ve lubed up, asking your partner to introduce a finger into your anus can help it to open up and for you to feel more at ease about having something inside there.
Then you can build up with a few more fingers, or switch to a sex toy to help further stimulate your anus.
Butt plugs and other sex toys can be a great tool to help your anus open up and for you to grow in confidence about anal penetration.
Get him to do some of the work, whilst you take a break.
Lying on your back with your knees tucked into your chest is a great way to help your anal canal straighten out.
This will give his dick a straighter and smoother route of entry, and it’ll be more comfortable for you too.
Work together to discover what feels right for you, by communicating with him about how far you want him to go inside.
If you’re struggling with his dick inside you, try some deep breathing.
This may sound a little daft, but it’ll help calm you down and if you’re calm, your anus will relax and open up more.
Let him know that you want to pause for a moment at any time, and then let him know when you’re ready to continue again.
Another technique to try when you’re a little more comfortable is clenching your butt muscles when his dick is already inside and then relaxing them.
Getting down on your hands and knees, facing away from your partner as he enters you from behind is also a position that suits some people.
Because your partner has a big dick, you might want to start off by bringing your knees close to your chest and then slowly opening out on to all fours.
If you’re struggling with angle or depth of penetration, sliding a couple of pillows between your stomach and the bed can provide you with some extra support.
The support can also help you to relax more, as you won’t be tensing your muscles as much in order to maintain your position.
Just because you’re receiving, doesn’t mean you’re not allowed to get on top.
Facing your partner, straddle him and reach behind with your hands to guide his dick to your back entrance.
Once he’s inside, you’re in full control of how deep you want to go.
Experimenting with varying depths of penetration, either in the same session or across different sessions, can help you know how far you want his penis to go.
This applies to rhythm too – for beginners, taking things slowly and then gradually building up the speed is the way to go.
Sometimes you just don’t fancy penetration and that’s OK!
A sexual relationship is more than just penetrative anal sex, so if you’ve not been able to enjoy it with your partner, there’s plenty more things to be getting busy with in the bedroom.
Even the Queen of Pop dedicated a whole song to oral, so don’t overlook it.
If you’re not used to having a dick of a certain size inside you, we agree that it can feel a bit strange and overwhelming.
Sometimes sexual partners feel like they need to go for a pee during penetration, which is more common among people who lie on their back when being penetrated.
That’s because your partner’s dick is hitting your bladder and causing it to think you need to go to the toilet.
Trying another position or changing the angle of penetration might help to avoid this problem.
In general, it’s very common to feel like you need to go to the toilet when being penetrated.
Your body mistakenly thinks that your bowel is full, but don’t worry it’s just his dick.
Consent still applies, even if he is well endowed!
Celebs you didn’t know have an LGBT sibling
Negotiating safer sex with a partner who has a big dick is also about understanding that he might not have found the right condom size that suits him.
Letting him know that there are a variety of condom sizes (both length and width), that will help ensure that when he does use a condom, it fits his penis well.
Using a condom that is too small increases the risk of it breaking and puts you both at greater risk of sexually transmitted infections (STIs).
Experience has a lot to answer for – sex, irrespective of your partner’s size, is a process of discovering what works best for you and communicating your wants and needs to your partner.
We’ve only included a few of the endless sex positions here, so don’t let that restrict your creativity between the sheets.
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"Todger" redirects here. For the British First World War recipient of the Victoria Cross nicknamed "Todger", see Thomas Alfred Jones.
The human penis is an external male intromittent organ that additionally serves as the urinal duct. The main parts are the root (radix); the body (corpus); and the epithelium of the penis including the shaft skin and the foreskin (prepuce) covering the glans penis. The body of the penis is made up of three columns of tissue: two corpora cavernosa on the dorsal side and corpus spongiosum between them on the ventral side. The human male urethra passes through the prostate gland, where it is joined by the ejaculatory duct, and then through the penis. The urethra traverses the corpus spongiosum, and its opening, the meatus (/miːˈeɪtəs/), lies on the tip of the glans penis. It is a passage both for urination and ejaculation of semen (see male reproductive system.)
A flaccid penis, with surrounding pubic hair removed to show anatomical detail
Most of the penis develops from the same embryonic tissue as does the clitoris in females. The skin around the penis and the urethra come from the same embryonic tissue from which develops the labia minora in females.[1][2] An erection is the stiffening and rising of the penis, which occurs during sexual arousal. Erections can also occur in non-sexual situations; spontaneous non-sexual erections frequently occur during adolescence and during sleep. In its flaccid (unerect) state, the shaft of the penis has the feel of a dense sponge encased in very smooth eyelid-type skin. The glans of the penis, in uncircumcised males, is covered by the foreskin. In its fully erect (hard) state, the shaft of the penis is rigid, with the skin tightly stretched. The glans of the erect penis has the feel of a raw mushroom. An erect penis may be straight or curved and may point at an upward angle, a downward angle, or straight ahead. As of 2015, the best research on penis size concluded that the average erect human penis is 13.12 cm (5.17 inches) long and has a circumference of 11.66 cm (4.59 inches).[3][4] Neither age nor size of the flaccid penis accurately predicts erectile length.
The most common form of alterations of the penis are circumcision and piercings. Circumcision is the removal of part or all of the foreskin for various cultural, religious, and, more rarely, medical reasons, and there is controversy surrounding the practice.
Efforts by scientists to partially or fully regenerate the structures of the human penis are currently underway. Patients who can benefit most from this field are those who have congenital defects, cancer, injuries that have excised parts or all of their penis, and men wishing to reverse forms of involuntary genital modification.
The human penis is made up of three columns of tissue: two corpora cavernosa lie next to each other on the dorsal side and one corpus spongiosum lies between them on the ventral side.[6]
The enlarged and bulbous-shaped end of the corpus spongiosum forms the glans penis with two specific types of sinusoids, which supports the foreskin, or prepuce, a loose fold of skin that in adults can retract to expose the glans.[7] The area on the underside of the penis, where the foreskin is attached, is called the frenum, or frenulum. The rounded base of the glans is called the corona. The perineal raphe is the noticeable line along the underside of the penis.
The urethra, which is the last part of the urinary tract, traverses the corpus spongiosum, and its opening, known as the meatus /miːˈeɪtəs/, lies on the tip of the glans penis. It is a passage both for urine and for the ejaculation of semen. Sperm are produced in the testes and stored in the attached epididymis. During ejaculation, sperm are propelled up the vas deferens, two ducts that pass over and behind the bladder. Fluids are added by the seminal vesicles and the vas deferens turns into the ejaculatory ducts, which join the urethra inside the prostate gland. The prostate as well as the bulbourethral glands add further secretions, and the semen is expelled through the penis.
The raphe is the visible ridge between the lateral halves of the penis, found on the ventral or underside of the penis, running from the meatus (opening of the urethra) across the scrotum to the perineum (area between scrotum and anus).[8]
The human penis differs from those of most other mammals, as it has no baculum (or erectile bone) and instead relies entirely on engorgement with blood to reach its erect state. A distal ligament buttresses the glans penis and plays an integral role to the penile fibroskeleton, and the structure is called "os analog," a term coined by Geng Long Hsu in the Encyclopedia of Reproduction.[9] It is a remnant of baculum evolved likely due to change in mating practice.[10]
The human penis cannot be withdrawn into the groin, and it is larger than average in the animal kingdom in proportion to body mass. The human penis is reciprocating from a cotton soft to a bony rigidity resulting from penile arterial flow varied between 2-3 to 60-80 mL/Min implies the most ideal milieu to apply Pascal's law in the entire human body; the overall structure is unique.[9]
Penile measurements vary, with studies that rely on self-measurement reporting a significantly higher average size than those which rely on measurements taken by health professionals. As of 2015, a systematic review of 15,521 men (and the best research to date on the topic, as the subjects were measured by health professionals) concluded that the average length of an erect human penis is 13.12 cm (5.17 inches) long, while the average circumference of an erect human penis is 11.66 cm (4.59 inches).[3][4]
Among all primates, the human penis is the largest in girth, but is comparable to the chimpanzee penis and the penises of certain other primates in length.[11] Penis size is affected by genetics, but also by environmental factors such as fertility medications[12] and chemical/pollution exposure.[13][14][15] The longest officially documented human penis was found by physician Robert Latou Dickinson. It was 34.3 cm (13.5 in) long and 15.9 cm (6.26 in) around.[16]
In the developing fetus, the genital tubercle develops into the glans of the penis in males and into the clitoral glans in females; they are homologous. The urogenital fold develops into the skin around the shaft of the penis and the urethra in males and into the labia minora in females.[1] The corpora cavernosa are homologous to the body of the clitoris; the corpus spongiosum is homologous to the vestibular bulbs beneath the labia minora; the scrotum, homologous to the labia majora; and the foreskin, homologous to the clitoral hood.[1][19] The raphe does not exist in females, because there, the two halves are not connected.
On entering puberty, the penis, scrotum and testicles will enlarge toward maturity. During the process, pubic hair grows above and around the penis. A large-scale study assessing penis size in thousands of 17- to 19-year-old males found no difference in average penis size between 17-year-olds and 19-year-olds. From this, it can be concluded that penile growth is typically complete not later than age 17, and possibly earlier.[20]
In males the expulsion of urine from the body is done through the penis. The urethra drains the bladder through the prostate gland where it is joined by the ejaculatory duct, and then onward to the penis. At the root of the penis (the proximal end of the corpus spongiosum) lies the external sphincter muscle. This is a small sphincter of striated muscle tissue and is in healthy males under voluntary control. Relaxing the urethra sphincter allows the urine in the upper urethra to enter the penis properly and thus empty the urinary bladder.
Physiologically, urination involves coordination between the central, autonomic, and somatic nervous systems. In infants, some elderly individuals, and those with neurological injury, urination may occur as an involuntary reflex. Brain centers that regulate urination include the pontine micturition center, periaqueductal gray, and the cerebral cortex.[21] During erection, these centers block the relaxation of the sphincter muscles, so as to act as a physiological separation of the excretory and reproductive function of the penis, and preventing urine from entering the upper portion of the urethra during ejaculation.[22]
The distal section of the urethra allows a human male to direct the stream of urine by holding the penis. This flexibility allows the male to choose the posture in which to urinate. In cultures where more than a minimum of clothing is worn, the penis allows the male to urinate while standing without removing much of the clothing. It is customary for some boys and men to urinate in seated or crouched positions. The preferred position may be influenced by cultural or religious beliefs.[23] Research on the medical superiority of either position exists, but the data are heterogenic. A meta-analysis[24] summarizing the evidence found no superior position for young, healthy males. For elderly males with LUTS, however, the sitting position when compared to the standing position is differentiated by the following:
This urodynamic profile is related to a lower risk of urologic complications, such as cystitis and bladder stones.
An erection is the stiffening and rising of the penis, which occurs during sexual arousal, though it can also happen in non-sexual situations. Spontaneous erections frequently occur during adolescence due to friction with clothing, a full bladder or large intestine, hormone fluctuations, nervousness, and undressing in a nonsexual situation. It is also normal for erections to occur during sleep and upon waking. (See nocturnal penile tumescence.) The primary physiological mechanism that brings about erection is the autonomic dilation of arteries supplying blood to the penis, which allows more blood to fill the three spongy erectile tissue chambers in the penis, causing it to lengthen and stiffen. The now-engorged erectile tissue presses against and constricts the veins that carry blood away from the penis. More blood enters than leaves the penis until an equilibrium is reached where an equal volume of blood flows into the dilated arteries and out of the constricted veins; a constant erectile size is achieved at this equilibrium. The scrotum will usually tighten during erection.
Erection facilitates sexual intercourse though it is not essential for various other sexual activities.
Although many erect penises point upwards (see illustration), it is common and normal for the erect penis to point nearly vertically upwards or nearly vertically downwards or even horizontally straight forward, all depending on the tension of the suspensory ligament that holds it in position.
The following table shows how common various erection angles are for a standing male, out of a sample of 1,564 males aged 20 through 69. In the table, zero degrees is pointing straight up against the abdomen, 90 degrees is horizontal and pointing straight forward, while 180 degrees would be pointing straight down to the feet. An upward pointing angle is most common.[25]
Ejaculation is the ejection of semen from the penis. It is usually accompanied by orgasm. A series of muscular contractions delivers semen, containing male gametes known as sperm cells or spermatozoa, from the penis. Ejaculation usually happens as the result of sexual stimulation, but it can be due to prostatic disease in rare cases. Ejaculation may occur spontaneously during sleep (known as a nocturnal emission or wet dream). Anejaculation is the condition of being unable to ejaculate.
Ejaculation has two phases: emission and ejaculation proper. The emission phase of the ejaculatory reflex is under control of the sympathetic nervous system, while the ejaculatory phase is under control of a spinal reflex at the level of the spinal nerves S2–4 via the pudendal nerve. A refractory period succeeds the ejaculation, and sexual stimulation precedes it.[26]
The human penis has been argued to have several evolutionary adaptations. The purpose of these adaptations is to maximise reproductive success and minimise sperm competition. Sperm competition is where the sperm of two males simultaneously resides within the reproductive tract of a female and they comp
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The best sex positions if he has a big dick - PinkNews
Human penis - Wikipedia
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