When it comes to what happens between the
sheets (or any place you have sex), you want to put your best foot
forward, and, while you’re at it, you want it to rock your world. But
how realistic is it to expect to hit an out-of-the-ballpark home run
each time?
“Neglect is born out of lack of knowledge and awareness,” says Sheryl Kingsberg, Ph.D., a Clinical psychologist
and one of HealthyWomen’s medical experts. “Women and men have a fairly
narrow view of what parts of their body are tied to arousal and sensual
pleasure,” adds Kingsberg, who is also a professor in the Departments
of Reproductive Biology and Psychiatry at Case Western Reserve
University School of Medicine in Cleveland, Ohio.
Sometimes, it goes far beyond the obvious.
Like what? Where? How?
The journal Cortex has some
clues for you and lends some insight into the nature of human erogenous
zones via an anonymous online questionnaire they sent out to nearly 800
volunteers, who were mostly students recruited from England and South
Africa. They rated each of 41 body parts for the “ability to facilitate
sexual arousal” on a scale of 1 to 10.
The results were unsurprising and pretty
much unanimous: everyone agreed that the top turn-on zones were the
genitals. Gaining high marks after that were the mouth and lips,
nipples, nape of the neck and thighs.
And what of the body zones that are least
erogenous? People were pretty much in agreement about those, as well,
giving low marks to the elbow, skin, kneecaps, nose and forehead.
BORING.
In another study of the female body published in The Journal of Sexual Medicine, Canadian
scientists using light touch, pressure and vibration tested 30 women
between the ages of 18 and 35 (who laid under a bed sheet for the test,
in case you’re curious) to measure the sensitivity of various sexual
areas on their bodies.
Their findings: when it comes to light touch, the neck, forearm and vaginal “margin” are the most sensitive. The clitoris and nipple were most sensitive to both pressure and vibration.
OK, all of this probably does not
surprise you; after all, it’s pretty much common knowledge. But what of
those “hidden” zones, the ones that may be victims of “out of sight, out
of mind?” You know, the oft-forgotten and neglected parts that silently
scream, “Hey, what about me?”
“There are some non-genital areas on the
body that are commonly experienced as erogenous, including the nape of
neck, ears and small of back,” says Kingsberg. She also advises you
“should not stop there and ignore your own responses.” Enjoy the
experience if you discover you’re aroused by a kiss on their nose,
eyelid, toe, calf or elsewhere, she says.
Hence, other body parts that might be masking some erotic potential—some scientifically documented and others rumored to be a turn-on:
- Feet (arches and toes in particular, but that’s up for debate and highly individual)
- Scalp (rich in nerve endings)
- Ears
- Lips (they have more nerve endings than any other part of the body)
- Naval
- Fingertips (another treasure trove of nerve endings, second to the mouth and genitals, some say)
- Arms
- Thighs
- Chest
- Behind the knees (the thin skin allows access to more nerve endings)
- Abs
- Nape of neck
- Ears
- Back of neck
- Inner thigh
- Stomach (lower part)
- Tailbone
In closing, one most obvious erogenous
zone that bears repeating: the mind. Sometimes, it takes more than
simply touching. Flowers, wine, oysters, holding the door, a cup of
coffee served in bed, some gentle attention: these, and more, can have
an amazing effect.
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