Originally posted by WhiteSnowAngelI thought you asked me a question, thats why I was wasting my time...
you mean like all the offtopic forums that dont get problems ?Like 2 Am, real question
You came in with the name whiteracistgirl, and made controversial threads, you shouldn't be saying anything about problems.
I'm on neither side, don't worry.
Originally posted by CorderaMitchell
I thought you asked me a question, thats why I was wasting my time...You came in with the name whiteracistgirl, and made controversial threads, you shouldn't be saying anything about problems.
I'm on neither side, don't worry.
I love how you try to change the subject, to aviode verything else, and just want people to comment on that. I love it 😉
Originally posted by bilbas did I but she owned me evrytime I posted after wards...or so she thinks.
wel i kinda meant buh bye just to her,, not the thread.. but YEAY STUPIDITY!! WOOT! 😛
anyways...Im saying bye to the thread now as well...
WSA > get educated....
from the link I posted earlier...http://www.infocirc.org/facts.htm
The penile foreskin defined
The foreskin (or prepuce) is a natural, retractile, protective covering for the glans (head) of the penis, and is the most erotogenic area of the penis in terms of the quantity, concentration, and quality of specialized nerve receptors and stretch receptors that it is endowed with, especially on its inner mucosal lining (which gets redeployed behind the glans during erection).
The average adult foreskin consists of 1½ inches of outer skin, 1½ inches of inner mucosal lining – totaling a length of 3 inches – and is 5 inches in circumference when erect. This amounts to a surface area of 15 square inches, or a surface area equivalent to that of a 3" by 5" inch index card!
The foreskin contains over 240 feet of nerves and over 1,000 nerve endings, as well as being a highly vascularized structure.
The foreskin contains “junctional mucosa that appear to be an important component of the overall sensory mechanism of the human penis”
–J. R. Taylor et al. The prepuce: specialized mucosa of the penis and its loss to circumcision. British Journal of Urology (1996) 77, pp. 291-295.
The foreskin is not vestigial or redundant tissue, in that no other part of the male body does what the foreskin does, or feels what the foreskin feels.
The foreskin serves to protect the glans, thereby maintaining the glans-surface’s naturally-intended thinness, texture, and sensitivity.
The foreskin has rich sensations in and of itself. The foreskin also plays a mechanical-lubrication role. It serves as a gliding sheath during masturbation or sexual activity, rendering the quality of the friction between the man and his partner more gentle, less abrasive. This is useful to the woman, especially with prolonged intercourse and especially with age, when she provides less liquid lubrication. With circumcision, this natural gliding mechanism is lost.
The fact that the foreskin in infancy is usually non-retractile serves to protect the baby’s glans penis from urine and feces during the period that he is incontinent.
Women have a foreskin as well, which covers and protects their clitoris. It is alternatively referred to as the clitoral foreskin, clitoral prepuce, or clitoral hood.
bw for real...*in a stewardess's like voice* Bye bye now 😊 bye bye, bye bye now....bye bye