If you aren’t feeling sexual arousal like you used to, it might not be low libido, but it could be clitoral atrophy.
Clitoral atrophy is a pleasure-stealing—and vastly under-researched—condition looming over people with vaginas.
If you aren’t feeling sexual arousal like you used to, it might not be low libido, but it could be clitoral atrophy.
Clitoral atrophy is a pleasure-stealing—and vastly under-researched—condition looming over people with vaginas.
As a result of either poorly adapted education or ill-informed parents and teachers, disabled people are often sidelined or excluded entirely when it comes to sex education.
Perhaps assumed to be nonexistent, the community’s sexuality is taboo, and representation is typically limited to appearing in pornography as an objectifying fetish. A lack of inclusive sex education leaves disabled people vulnerable to exploitation as they grow into adults without information on sexual health, consent and pleasure.
Your pelvic floor matters, but it’s easy for certain conditions to go unresolved, and the idea of a too-tight vagina doesn’t often enter the conversation.
However, hypertonic pelvic floor dysfunction is more common than you’d think.
Most everyone vents their feelings. It’s part of being human. We verbalize emotions so we can better process them.
At least, that’s what we tell ourselves.
There’s a line, however, between letting off steam and callously dumping raw emotions on your loved ones. Unfortunately, the line is not always recognizable.