A new study found that trained sexologist could determine a woman’s history of vaginal orgasm by observing the way she walks. The study is published in the Sept 08 issue of The Journal of Sexual Medicine, the official journal of the International Society for Sexual Medicine and the Internal Society for the Study of Women’s Sexual Health.
Led by Stuart Brody of the University of West of Scotland in collaboration with colleagues in Belgium, the study involved 16 female Belgian Unvi students. Subjects completed a questionnaire on their sexual behavior and were then videotaped from a distance while walking in a public place. The videotapes were rated by two professors of sexology and two research assistants trained in the functional-sexological approach to sexology, who were not aware of the women’s O’ history or the questionnarir.
The results showed that the appropriately trained sexologists were able to correctly infer vaginal orgasm through watching the way the woman walked over 80 percent of the time. Further analysis revealed that the sum of stride length and vertebral rotation was greater for the vaginally orgasmic women. “This could reflect the free, unblocked energetic flow from the legs through the pelvis to the spine,” the authors note.
There are several plausible explanations for the results shown by this study. One possibly is that a woman’s anatomical features may predispose her to greater or lesser tendency to experience vaginal orgasms. According the Brody, “Blocked pelvic muscles, which might be associated with psychosexual impairments, could both impair vaginal orgasmin response and gait (swag/stride).” In addition, vaginally orgasmic women may feel more confident about thier sexuality, which in turn might be refleced in their “swag”. Such confidence might also be related to the relationship(s) that a woman has had, given the finding that specifically penile-vaginal orgasm is associated with indices of better relatioship quality,” the authors state. Research has linked vaginal orgasm to better metal health.
The study provides some support for assumptions of a link between muscle blocks and sexual function, according to the authors. They conclude that it may lend credibility to the idea of incorporating training in movement, breathing and muscle patterns into the treatment of sexual dysfunction.
So, can you relate to this, women? Those of you who are completely comfortable with your sexual prowl-ness, do you think it shows in your swagg, or that maybe it’s jus the confidence you have within yourself, and has nothing to do with how many times you hit O Factor???
So which ‘came’ first, the confidence or the O Factor….



