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"X-Men" Beauty Loves X-Rated Sex

May 22, 2006 5:59 p.m. EST

Matthew Borghese - All Headline News Staff Writer

Los Angeles, CA (BANG) - Rebecca Romijn has told how she loves X-rated sex - and gets turned on by playing a dominatrix.

The 'X-Men' beauty - who plays mutant Mystique in the sci-fi series - also says she's happiest when she's stark naked.

She is quoted in Britain's News of the World newspaper as saying: "I love to be nude and I love sex.

"Being a dominatrix in the bedroom, sex in cars and in public places all turn me on. And I love fantasizing about being naked on an island with lots of other naked people."

The actress, who is engaged to 'Sliders' star Jerry O'Connell - also revealed her biggest turn-on is having her ears kissed.

She said: "Having them kissed turns me on like nothing else. They're easily my most erogenous zone."

Meanwhile, the 33-year-old has revealed she wants to start a family.

She said: "I am really looking forward to starting a family sometime soon. I can't wait. It is actually getting to the point where I get tears in my eyes when I see a pregnant woman.

"You know it is time to have a baby when you get tearful if you see a pregnant woman. Family is a priority for me."

All content provided by BANG Showbiz.


 
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The New Sex Scorecard
Men and women's minds really do work differently -- but not on everything.
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Hara Estroff Marano

Page 1 of 5

Get out the spittoon. Men produce twice as much saliva as women. Women, for their part, learn to speak earlier, know more words, recall them better, pause less and glide through tongue twisters.

Put aside Simone de Beauvoir's famous dictum, "One is not born a woman but rather becomes one." Science suggests otherwise, and it's driving a whole new view of who and what we are. Males and females, it turns out, are different from the moment of conception, and the difference shows itself in every system of body and brain.

It's safe to talk about sex differences again. Of course, it's the oldest story in the world. And the newest. But for a while it was also the most treacherous. Now it may be the most urgent. The next stage of progress against disorders as disabling as depression and heart disease rests on cracking the binary code of biology. Most common conditions are marked by pronounced gender differences in incidence or appearance.

Although sex differences in brain and body take their inspiration from the central agenda of reproduction, they don't end there. "We've practiced medicine as though only a woman's breasts, uterus and ovaries made her unique -- and as though her heart, brain and every other part of her body were identical to those of a man," says Marianne J. Legato, M.D., a cardiologist at Columbia University who spearheads the new push on gender differences. Legato notes that women live longer but break down more.

Do we need to explain that difference doesn't imply superiority or inferiority? Although sex differences may provide ammunition for David Letterman or the Simpsons, they unfold in the most private recesses of our lives, surreptitiously molding our responses to everything from stress to space to speech. Yet there are some ways the sexes are becoming more alike -- they are now both engaging in the same kind of infidelity, one that is equally threatening to their marriages.

Everyone gains from the new imperative to explore sex differences. When we know why depression favors women two to one, or why the symptoms of heart disease literally hit women in the gut, it will change our understanding of how our bodies and our minds work.

The Gene Scene

Whatever sets men and women apart, it all starts with a single chromosome: the male-making Y, a puny thread bearing a paltry 25 genes, compared with the lavish female X, studded with 1,000 to 1,500 genes. But the Y guy trumps. He has a gene dubbed Sry, which, if all goes well, instigates an Olympic relay of development. It commands primitive fetal tissue to become testes, and they then spread word of masculinity out to the provinces via their chief product, testosterone. The circulating hormone not only masculinizes the body but affects the developing brain, influencing the size of specific structures and the wiring of nerve cells.

But sex genes themselves don't cede everything to hormones. Over the past few years, scientists have come to believe that they too play ongoing roles in gender-flavoring the brain and behavior.

Females, it turns out, appear to have backup genes that protect their brains from big trouble. To level the genetic playing field between men and women, nature normally shuts off one of the two X chromosomes in every cell in females. But about 19 percent of genes escape inactivation; cells get a double dose of some X genes. Having fall-back genes may explain why females are far less subject than males to mental disorders from autism to schizophrenia.



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Publication: Psychology Today Magazine
Publication Date: Jul/Aug 2003
Last Reviewed: 9 Sep 2005
(Document ID: 2832)

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