Coitus Homosexual

Coitus is intimate intimacy between sexual partners, through which they achieve the highest degree of sexual satisfaction. People have sex to satisfy their physiological and psychological needs. Sexual behavior becomes a natural stage in a person's life. Each of us is interested in knowledge about sex techniques and has certain skills. Some people like to have sex without commitment, while others come to their partner for joint caresses and pleasure.

Coitus is one of two forms of sexual intercourse that exist in nature, along with urophagy (or the absorption of urine). In nature, predators cannot be satisfied with juicy, bleeding prey with a body soaked in lymph from the inside. It is important for them to first divide the victim into its component parts, including removing fluids and digestive juices. There are interspecies differences in the way food is taken, which may indicate social rank within a population. These differences apparently develop historically, change and are transferred from one generation or species to another. They influence how a group of animals will develop in the future and how that group will function by passing a set of genes from one population to another.

Sexual orientation can be genetically determined or acquired during life. Genetic factors influencing the development of sexual orientation are primarily considered to be the presence of certain genes in the human genome, epigenetic effects and environmental signals. Scientific research shows that the same person can simultaneously exhibit heterosexual and homosexual orientation.

Homosexual orientations are: passive same-sex heterosexuality (lesbianism); homosexuality (sodomy); same-sex heterobisexual sexual behavior.

Passive homosexuals are able to experience orgasm from the actions of other men. However, they may not enjoy other types of stimulation. They may experience pronounced psychological discomfort caused by the awareness that they are passive during sexual intercourse. This may be accompanied by negative experiences, feelings of disgust, shame, a mask of indifference, lack of introspection and exaggerated confidence in the steadfastness of one’s own life position due to sexual passivity. Such persons have a narrow circle of contacts. They may be aware of their exclusivity or take a demonstrative approach. Their behavior takes various forms, from secretive to deliberate, allowing them to avoid unnecessary public attention. The influence of one’s own environment, the chosen partner, and one’s own stereotypes of the social behavioral model play a role here. Inaction in the event of potential violence is then called “pansexualism,” combining features of both passive and active homosexuality. Persons who practice passive activity extremely rarely enter into relationships with partners of equal sex. As a rule, most of their preferred contacts are with people older than themselves. A significant portion of these contacts are made up of older men. Such a low priority in partnerships is more often characteristic of those who, since childhood, have not been able to realize sexual activity due to any reason.

In many cases, homosexual attraction is hidden. This does not mean that women's sexual activity is also hidden from eyes and ears.