Rhythm and Synchronization
03:50
Late post, andami ko na pa lang pending sa Drafts ko.
She’s one my regular repeater. We had gained a great friendship that we meet over coffee or dinner even without having yoni sessions. Maaamong mukha, perfect boobs, not chubby but has curves on the right places, intelligent, passionate kausap (nakakagulat nga bakit hindi pa nagjojowa) and very sex positive.
Here is her moans:
Minsan sa mga recordings ko ng moans mapapansin that my breathe synchronizes with the woman I am massaging. Minsan my heart beat even faster than them. I can feel the lady’s heartbeat in my fingertips even when it is inside her pussy, moreover, my heartrate and breathing involuntarily synchronized with the woman I am doing yoni massage with. This is normal and is called body synchronization.
Let’s say you’re redecorating your home, and, with a bit of Wes Anderson whimsy, you install two pendulum clocks on your wall. In what’s been a mystery since 1655, they will eventually synchronize, and start swinging through the seconds in perfect unison. Physics is just starting to understand why. Even weirder: People do it, too.
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The study of 22 couples, published in the journal Scientific Reports, is the latest in a growing body of research on "interpersonal synchronization," the phenomenon in which individuals begin to physiologically mirror the people they're with.
Scientists have long known that people subconsciously sync their footsteps with the person they're walking with or adjust their posture to mirror a friend's during conversation. Recent studies also show that when people watch an emotional movie or sing together, their heart rates and respiratory rhythms synchronize. When leaders and followers have a good rapport, their brainwaves fall into a similar pattern. And when romantic couples are simply in each other's presence, their cardiorespiratory and brainwave patterns sync up, research has shown.
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03:50