Women who get bréast implants do have improved séx lives – but not for the reason they might think, a psychologist has claimed.
Instead
of having increased body confidence, it is the fact a woman has spent
money on herself that gives her a boost in the bedroom, says Tomi-Ann
Roberts, a professor of psychology at Colorado College.
“When
we have exerted a great effort, spent a great deal of money and effort
and time on something, we tend to justify that effort,' she said. 'Our
good feeling is increased because of the effort, not the thing itself.”
Professor
Roberts was speaking following a study by Brazilian researchers which
found that women experienced a significant boost to their arousál and
séxual satisfaction following the procedure.
The study involved 45 women who planned to undergo bréast implant surgery.
Researcher
Dr. Paulo Guimaraes and colleagues asked the women to fill out a
questionnaire before the surgery that assessed their séxual desire,
arousál and séxual satisfaction. Patients were then asked to retake the
questionnaire at two, four and 18 months after surgery.
Nine
women with stretch marks following their plastic surgery did not report
any improvement. Stretch marks can occur if the implant is
significantly larger than the original bréast was, according to the
ASPS.
But
the 36 women who did not develop stretch marks after surgery said they
had experienced improved levels of arousál and were more satisfied with
their séx lives. They reported this improvement at both four and 18
months following surgery.
Commenting
on the findings, Professor Roberts said: 'Here are 45 women who spent a
great deal of time and money and effort augmenting their bréasts
because the media has clearly convinced them their bréasts are
inadequate. So we shouldn't be surprised they are pleased with the
bréast augmentation.'
Professor
Roberts, who is also a member of the American Psychological
Association's task force on the séxualisation of girls, added she wasn't
surprised that women felt more attractive in the bedroom after surgery.
“Feminine
heteroséxuality is very much about our sense of whether or not we are
pleasing our partner, and here we have 45 women who have spent a great
deal of money to that purpose.
“If these bréasts are now pleasing to their male partners, then they are likely to feel more séxually attractive.
“There
are a lot of other things bréasts are a part of. This is an indication
that in our Victoria's Secret culture, bréasts are for men. They are for
men's pleasure,” she said.
But Dr. David Reath, chair of the public education committee of the American Society of Plastic Surgeons (ASPS), disagrees.
“When
I see patients and follow up, a lot of them will say "My husband and I
or my boyfriend and I are having a lot of fun”. “Why not? It's an
important part of life,” he said.
“I
think that the female bréast is a very important part of a woman's
body, in terms of how a woman feels about herself in public, how her
clothes fit and how she feels about herself séxually.
“It's very common for a woman post-surgery to say she feels more confident, that her outward body now fits her inward persona.”
“[The
study] found that in the areas of both séxual satisfaction and séxual
arousál, there were significantly increased feelings,' said. These
aspects of the séxual experience were increased for these women.”
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