S*x may be one of life’s great pleasures, but it also
involves a lot that normally might gross people out — sweat, bodily
fluids and body odor, for starters.
A small Dutch study, released Wednesday, set out to identify the
psychology that leads women to willingly, and even enthusiastically,
engage in sexual activities despite the ick factor. The results,
published online in the journal PLoS ONE, indicate that arousal
overrides feelings of disgust and facilitates a woman’s desire to do
something that a woman who is not aroused might find flat-out repulsive.
“Women [who] were sexually aroused were more willing to touch and do initially disgusting tasks,” study
co-author Charmaine Borg, a researcher in the department of clinical
psychology and experimental psychopathology at the University of
Groningen in The Netherlands, told The Huffington Post.
Borg and her colleagues separated 90 female university students
into three equal groups: one watched “female friendly erotica;” one
watched a video of extreme sports meant to get them excited, but in a
non-s*xual way; and one watched a video of a train, meant to elicit a
neutral response.
The women were then given 16 tasks, most of them unappealing. They
were asked to take a sip from a cup of juice that had a large (fake)
insect in it, to wipe their hands with a used tissue and to take a bite
from a cookie that was sitting next to a living worm. The women were
also asked to perform several s*x-related tasks, like lubricating a
vibrator.
Women in the “aroused group” said they found both the
unpleasant tasks and the s*x-related tasks less disgusting than women in
the other groups. They also completed the highest percentage of the
activities, suggesting that s*xual arousal not only decreases feelings
of disgust, but directly affects what women are willing to do, the study
shows.
Daniel R. Kelly, an associate professor of philosophy at Purdue University and author of the book “Yuck! The Nature and Moral Significance of Disgust” who was not involved in the study, explained that disgust is an“extension of our immune system”
that helps prevent people from getting infected by making them wary of
things, like bodily fluids, that potentially carry disease or make
people vulnerable.
“Disgust is an emotion,” he explained. “What it’s
there for, primarily, is to protect us against eating things that might
poison us, or coming into close physical proximity to things that might
carry infections. That’s its mission.”
David Buss, a professor of psychology at the University of Texas Austin and author of “Why Women Have S*x,”called disgust a “huge issue for women.”
“Women show far more disgust and especially s*xual disgust, than men,” he said.
Buss concurred with Kelly that the findings are evidence of what “is very likely an evolved psychological defense.”
“It helps to protect women from having s*x with the wrong men,
such as men who might communicate diseases, men who show signs of a high
‘parasite load,’ men who have poor hygiene and so on,” he said.
What is interesting about the new Dutch paper, the two experts
agreed, is that it suggests the mission to avoid the potentially
“dangerous” parts of s*x takes a backseat when women are aroused. “S*xual arousal can override disgust,” Buss said.
That not only suggests a potential reason why a woman might engage
in behaviors that she wouldn’t if she weren’t turned on, it might also
provide insights into how low-s*xual arousal feeds sexual dysfunctions
in women, the study’s authors argue.
“These findings indicate that lack of s*xual arousal may
interfere with functional s*x, as it may prevent the reduction of
disgust and disgust-related avoidance tendencies,” Borg explained, saying she hopes the findings prompt further research in this area.
Source: HufingtonPost

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