DOES SIZE REALLY MATTER?

Of the virile member when it is hard, it is thick and long, dense and heavy, and when it is limp, it is thin, short of flesh or wind but to arterial blood.
- Leonardo da Vinci

Traditional thinking has been that size really doesn’t matter. (”It’s not the size of the wand; it’s the magic with which you wave it.”) Although many suspect this is the kind of logic men with small penises have, it really is true regarding the sexual enjoyment of both the male and his partner.

The vaginal diameter can stretch from zero (most of the time the walls are collapsed together) to huge (about the time junior’s head passes through). With this adaptability, it makes sense that female partners report no difference in either pleasure or discomfort in men they judge to have larger or smaller penises.

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Women perceive essentially no sexual stimulation anywhere in the vagina except in the third that is closest to the exterior. Assuming even the smallest penis will reach one-third of the way in, no man should feel unfit. In fact, most women get more stimulation in the clitoris, which is outside the vagina entirely. Any man incapable of reaching the clitoris is simply not trying.

It is widely assumed that race or ethnicity defines penis size. The second half of this assumption that many people have is that white men have smaller flaccid penises that simply enlarge more during erection, evening the playing field when it really counts.

Because of the controversial - and trivial - nature of the question, we’ll probably never get a good scientific study on racial differences in penis size. The only research reporting any indication that black men have larger penises is the British Flat Condom Study. Only 14 percent of white men found the condoms too small, whereas 38 percent of black men did. Indirect evidence, but about all there is beyond locker-room humor.