My Company

Category: Womens

  • I Tried The Vagina Shot That’s Supposed To Make Sex Better

    I Tried The Vagina Shot That’s Supposed To Make Sex Better

    When Smooth Synergy medispa invited me to have a needle injected into my clitoris last February, I didn’t want to do it. I didn’t say no directly. I said yes, because I’m a sex writer and I know a good story when I see one. But once I said yes, I kept putting it off, and putting it off, and putting it off some more.

    I can handle pain; I’ve gotten three tattoos and have broken bones and did all of that like a total badass. But there was something about a needle full of my own blood injected straight into my clitoris and vagina that made said body part retreat back up inside me like a small, pink turtle’s head.

    I rationalized this decision brilliantly. The O-Shot, after all, was designed for women who are having a difficult time reaching orgasm. It’s also for menopausal women or anyone who might be experiencing pain due to dryness during sex.

    I’m 33, pretty damn moist, and my ability to orgasm ranks somewhere up there with a 19-year-old boy’s.

    Eventually, however, my passion for actually doing my job (and my guilty conscience) led me to the doors of Smooth Synergy in Manhattan, where you, too, for the trifling cost of $1,900 can have your own blood injected into your clitoris and vagina for health or recreation.

    MORE: 6 WTF Things You Should Really Know About Your Clitoris

    Any nervousness I felt about the procedure vanished when I met the spa’s doctor, Dr. George. He was patient, thorough, kind, and also hilarious. I pointed to an award on his wall. “Oh,” I said, “You won most compassionate doctor.” George laughed, “Yeah in 2013. The real question you have to ask yourself is what I’ve been doing lately!”

    I would have laughed harder, but the numbing cream applied to my ladybits had me gripped in a paroxysm of total fear.

    The O-Shot was designed by Dr. Charles Runels, the same man responsible for the Vampire Facelift, and the general procedure follows the same guidelines. Your blood is taken and put through a centrifuge where plasma-rich platelets are separated from the rest of your “garbage blood”.

    Then, using two shots, these platelets are injected into your clitoris and vagina. The idea here is that they encourage stem cell growth and make you feel more sensitive and more aroused. Some people get the shot once a year, but some believe that just getting it done once will be all you need.

    My boyfriend Buddy came with me to film the entire encounter for YourTango’s Facebook Live. He was lovely and supportive and insanely eager to try out my fancy “Two thousand dollar cunt job” as he called it, albeit fondly.

    For some women, the shot does nothing. For others, it’s life-changing. I fell somewhere in the middle. The shot doesn’t require any healing time. I went from my appointment back to work where I feasted on a burger and strategically blocked creeps on Facebook.

    That evening, Buddy and I got to work testing out the new car, as it were. I had felt horny all day, tingly, hyper aware of my clit and weirdly, of my G-spot. Our sex was like our usual sex, but turned up, as Spinal Tap would say, to 11.

    My junk felt swollen and sensitive, like that weird giddy feeling when your leg has fallen asleep and it just starts to wake up. My boyfriend said he could feel a difference, which was neat, but I could have done without his scientific reporting while he was still inside of me.

    If the O-Shot had such a strong effect on me (and it’s continued to rock my sex life), then I can’t even begin to imagine what a godsend it must be for people suffering from sexual dysfunction who are in need of help.

    And for the record, there’s a P-Shot too. I have yet to decide whether or not I am going to put my boyfriend through that.

    Depends on just how charming he is in the next couple of days or so, I suppose. But don’t worry, we’ll keep you posted.

    This story was originally published by our partners at YourTango.com.

  • “I had the controversial O Shot injection in my vagina”

    “I had the controversial O Shot injection in my vagina”

    The £1,200 procedure claims to give you better orgasms, but did it work?

  • Talk to your doctor about your heavy periods

    Talk to your doctor about your heavy periods

    Talk to your doctor about your heavy periods

    Many women wait several years before speaking up and seeking treatment for their heavy periods. Don’t wait – talk to your doctor about your symptoms during your next appointment, and ask about the NovaSure procedure, a one-time, five minute procedure for women who are finished with childbearing. Use our helpful discussion guide as support for the conversation.

    TAKE THE HEAVY PERIOD QUIZ [PDF] MORE ABOUT NOVASURE NOVASURE WEBSITE
  • The O-Shot

    The O-Shot

    Miracle injection—or shot in the dark? A radical new treatment for women promises a cure for the bedroom blues.

    Call it the shot heard round the world—only this time the revolution is on behalf of modern women. The O-Shot, a new, noninvasive treatment that aims to alleviate female sexual dysfunction by extracting PRP, or platelet-rich plasma, from a woman’s own blood and injecting it directly into the vaginal area.

    As Charles Runels, an Alabama cosmetic doctor (who’s better known as the creator of the Vampire Facial, made famous when Kim Kardashian had the procedure done on TV), explains, the O-Shot uses PRP to stimulate the growth of new cells in a woman’s vaginal walls and clitoris. The platelets, which the body utilizes to naturally generate tissue, increase not only the number of cells but also, Runels claims, sensitivity to stimulation.

    Runels says that he was inspired by the array of treatments available for men dealing with sexual problems—with everything from Viagra to penile implants as a remedy—and the glaring void when it came to female sexual dysfunction, even though more than 40 percent of American women are estimated to suffer from it. There was nothing similar for women, recalls Samuel Wood, a San Diego reproductive endocrinologist who began a clinical trial on the procedure in 2011. Now he and Runels are hopeful that the in-office treatment, which takes about 20 minutes and can be done only by a certified doctor or nurse-practitioner, will be the answer both for those women and for others looking to boost a less than satisfying sex life.

    Take Nadia*, 39, a mother of three who found sex with her fiancé lacking. In her younger days, she says, “I was turned on whenever the guy was,” but by her late 30s, getting to that same level of arousal “required so much foreplay, I was ready to give up.” Though she tried over-the-counter lubricants, she complained that they didn’t last. When she heard about the O-Shot, she decided to give it a try. She says she now has an orgasm every time she has sex, “stronger ones than I used to have when I was younger.”

    Similarly, Gail*, 53, has been married for 20 years and had resigned herself to lackluster, once-a-month lovemaking. “I wasn’t really aroused no matter what we did,” she says. So when her nurse-practitioner suggested the shot, she was more than willing. The result? She noticed an immediate effect, and she returned home from work that day ready to go. Whereas before, she’d fake orgasms and felt “inadequate,” she now looks forward to sex.

    So how does the O-Shot work? First, the patient’s blood is drawn (about half a tablespoon) and placed in a centrifuge to separate out the PRP. To determine where an injection will have maximum results, Wood does “vaginal mapping,” asking the patient where she’s most sensitive, and then an anesthetic cream is applied to the area. “You have to understand each woman’s sexuality and her anatomy to know where to put it,” he explains. The procedure, which costs $1,200 to $1,500 and isn’t covered by insurance, has the added benefit of creating what he refers to as an immediate volumizing effect, which lasts up to a week. The real payoff, though, comes over the next few months as the PRP “stimulates the stem cells, collagen, and blood vessels,” says Runels, who calls it “fertilizer to grow the tissue.” (The overall effect should last at least 18 months.)

    As for safety, Runels says that no serious side effects have been reported. The treatment itself doesn’t require FDA oversight, although an FDA-cleared kit is required to prepare the plasma. And it has plenty of skeptics. Laura Berman, author of Loving Sex: The Book of Joy and Passion, is concerned about the lack of scientific studies thus far. (Results of both Runels’s and Wood’s clinical trials will be published this year.) “There’s no mechanism of action that I can see that would really facilitate arousal and orgasm,” Berman says. “It feels like they’re taking advantage of a valid longing that millions of women have and stating a claim that hasn’t been supported in any substantial way other than through anecdotal reports.”

    Perhaps Dena Harris, a New York gynecologist who has treated women suffering from vulvar pain with PRP and is interested in seeing study results, sums it up best: “I don’t know if it works, but I really hope it does.” *Names have been changed

    Original Source: https://www.harpersbazaar.com/beauty/health/advice/a1476/orgasm-injection-0214/