Men or Women… who are the horniest sex?

Men or Women… who are the horniest sex?

sevengraduates
sevengraduates
3 min read

Any guesses? The answer won’t surprise any of you. So… Surprise! Men are the hornier sex! Now, who saw that cuming? I mean, coming!

In  "The Erotic Journey of The Seven Graduates” our male graduates show more signs of being horny as compared to the female graduates. Our male graduates get hard almost every time they see a seductive female or when female talks dirty.

The strength of sexual motivation is referred to as sex drive. Men have been shown to have more frequent and intense sexual desires than women across a variety of studies and measures, as evidenced by spontaneous thoughts about sex, frequency and variety of sexual fantasies, desired frequency of intercourse, a desired number of partners, masturbation, liking for various sexual practices, willingness to forego sex, initiating versus refusing sex, making sex sacrifices, and other measures. There were no data that contradicted this (showing that women had higher sexual drive). As a result, we might conclude that the male sex drive is greater than the female sex drive. Other categories such as sexual or orgasmic capability, the pleasure of sex, or extrinsically driven sex should not be generalized from the gender difference in sex drive.

Original source: “Is There a Gender Difference in Sex Drive Strength? A Review of Relevant Evidence, Theoretical Views, and Conceptual Distinction “from the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology

Here are a few noteworthy and startling comments from the report (the most of the quotes link to previous research in the field):

 “Over half of the males in their national sample said they thought about sex every day, but just one-fifth of the women said they did.”Husbands continued to like intercourse more frequently than wives, he discovered. In reality, ladies constantly expressed satisfaction with the quantity of sex they enjoyed in their relationships, whereas men yearned for a 50 percent increase in “Crisp.”McCabe (1987) discovered that the group of persons in a committed relationship who wanted to have sex but didn’t have sex was nearly exclusively made up of men in a large Australian sample. For example, among 25-year-olds, 28 percent of men but just 2% of women were classified as “relatives.” reluctant virgins.Davies, Katz, and Jackson (1999) observed no mean gender difference in self-reported sexual desire among 20-year-olds who had been dating for around 2 years, suggesting that there may be a phase of equal desire. Other evidence supporting that conclusion is still scarce, although the weight of data clearly suggests that males seek more sex than women during most periods in partnerships.Men and women agreed that vaginal and anal intercourse constituted sex but disagreed on intermediate acts, including fellatio, cunnilingus, and manual stimulation of a partner’s genitals. Men were consistently more likely than women to classify those acts as sex.Spanier and Margolis discovered that 26% of unfaithful spouses had more than three extramarital relationships, whereas just 5% of unfaithful wives had done so. In the group of having only one extramarital relationship, however, women outweighed husbands (64% vs. 43%).

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