Do Women's hips stop growing

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rudder
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Do Women's hips stop growing

Post by rudder »

I heard they don't. They just keep growing as they get older. Is that true?
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Cornfed
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Re: Do Women's hips stop growing

Post by Cornfed »

Apparently that is true.
MrMan
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Re: Do Women's hips stop growing

Post by MrMan »

Maybe that has something to do with many middle-aged women getting stouter at that age.

I read somewhere that the tightness of a woman's you-know-what has to do with the width of her hips or size of her pelvis. This had to do with race. On average, African women had narrower hips (and gave birth to babies with smaller heads) and therefore, their you-know-what's were tighter than white women's, who had wider hips.

So does this mean women get looser as they age due to hips getting wider, or do hip bones stay the same on the inside and get thicker, making them wider? Does the fat on the hips get wider or is it the bones?
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HouseMD
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Re: Do Women's hips stop growing

Post by HouseMD »

MrMan wrote:
January 20th, 2023, 10:54 pm
Maybe that has something to do with many middle-aged women getting stouter at that age.

I read somewhere that the tightness of a woman's you-know-what has to do with the width of her hips or size of her pelvis. This had to do with race. On average, African women had narrower hips (and gave birth to babies with smaller heads) and therefore, their you-know-what's were tighter than white women's, who had wider hips.

So does this mean women get looser as they age due to hips getting wider, or do hip bones stay the same on the inside and get thicker, making them wider? Does the fat on the hips get wider or is it the bones?
The bones are fixed in size and women add fat as they age, due to pregnancy, lifestyle, or genetic reasons. Women being less tight as they age is due to the loss of elastin and other proteins that help tissues retain their elasticity over time, the same reason as faces and breasts sag.
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Shemp
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Re: Do Women's hips stop growing

Post by Shemp »

HouseMD wrote:
January 21st, 2023, 4:41 am
Women being less tight as they age is due to the loss of elastin and other proteins that help tissues retain their elasticity over time, the same reason as faces and breasts sag.
Where did you get your education? Vagina is like the mouth. Tightness is due to muscles, not tissue elasticity. Vaginas can become permanent loose because of muscle atrophy or muscle or connective tissue damage (such as tearing during pregnancy that is too severe to heal later). Vaginas can be temporarily loose if the woman chooses not to flex muscles for some reason, or temporarily excessively tight if she over flexes. Same as the mouth. Lips, cheeks, tongue muscles are normally still able to tighten around something no matter how old a person is.
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MarcosZeitola
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Re: Do Women's hips stop growing

Post by MarcosZeitola »

HouseMD wrote:
January 21st, 2023, 4:41 am
The bones are fixed in size and women add fat as they age, due to pregnancy, lifestyle, or genetic reasons.
Are the bones always "fixed in size"? I've often noticed that the finger joins of men who work manual labour jobs are far thicker and broader than those of blue-collar folks or piano players for instance. And is it not possible that the hips widen somewhat after a woman gives birth repeatedly? Not much of an expert here, but it would make sense that over time, certain lifestyle decisions or heavy physical activities may alter a person's skeleton somewhat.
On "Faux-Tradionalists" and why they're heading nowhere: viewtopic.php?style=1&f=37&t=29144
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Re: Do Women's hips stop growing

Post by HouseMD »

Shemp wrote:
January 21st, 2023, 7:15 am
HouseMD wrote:
January 21st, 2023, 4:41 am
Women being less tight as they age is due to the loss of elastin and other proteins that help tissues retain their elasticity over time, the same reason as faces and breasts sag.
Where did you get your education? Vagina is like the mouth. Tightness is due to muscles, not tissue elasticity. Vaginas can become permanent loose because of muscle atrophy or muscle or connective tissue damage (such as tearing during pregnancy that is too severe to heal later). Vaginas can be temporarily loose if the woman chooses not to flex muscles for some reason, or temporarily excessively tight if she over flexes. Same as the mouth. Lips, cheeks, tongue muscles are normally still able to tighten around something no matter how old a person is.
The vagina is complex, with numerous layers of epithelium, endothelium, and muscle. Elastin is a core component of the non- muscular epithelium which comprises the majority of vaginal tissue. Muscular tissue comprises far less, and primarily exists to provide pulsations and intermittent stimulation during sexual intercourse, rather than providing primary structural integrity.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3042770/

Menopause causes powerful loss of elastin, which results in atrophy of vaginal tissue and potential vaginal prolapse. That's a big part of why estrogen can successfully treat vaginal atrophy so well
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Re: Do Women's hips stop growing

Post by HouseMD »

MarcosZeitola wrote:
January 21st, 2023, 8:32 am
HouseMD wrote:
January 21st, 2023, 4:41 am
The bones are fixed in size and women add fat as they age, due to pregnancy, lifestyle, or genetic reasons.
Are the bones always "fixed in size"? I've often noticed that the finger joins of men who work manual labour jobs are far thicker and broader than those of blue-collar folks or piano players for instance. And is it not possible that the hips widen somewhat after a woman gives birth repeatedly? Not much of an expert here, but it would make sense that over time, certain lifestyle decisions or heavy physical activities may alter a person's skeleton somewhat.
Bone growth is largely lost after puberty. Frequent trauma (we're talking daily) can change bone structure, but there is no normal process by which bones continue to change after puberty ceases. There is no difference in the skeletons of women that had 10 children versus 2, your hips are wide enough to pass a child or they aren't.
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Re: Do Women's hips stop growing

Post by HouseMD »

Mercer wrote:
January 21st, 2023, 3:52 pm
HouseMD wrote:
January 21st, 2023, 4:41 am
MrMan wrote:
January 20th, 2023, 10:54 pm
Maybe that has something to do with many middle-aged women getting stouter at that age.

I read somewhere that the tightness of a woman's you-know-what has to do with the width of her hips or size of her pelvis. This had to do with race. On average, African women had narrower hips (and gave birth to babies with smaller heads) and therefore, their you-know-what's were tighter than white women's, who had wider hips.

So does this mean women get looser as they age due to hips getting wider, or do hip bones stay the same on the inside and get thicker, making them wider? Does the fat on the hips get wider or is it the bones?
The bones are fixed in size and women add fat as they age, due to pregnancy, lifestyle, or genetic reasons. Women being less tight as they age is due to the loss of elastin and other proteins that help tissues retain their elasticity over time, the same reason as faces and breasts sag.
Women get loose, roast beef pussies from the thousands of Chads and Tyrone dicks they've taken over the years. You should have learned that in medical school.
Beef curtains are entirely genetic and related to hormone exposure. No amount of banging your wife will make external vaginal anatomy change unless you're literally ripping things to pieces. I've done OB/Gyn and whether a woman was a virgin or had been with 100 men didn't change the look of things or how difficult it was to do a Pap
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Shemp
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Re: Do Women's hips stop growing

Post by Shemp »

HouseMD wrote:
January 21st, 2023, 8:44 pm
Shemp wrote:
January 21st, 2023, 7:15 am
HouseMD wrote:
January 21st, 2023, 4:41 am
Women being less tight as they age is due to the loss of elastin and other proteins that help tissues retain their elasticity over time, the same reason as faces and breasts sag.
Where did you get your education? Vagina is like the mouth. Tightness is due to muscles, not tissue elasticity. Vaginas can become permanent loose because of muscle atrophy or muscle or connective tissue damage (such as tearing during pregnancy that is too severe to heal later). Vaginas can be temporarily loose if the woman chooses not to flex muscles for some reason, or temporarily excessively tight if she over flexes. Same as the mouth. Lips, cheeks, tongue muscles are normally still able to tighten around something no matter how old a person is.
The vagina is complex, with numerous layers of epithelium, endothelium, and muscle. Elastin is a core component of the non- muscular epithelium which comprises the majority of vaginal tissue. Muscular tissue comprises far less, and primarily exists to provide pulsations and intermittent stimulation during sexual intercourse, rather than providing primary structural integrity.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3042770/

Menopause causes powerful loss of elastin, which results in atrophy of vaginal tissue and potential vaginal prolapse. That's a big part of why estrogen can successfully treat vaginal atrophy so well
Any tightness provided by non muscular tissue is insignificant. The real tightness, which is obvious as the woman approaches orgasm, assuming you have a normal length penis fully inserted, is due to pelvic muscles surrounding the vagina. These are the muscles worked by Kegel exercises.

As for menopause, the real problem are dryness and thinning of the vaginal tissue so that it becomes prone to tearing. Dryness is easily fixed with artificial lubrication. Thinning of the vaginal tissue can be ameliorated in 3 ways: 1) topical estrogen cream applied to vulva and vagina (man should wear condom to avoid being affected by recently applied estrogen cream); 2) systemic estrogen, as part of hormone replacement therapy, which is advisable for most women up to age 65-70, but not all women and not beyond 70 (however, systemic estrogen doesn't always renovate vagina tissue enough to avoid tearing); 3) topical non-estrogen creams similar to creams used for burn and other wound treatment (burn-type cream "plumps" the vulva/vaginal tissue only temporarily, like 24 hours, whereas estrogen cream is longer lasting, but the burn-type cream is safer for men so they don't need condoms).

I have experience with 2 women who had vaginal childbirth. One pre-menopause age about 45 or so, one post-menopause age about 53. Both needed artificial lubrication but were normally tight. Neither had problems with vaginal wall tearing. Another women age about 45 had undergone full hysterectomy for ovarian cancer, so menopausal. She needed lubrication and was extremely tight, due to vaginismus. She was also a masochist so encouraged me to bust my way through the vaginismus, then screamed blood murder, then finally relaxed. She was Irish Catholic and had all kinds of hangups about sex, but definitely preferred it fast and violent. Another age about 35 had pre-menopause due to chemo for breast cancer. Also needed lubrication, no vaginal tearing, very loose until near orgasm. Whole body was weak in the muscles. Another about age 65, on HRT, had a single cesarean delivery in her 30's. Needed lubrication but very firm in the vagina, like a girl. So that's my experience with older women: they almost always need lubrication, vaginal wall tearing never a problem in my experience, excessive vaginal looseness only if body as a whole is muscularly weak.

Loosest vaginas I've ever experienced were highly excited young women overflowing with natural lubrication, fully dilated and aching for penetration. They remained loose until near orgasm. Then bottom of vaginal is squeezed by pelvic muscles, then the squeezing relaxes in a flood of additional lubrication as orgasm occurs.

Only had one truly multiorgasmic woman. She could use her pelvic muscles to make her vagina as tight or loose as she wanted or to milk the penis. I'm multiorgasmic myself.
MrMan
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Re: Do Women's hips stop growing

Post by MrMan »

Mercer wrote:
January 21st, 2023, 3:52 pm
HouseMD wrote:
January 21st, 2023, 4:41 am
MrMan wrote:
January 20th, 2023, 10:54 pm
Maybe that has something to do with many middle-aged women getting stouter at that age.

I read somewhere that the tightness of a woman's you-know-what has to do with the width of her hips or size of her pelvis. This had to do with race. On average, African women had narrower hips (and gave birth to babies with smaller heads) and therefore, their you-know-what's were tighter than white women's, who had wider hips.

So does this mean women get looser as they age due to hips getting wider, or do hip bones stay the same on the inside and get thicker, making them wider? Does the fat on the hips get wider or is it the bones?
The bones are fixed in size and women add fat as they age, due to pregnancy, lifestyle, or genetic reasons. Women being less tight as they age is due to the loss of elastin and other proteins that help tissues retain their elasticity over time, the same reason as faces and breasts sag.
Women get loose, roast beef pussies from the thousands of Chads and Tyrone dicks they've taken over the years. You should have learned that in medical school.
Weren't you saying you couldn't get a woman and the world is getting worse and worse. Now, you are an expert on aging vaginas? Where did you get your knowledge of these things?
MrMan
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Re: Do Women's hips stop growing

Post by MrMan »

Shemp wrote:
January 22nd, 2023, 10:21 am
HouseMD wrote:
January 21st, 2023, 8:44 pm
Shemp wrote:
January 21st, 2023, 7:15 am
HouseMD wrote:
January 21st, 2023, 4:41 am
Women being less tight as they age is due to the loss of elastin and other proteins that help tissues retain their elasticity over time, the same reason as faces and breasts sag.
Where did you get your education? Vagina is like the mouth. Tightness is due to muscles, not tissue elasticity. Vaginas can become permanent loose because of muscle atrophy or muscle or connective tissue damage (such as tearing during pregnancy that is too severe to heal later). Vaginas can be temporarily loose if the woman chooses not to flex muscles for some reason, or temporarily excessively tight if she over flexes. Same as the mouth. Lips, cheeks, tongue muscles are normally still able to tighten around something no matter how old a person is.
The vagina is complex, with numerous layers of epithelium, endothelium, and muscle. Elastin is a core component of the non- muscular epithelium which comprises the majority of vaginal tissue. Muscular tissue comprises far less, and primarily exists to provide pulsations and intermittent stimulation during sexual intercourse, rather than providing primary structural integrity.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3042770/

Menopause causes powerful loss of elastin, which results in atrophy of vaginal tissue and potential vaginal prolapse. That's a big part of why estrogen can successfully treat vaginal atrophy so well
Any tightness provided by non muscular tissue is insignificant. The real tightness, which is obvious as the woman approaches orgasm, assuming you have a normal length penis fully inserted, is due to pelvic muscles surrounding the vagina. These are the muscles worked by Kegel exercises.

As for menopause, the real problem are dryness and thinning of the vaginal tissue so that it becomes prone to tearing. Dryness is easily fixed with artificial lubrication. Thinning of the vaginal tissue can be ameliorated in 3 ways: 1) topical estrogen cream applied to vulva and vagina (man should wear condom to avoid being affected by recently applied estrogen cream); 2) systemic estrogen, as part of hormone replacement therapy, which is advisable for most women up to age 65-70, but not all women and not beyond 70 (however, systemic estrogen doesn't always renovate vagina tissue enough to avoid tearing); 3) topical non-estrogen creams similar to creams used for burn and other wound treatment (burn-type cream "plumps" the vulva/vaginal tissue only temporarily, like 24 hours, whereas estrogen cream is longer lasting, but the burn-type cream is safer for men so they don't need condoms).

I have experience with 2 women who had vaginal childbirth. One pre-menopause age about 45 or so, one post-menopause age about 53. Both needed artificial lubrication but were normally tight. Neither had problems with vaginal wall tearing. Another women age about 45 had undergone full hysterectomy for ovarian cancer, so menopausal. She needed lubrication and was extremely tight, due to vaginismus. She was also a masochist so encouraged me to bust my way through the vaginismus, then screamed blood murder, then finally relaxed. She was Irish Catholic and had all kinds of hangups about sex, but definitely preferred it fast and violent. Another age about 35 had pre-menopause due to chemo for breast cancer. Also needed lubrication, no vaginal tearing, very loose until near orgasm. Whole body was weak in the muscles. Another about age 65, on HRT, had a single cesarean delivery in her 30's. Needed lubrication but very firm in the vagina, like a girl. So that's my experience with older women: they almost always need lubrication, vaginal wall tearing never a problem in my experience, excessive vaginal looseness only if body as a whole is muscularly weak.

Loosest vaginas I've ever experienced were highly excited young women overflowing with natural lubrication, fully dilated and aching for penetration. They remained loose until near orgasm. Then bottom of vaginal is squeezed by pelvic muscles, then the squeezing relaxes in a flood of additional lubrication as orgasm occurs.

Only had one truly multiorgasmic woman. She could use her pelvic muscles to make her vagina as tight or loose as she wanted or to milk the penis. I'm multiorgasmic myself.
We always have lube around, and have since we were young, and almost always use it. It's not absolutely necessary. But It's good to keep stuff extra well-lubricated to decrease the chance that a bit of soreness could keep her from being up for another round the following night.
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