As blood flow increases, the “head” of the clitoris becomes erect and hard like a cock. If you pull the skin around it well, you can see the tip becoming round, and it is this more swollen part that is sensitive to touch and produces great effects and great orgasms when stroked.
In addition to this external part, there are three internal ones: the crus, consisting of two corpora cavernosa that come together to form the body of the clitoris if you look closely at the illustration, the clitoris is actually very similar to a penis. There are also two bulbs of erectile tissue called vestibular bulbs that run the entire length of the vulva.
When a woman is very aroused, these bulbs fill with blood and swell, making the urethra and vaginal canal even more sensitive to sex. That’s why when you’re crazy with pleasure, you feel not only the pulsation of your clitoris, but also everything around it. And because it makes so much sense that most women reach climax through clitoral stimulation, not vaginal stimulation.
Poorly researched
Although it is still a mystery and unknown, the true “gear” of the clitoris was discovered twenty years ago by Australian urologist Helen O’Connell of the University of Melbourne in Sydney. Disappointed that major anatomy reference books contained only very cursory mentions of the clitoris, she decided to research the subject herself and discovered that the organ has more nerves and blood vessels than previously thought, as well as invisible parts.
The word clitoris comes from the Greek “clitoris,” meaning “little hill,” and was born in ancient Greece. It was Hippocrates, considered the father of medicine, who first mentioned it in studies. For him, the woman also produced sperm and only had a chance of becoming pregnant if she orgasmed.