Menstrual Flow vs. Lube

Boxlicker101

Licker of Boxes
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Apr 5, 2003
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Believe it or not, this is a writing question, not just my own salacious curiosity.

If a woman is in her menses and is also sexually excited, would the odor of her menstrual blood overpower the fragrance of her lubricating juices. How would a day of heavy flow compare to a day of light flow? :eek:
 
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Believe it or not, this is a writing question, not just my own salacious curiosity.

If a woman is in her menses and is also sexually excited, would the oder of her menstrual blood overpower the fragrance of her lubricating juices. How would a day of heavy flow compare to a day of light flow? :eek:

Ok I'm bored so I'll, uh, bite. Yes, the smell of menstrual flow would overpower anything else, light or heavy, but more so when heavy.
 
Yes, matter of fact I can usually detect a change in scent a day or two before the period arrives.
 
I'm disappointed in you Box, you of all people should know that, you know!
 
They are not the best days to take her out for a romantic canoe ride through shark infested waters, either.
 
Those are her 'safe' days though, if you don't mind all the mess. ;)
 
They are not the best days to take her out for a romantic canoe ride through shark infested waters, either.

It turns out, sharks don't smell blood. They sense the miniscule electric current generated when the iron-based salts in the blood meet the sodium-based salt in sea water.

How astounding is that!
 
It turns out, sharks don't smell blood. They sense the miniscule electric current generated when the iron-based salts in the blood meet the sodium-based salt in sea water.

How astounding is that!
Cool! :cool:

And Box--what everyone else said. And the blood is the lubrication on heavier days ;)
 
That is cool, but it seems misleading for the sake of eliciting a "wow" response.

It's like saying human eyes don't really "see" anything. All it is is rods and cones responding to photon energy incident on the cornea, and then generating tiny electrical signals in response which are transmitted to and decoded by the brain into a virtual image.

It's so much simpler and just as accurate to say sharks smell blood in the water and eyeballs see.
 
That is cool, but it seems misleading for the sake of eliciting a "wow" response.

It's like saying human eyes don't really "see" anything. All it is is rods and cones responding to photon energy incident on the cornea, and then generating tiny electrical signals in response which are transmitted to and decoded by the brain into a virtual image.

It's so much simpler and just as accurate to say sharks smell blood in the water and eyeballs see.
Sharks rely on electroreception not smell.
 
That is cool, but it seems misleading for the sake of eliciting a "wow" response.

It's like saying human eyes don't really "see" anything. All it is is rods and cones responding to photon energy incident on the cornea, and then generating tiny electrical signals in response which are transmitted to and decoded by the brain into a virtual image.

It's so much simpler and just as accurate to say sharks smell blood in the water and eyeballs see.

Ha! So there, Ben! :p Neener-neener-neener!

Try and ruin our shark fun.
 
Thanks, Peeps. I was pretty sure that was the case, but I hate to include misinformation in a story. If I said somebody could smell her pussy juices even thow she was in her menses, I would look silly. :eek:
 
They are not the best days to take her out for a romantic canoe ride through shark infested waters, either.

Might want to skip the hike through grizzly country, too. Maybe sharks don't smell blood---but grizzly bears do. From five miles away.
 
It turns out, sharks don't smell blood. They sense the miniscule electric current generated when the iron-based salts in the blood meet the sodium-based salt in sea water.

How astounding is that!

The mechanism is the ampullae of Lorenzini. Sharks got 'em.
 
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