I've often wondered about perspectives in regard to this subject.
Being female, the intrusion of a penis into my body has been mentally accepted as something that was going to happen since, well, probably before puberty.
As little girls, we fantisiced about men's "thingy's" going into our hole. (After we were married, of course

)
The advance to accepting a thingy into our bottoms was probably more about overcoming taboos about "dirty" rather than actually taking it.
For men, regardless of how gay you are, is accepting a penis into your body proper an act that requires far greater mental adjustmentst than for a woman?
Men are "engineered" to penetrate and does this transfer into actually having to overcome some homophobic (mental) barrier?
I ask this because very often I have read how men found their first anal experience painful.
My first anal experience was with my husband - it was easy, thoroughly enjoyable and gave and gives, incredibly powerful sensations. It is now an accepted part of our sexual lives.
I must admit my only anal experience with plastic has been with a female and was nothing like approaching the "real thing" (sounds sexist)
Anyway back to my original observation/ponder. I'm wondering, is there a greater mental challenge for men than women when considering anal penetration?
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