91% of Women Are Unsatisfied with Their Bodies: How This Ruins Their Sex Lives.

91% of Women Are Unsatisfied with Their Bodies: How This Ruins Their Sex Lives
91% of Women Are Unsatisfied with Their Bodies: How This Ruins Their Sex Lives

Britain’s Got Body Issues

According to The Sun: Three women share how they boosted their self-esteem in the bedroom and achieved a hot sex life. But if intimacy feels like a big issue for you, you are not alone.

I didn't see my body as something to be valued, but as a piece of meat for men to use.

Krisi Wright

I faked orgasms waiting for it to be over. I felt empty, as if I were missing something.

Emily Lavinia

My self-esteem was so shattered that I couldn't look in the mirror if I was fully dressed.

Wendy Gregory

According to an exclusive survey by Fabulous, 91 percent of women have body confidence issues that ruin their sex lives.

But it doesn’t have to be this way.

Psychologist and author Wendy Gregory, 60, from Windsor, Berkshire, says her self-esteem was crushed after a harsh remark from her partner during their 18 years together. This led to stagnation in their intimate relationship.

“Then, the second piece of advice changed everything.”

Born-again virgin

“I was scared to reveal my body in lingerie in front of a stranger, but I was stunned upon looking at those photographs,” she says.

London influencer and sex expert Emily Lavinia, 32, shares that intimacy was once a source of shame for her.

In 2017, Emily decided that something had to change in her life.

'That year changed everything,' she says.

“Now I am very proud of how far I’ve come. Respecting your body is an important part of becoming a person. You only have one body - respect it, cherish it, and love it.

I faked orgasms waiting for it to be over. I felt empty, as if I were missing something.

Emily Lavinia
The Sun's Campaign 'Britain Has Body Issues' Boosting self-esteem and confidence can greatly improve the quality of one’s sex life. Psychologists and experts emphasize the importance of respecting one’s body and support from loved ones in this process. Disclosing intimate issues can help other women find a way to improve their relationships with themselves and their partners.

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