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The survey revealed that women were cheating more on husbands and boyfriends and becoming more sexually experimental and exploring porn, the ‘The Daily Telegraph’ reported on Wednesday.
It was found that one in three women were forced to have sex, almost always by men they know, the survey claimed.
A new book based on the survey, ‘Sex Lives of Australian Women’, written by film development executive Joan Sauers, comprises harrowing stories of women carrying the emotional scars of sexual attack.
The gamut of women’s sex lives - the good, the bad, the ugly and the depraved - are exposed in the stories and opinions of about 2000 women of all ages who completed an anonymous online survey.
The survey found that one in four women view pornography regularly, almost 61 per cent masturbate at least once a month and one in five have starred in their own sex tape.
It claimed that multiple partners were a growing fad and many women complain of boring sex lives and one in three rarely, if ever, experience orgasm. Almost 49 per cent said they want sex most of the time when it is offered.
“A lot of women want more emotional connection, but a lot of women said they want partners who are not ‘rubbish’ at sex,” Sauers said, adding “They want men to take more time and the really big one is women want emotional intimacy before sex.”
Women needed to understand their voice was “your most important sexual organ”. “He isn’t going to know how if you don’t tell him,” she said, adding “Women would rather fake orgasm than bother to explain how they would like sex."



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