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Posted May 1, Reviewed by Ekua Hagan. And where is it? The standard view is that the clitoris is the little protuberance of erotically sensitive, orgasm -triggering tissue an inch or two above the vaginal opening nestled beneath the upper junction of the vaginal lips.
Actually, the clitoris is much more than that. But unfortunately, for some years, the clitoris has been minimized, misrepresented, and misunderstood. Those ancient Greeks knew more about women's genitals than many people do today. But in men, they are outside, in women, inside. Just as all parts of the penis and surrounding tissue can become sexually aroused, the same goes for all parts of the Clitoral System.
Many men would feel short-changed if lovers focused only on the head glans of the penis and ignored the shaft, scrotum, and anal area. Many women feel the same when lovers focus only on the little nub and not on the entire Clitoral System. Embryologically, the penis and Clitoral System develop from the same germ cells. At eight weeks of fetal development, they appear virtually identical.
The bump of the clitoris is the equivalent of the glans of the penis. But just as the penis is more than its head, the Clitorial System is more than what we know as the clitoris. The tip of the clitoris holds 7, nerve endings, as many as the head of the penis, but packed into a much smaller space.
Their concentration makes the clitoris comparatively more sensitive to touch than the penis. Even when caressed ever so gently, some women find any direct pressure on the little bump hard to take.