…Down Her Mound of Venus. Succulent Women.
Like What you See? The Male Gaze.
Busting Out. Magnificent Hips.
Venus was the goddess of love in the ancient world.
The ancients raised monuments to her on raised areas
of land in order to emulate the pubic area of the female.
Let’s start a new trend among women and the men who love us.
Let’s offer praise to this gateway of pleasure and life.
You might be amazed what could begin to open when
the Mounds of Venus are given love, praise and adoration.

There’s a little-known region that could be the key to making her climax.
Debunking the myth that the key to a womans’ pleasure
lies in the clitoris and G-spot, the mons pubis is the
place you should be focusing on.
The underrated erogenous zone is the fleshy part of the vagina above the labia, also known as the pubic mound, but most people skip over it during foreplay.
This plump, rounded pad of fatty tissue sits just above
a woman’s labia, or ‘lips’. It’s the triangular bit
where most of her pubic hair grows.
It has several functions. It covers the pubic bone and acts
like a tiny bouncy cushion which helps to protect the bone
beneath from being uncomfortably bumped and knocked during
intercourse or general life. It’s literally a cushion for the pushing.
The mons is also home to lots of sebaceous and sweat glands
which produce sebum and perspiration containing pheromones:
chemicals designed to smell attractive to partners and provoke arousal.
It contains a host of nerve endings too.
It moistens the vagina when tenderly massaged.
Like What You See?
The ‘gaze’ is a term used to describe
how viewers engage with visual media.
It was first used in film theory and criticism in the 1970s.
The gaze refers to how we look at visual representations.
These include advertisements, television programs and cinema.
The ‘male gaze’ invokes the sexual politics
of the gaze and suggests a sexualised way of
looking that empowers men and objectifies women.
In the male gaze, woman is visually positioned
as an object of heterosexual male desire.
Her feelings, thoughts and her own sexual drives are
less important than her being ‘framed’ by male desire.
Traditional Hollywood films respond to a deep-seated
drive known as “scopophilia”: the sexual pleasure
involved in looking.
Most popular movies are filmed in ways
that satisfy masculine scopophilia.
Busting Out
Why are men infatuated with female breasts?
Evolutionary: breasts resemble buttocks.
Pre-human ancestors always mounted from behind.
The buttocks are the primary sexual
presentation site in primates.
The breast fetishism derives from the breasts’ similarity
to buttocks, providing sexual attraction from the front of the body.
The female bust mimics the buttocks. In our puritanical
culture the buttocks were seen as vulgar, perhaps reminding
us too much of the bestial nature of sexual reproduction.
Magnificent Hips
Artifacts, called ‘Venus figurines’ by archaeologists, are
prehistoric depictions of nude women with exaggerated
sexual features which represented an early fertility goddess.
The voluptuous figure being the feminine ideal
was a mainstay of the ancient world.
Venus (or Aphrodite), was goddess of renowned
beauty for the ancient Greeks and Romans,
as well as goddess of love, pleasure, passion,
procreation, fertility, beauty, and desire.
She was typically depicted with a round face,
large breasts, and a pear-shaped body.