Cosmopolitan US May2020

(Elle) #1

to help them find Beth’s G-spot so she could have The Orgasm.


“The night we did doggy-style, it felt...god, there was the sound of


skin smacking and my husband asking me if it was working. It was


terrible.” (We fact-checked this with Beth’s husband. Oh yeah, “it


sucked.”) After that, they gave up.


Other couples are still searching: 22 percent of guys say that


finding a woman’s G-spot is the number one goal of sex, which


helps explain the 31 percent of women who say they’re dealing


with exasperated partners. Prause worries about that. She says:


“You’ll hear guys say things like, ‘My last girlfriend wasn’t this


much work,’ or ‘You take a long time to orgasm,’ or ‘This worked


for the last person I slept with.’ That makes women question if


they’re normal. And that, we hate.”


WHICH IS WHY WE’RE CALLING OFF THE SEARCH. WE’RE


done with the damn “spot” and we’re sorry, again, that we ever


brought it up. And actually: Unless sex researchers make a surpris-


ingly major breakthrough, Cosmo won’t be publishing any more


G-spot sex positions or “how to find it” guides.


“What would truly be revolutionary for women’s sex lives is to


engage with what research has found all along: the best predictors


of sexual satisfaction are intimacy and connection,” adds Debby


Herbenick, PhD, a professor at Indiana University School of Public


Health and a research fellow at the Kinsey Institute.


The science world is revolutionizing, too, trying to figure out


how to rebrand the G-spot into something more (and by “more,”


we mean actually) accurate. Whipple stands by her “area.” Italian


researchers have suggested renaming it the somewhat less sexy


“clitoral vaginal urethral complex.” Herbenick has her own ideas:


“First of all, it should not be named after a man. It’s a female body


we’re talking about, and just because a man wrote about it doesn’t


mean he was the first to understand or experience it.” But anyway,


she’d go with “zone.”


As for us, we’re going to kick off this new era with a 100 percent


G-spot-free piece of smarter, wiser sex advice, courtesy of Nagoski:


“If it feels good, you’re doing it right.” Call that whatever you want.


GO AHEAD AND LET THAT SINK


in while we gear up to talk about the


fallout. Not only the sexual frustra-


tion (although that, definitely that)


but also the giant emotional burden


the G-spot unwittingly dropped on


all of us. Turns out, the thing that


was supposed to awaken and equal-


ize our sex lives came with a really


shitty side effect: shame.


More than half of the women in


Cosmo’s survey reported feeling inad-


equate or frustrated knowing that


others are able to orgasm in a way


they can’t. Eleven percent said this


made them avoid sex entirely. “I have


friends who say they always climax


from intercourse alone and they’re


like, ‘You just haven’t found it yet,’”


says Alyssa, a Cosmo reader. “It’s like


they’re the lucky ones.”


That’s why on one recent Tuesday,


another Cosmo reader, Beth, found


herself sitting in a room that looked


oddly like a vagina—low, pink light, a


candle burning softly nearby—get-


ting her first round of G-spot home-


work. She and her husband had hired


a sex therapist to help them feel more


in sync sexually. Basically, he wanted


it a lot more than she did, probably


because she was still waiting for


something...bigger. “I can have a cli-


toral orgasm,” she says. “But knowing


that there’s something better, I


wanted to experience that.”


The couple’s take-home tasks were


a checklist of “sexy” moves, designed


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May 2020 Cosmopolitan 101

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