Tuesday, 21 June 2011

How to Improve Your Gay sex-porn statr

You've heard about it - the telltale signals, the look, the way they carry themselves, how they dress. She gazes into your eyes when you meet...does the gaydar goes off? She looked at me differently than other girls do. He seemed to REALLY like me more than a regular guy friend. I sensed something...did I read her queues Best Dating Guides correctly? Was that a flirt I felt with her? What used to be considered an urban legend is now a scientifically documented series of identifiable characteristic differences between straight and gay males and females.Dating Advice
William Lee Adams, while an undergraduate at Harvard College studying the topic for his senior thesis, found that when volunteers quickly view a stranger with minimal information, from neck-up photos and videos, without jewelry or makeup, homosexual men and women are more accurate in identifying other homosexuals. Neither the viewers nor the videotaped volunteers knew the purpose of the study.
A study conducted by a Dutch researcher tested subjects by showing them a series of pictures of outlines of large shapes, filled in with smaller shapes. The results indicate that homosexuals tend to notice more detail and focus on different things than the heterosexuals, according to the journal Frontiers in Cognition reports.
Richard Lippa, a psychologist from California State University at Fullerton is one of the leading cataloguers of the many ways in which gay people are different. He measured characteristic traits of gay and lesbian volunteers during a gay pride festival. He found a higher percentage of them with identifiable characteristic traits in common, such as counter-clockwise hair whorls, more densely populated fingerprints, left-handedness (50% greater likelihood for gays), and index finger/ring finger height variations.
I found the finger variation very intriguing. The index fingers of most straight men are shorter than their ring fingers, while for most women they are closer in length, or even reversed in ratio. But some researchers have noted that gay men are likely to have finger-length ratios more in line with those of straight women, and a study of self-described "butch" lesbians showed significantly masculinized ratios.These findings lean heavily in favor of a genetic component that may at least in part, be responsible for the differences in sexual orientation.
So you ask, what does it all mean? Well, my estimation is this; gaydar is a mystical combination of innate, keen, detail-oriented observational skills combined with subtle, genetic variations that draw people to others through attraction. Some can enhance their gaydar by paying more attention to subtle clues.
I think bisexuals fall into this category. Maybe they possess half as much of both the genetic and the observational skills, which may provide them with a less-than-adequate system of identifying other bisexuals, or gays or lesbians. So while you're checking your index finger size against your ring finger size and wondering if you might be gay because you're left-handed, spend a little more time noticing the nuances, the subtle differences is others' mannerisms; the details, if you will.

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