Women don't care about penis size!

According to the latest research as far as women are concerned the size of a man's penis is immaterial.

Women are far more interested in a man's personality and looks than the size of his penis, but men nevertheless often become anxious about whether their penis is big enough.

Penis anxiety apparently abounds in Britain where even when it was often found that while men often have a better body image, a better genital image and more sexual confidence if they have a large penis, women don't necessarily feel that bigger is better.

Dr. Kevan Wylie, of the Royal Hallamshire Hospital, in Sheffield, and Ian Eardley, of St. James' Hospital in Leeds, examined more than 50 international research projects on penile size and small penis syndrome completed since 1942.

The researchers found from 12 studies that measured the penises of 11,531 men, that on average, erect penises ranged from 5.5 to 6.2 inches in length and 4.7 to 5.1 inches in girth.

A survey then conducted of over 50,000 heterosexual men and women found that 66 percent of men said their penis was average-sized, 22 percent said large and 12 percent said small and while 85 percent of women were satisfied with their partner's penile size, but only 55 percent of men were satisfied with their penis size.

The urologists say having a micropenis is a totally different condition from having penis anxiety and they urge doctors not to laugh at these very real worries over an imaginary defect and say the review normalizes the situation and provides accurate information.

The researchers warn against plastic surgery techniques which promise to make a man's flaccid or erect penis larger as they are unproven and serious complications may ensue.

Wylie and Eardley say in such cases if education and counseling do not resolve the anxiety issue, psychotherapy is advisable for men whose obsession over penis size is interfering with their lives.

The review is published in the current issue of the urology journal BJU International.

Comments

  1. kb kb United States says:

    I have a very embarrassing form of obsessive behavior. (These next few stories don't apply to all women I've been with but were the most significant). It stems from a lot of negative abuse from former lovers...(term used very loosely) and the guys they ended up sleeping with while I was dating. Also I was raped by a friends uncle when I was 16 and I was already insecure about almost everything in my life, he proceeded to drill into my head the notion that no woman would ever want me. And my peers labeled me a fagot. In the service I was crazy in love with a girl but she ended up sleeping with half the guys in the barracks.

    My self image and self esteem have taken quite a beating not to mention my masculinity. I've spoken to my therapist about this but she just looks at me like I'm talking in a foreign language. So how do I heal from the scars? Maybe never I don't know. What I do know is that the knowledge that a man is concerned about the size of his penis puts her in a position of power and control to use as a weapon among her many other ways of humiliating and manipulating men. Think I'm a little disillusioned about the possibility of ever being "in love" again with another woman? I get what I can but I don't let feelings get involved because that's just a set up for more hurt and disappointment.

  2. Michelle Michelle United Kingdom says:

    The reason is that women aren't attracted to penis. A survey of women would find that it's not an attractive thing for us to look at. Here's just one of many forums where women say they're not attracted to penis:

    answers.yahoo.com/.../index

    I think some researchers should do this survey!

The opinions expressed here are the views of the writer and do not necessarily reflect the views and opinions of News Medical.
Post a new comment
Post

While we only use edited and approved content for Azthena answers, it may on occasions provide incorrect responses. Please confirm any data provided with the related suppliers or authors. We do not provide medical advice, if you search for medical information you must always consult a medical professional before acting on any information provided.

Your questions, but not your email details will be shared with OpenAI and retained for 30 days in accordance with their privacy principles.

Please do not ask questions that use sensitive or confidential information.

Read the full Terms & Conditions.

You might also like...
Patient-derived organoids: Transforming cancer research and personalized medicine