How to increase female libido quickly crossword
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Testosterone therapy could help boost women's sex drive as they age, but risks exist, experts say
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Having trouble? Click here.Celebrities' use of testosterone to boost their sex drive could lead more women to try hormone replacement therapy (HRT), experts say.
Actress Kate Winslet recently revealed in an appearance on the "How to Fail" podcast with Elizabeth Day that a dip in libido could mean an imbalance in testosterone levels.
"A lot of people don’t know this, but women have testosterone in their body; when it runs out, like eggs, it’s gone," the "Titanic" actress, 48, told a listener.
KATE WINSLET ADMITS TO USING TESTOSTERONE THERAP • I’ve been with my husband for 10 years, two ung children and absolutely no sex drive. My husband is fantastisk, literally amazing, couldn’t fault him for anything, hands on father, does his fair share of household tasks etc etc and we have a great relationship genuinely love each other and truly are each others best friends. I couldn’t imagine my life without him. We have sex about once a week he never makes me feel like I need to do it and I pretty much put up an act that I want to do it (because I want to want to do it if that makes sense) but truthfully, inom don’t. I’ve never discussed my lack of sex drive with him because I’ve just had the mentality of fake it until you make it but it isn’t working. He’s not a selfish lover and when we’re actually doing the deed I do end up enjoying it but when it’s over I think good, that’s that done for a week. i think back to before we had children and would have sex 3 times a day and couldn’t keep our hands off eac • Sexes Women may be more sexually omnivorous than men, but that doesn't necessarily mean they're as hungry. By Emily Esfahani Smith Daniel Bergner, a journalist and contributing editor to the New York Times Magazine, knows what women want--and it's not monogamy. His new book, which chronicles his "adventures in the science of female desire," has made quite a splash for apparently exploding the myth that female sexual desire is any less ravenous than male sexual desire. The book, What Do Women Want, is based on a 2009 article, which received a lot of buzz for detailing, among other things, that women get turned on when they watch monkeys having sex and gay men having sex, a pattern of arousal not seen in otherwise lusty heterosexual men. That women can be turned on by such a variety of sexual scenes indicates, Bergner argues, how truly libidinous they are. This apparently puts the lie to our socially manufactured assump How to improve sex drive.
How Strong Is the Female Sex Drive After All?