What is the right age for sex?

There are many reasons why it is good to delay sex until your brain's development fails to reach that of the genitals. A study in the British Medical Journal of 1,000 men and women revealed that more than half of the women said they should have waited longer before having sex, [...]
There are many reasons why it is good to delay sex until your brain's development fails to reach that of the genitals.
A study in the British Medical Journal of 1,000 men and women found that more than half of the women said they should have waited longer before having sex, growing to 70% if they had sex before 16. Average age for men was 17 years old for women. Many women said they would have been less willing than their partner, but they did so because they were curious, slightly drunk, or thought that everyone else was doing it.
The second National Survey of Sex Attitudes and Living Styles, which included more than 12,000 men and women aged 16-44 in Britain, also found nearly half of the young women who wanted to wait.
The earlier you have sexual intercourse, the more likely you are to feel driven by it, to enjoy it less, to have more sexual partners in life (depends on you if it's a bad thing) and an increased risk of sexually transmitted diseases, teen pregnancy, and cervical cancer. Recognition is often blamed for the dangers associated with teen sex, developing abstract reasoning, and predicting the consequences do not develop until late adolescence.
A study of 400 teenagers in the Journal of Adolescent Health revealed that when mothers are a major source of sexual information, adolescents are less likely to risk sex. In the Netherlands, where sex is discussed at dinner with grandparents, adolescents have sex later than in the United Kingdom and use more contraception. Teenagers want to know about contraception, masturbation and how to manage relations, writes the Guardian, broadcasts the Kosovo Clan.
According to experts, 18 is the right age for men and women to be sexually active.










