I saw something exciting this week on social media, and it just popped up in my suggested video playlist out of nowhere. It’s something worth sharing, except for two things that may pose a problem: one is that social media connections like Facebook don’t like me even mentioning the word that rhymes with “band hem thick” when referring to widespread disease, so I know this topic would make their heads spin, and the other is that some people in the general population would probably find this subject offensive because it involves the human anatomy.
However, knowledge is power, so I’m accepting the challenge and will attempt in this blog to talk about an organ in the female genitalia that rhymes with “hit or miss.” I won’t have to use the actual name of the body part at all, but if you are truly in need of further clarification, I’ll respond to comments and hope I don’t get banned from society. Since the video did use the “c-word,” I’m not too worried.
The video I saw featured a speaker (a woman, naturally) standing beneath a depiction of something resembling a stylized double wishbone. Having looked at the title of the video, which did mention the name of the organ to be discussed, I was naturally curious, then surprised: nobody ever depicted this body part in such a way before, but there it was.
Gee, I have a sensitive wishbone in my body! I don’t even have to make a wish or break it to get the bigger half and a wish granted like at Thanksgiving. And if you’re thinking what I think you’re thinking, you’re naughty and it’s okay.
The speaker went on to explain that medical science had been lax in talking about this part within the female body because of long-held opinions about sexual response. Woman have always–if I may say so–come up on the short end of this topic. We have always been instructed that this particular organ is just a little thingy the size of a bean, so looking at the new-fangled depiction is rather thrilling. That so-called bean appears to actually be the hooked end of a much more intricate piece of anatomical design, which starts out looking like a clothes hook and then goes on to resemble two conjoined wishbones, with one pair having tapered flanges and the other being more rounded at the ends. It’s quite beautiful. According to the new research, it’s also much more purposeful for female pleasure. This means that the old ideas about how men and women enjoy sex have now gone out the window.
This organ apparently covers the entire genital region, and thus serves as the seat of intimate attention. This means, putting it politely, that if a partner pays attention to areas slightly forward of where most stimulation is commonly concentrated, magical things can happen. The door is now open for women to explore a new world we never knew about. All because somebody found there was more than just a bean in there. Who’d have thought?
It looks like, from a faith-based standpoint, our Creator made woman second, so everything was put under the hood, making us the new (and improved) model. What is actually under the hood is more than originally thought.
Overall, this is new ground for understanding what our bodies do, and women can have more than ever before.
It’s so exciting!