August 26, 2008
Sex and the Olympic city
Matthew Syed in the Times of London:
I am often asked if the Olympic village - the vast restaurant and housing conglomeration that hosts the world's top athletes for the duration of the Games - is the sex-fest it is cracked up to be. My answer is always the same: too right it is. I played my first Games in Barcelona in 1992 and got laid more often in those two and a half weeks than in the rest of my life up to that point. That is to say twice, which may not sound a lot, but for a 21-year-old undergraduate with crooked teeth, it was a minor miracle.
Barcelona was, for many of us Olympic virgins, as much about sex as it was about sport. There were the gorgeous hostesses - there to assist the athletes - in their bright yellow shirts and black skirts; there were the indigenous lovelies who came to watch the competitions. And then there were the female athletes - literally thousands of them - strutting, shimmying, sashaying and jogging around the village, clad in Lycra and exposing yard upon yard of shiny, toned, rippling and unimaginably exotic flesh. Women from all the countries of the world: muscular, virile, athletic and oozing oestrogen. I spent so much time in a state of lust that I could have passed out. Indeed, for all I knew I did pass out - in a place like that how was one to tell the difference between dreamland and reality?
It was not just the guys. The women, too, seemed in thrall to their hormones, throwing around daring glances and dynamite smiles like confetti. No meal or coffee break was complete without a breathless conversation with a lithe long jumper from Cuba or an Amazonian badminton player from Sweden, the mutual longing so evident it was almost comical.
More here. [Thanks to Asad Raza.]
Posted by Abbas Raza at 11:08 AM | Permalink










Comments
I wonder how many of the female Olympic athletes are "oozing estrogen." I suspect it is quite the contrary. Low body fat tends to lead to low levels of estrogen.
Posted by: blah | Aug 26, 2008 1:58:18 PM
That's baloney at its Olympic best!
Neuroscience 1 for the ignorant and from the ignorant.
The famous "philosopher of science", Paul Anka, said it in his song:
"Multiplication is the name of the game that each generation plays the same."
If one has nothing clever to say, better keep your mouth shut and don't reveal your stupidity!
Lots of healthy young men and women and --- voila --- lots of sex.
Army, Navy USAF and, even, monasteries and convents!
Posted by: Felix E F Larocca MD | Aug 26, 2008 3:22:01 PM
nice pics hahha
Posted by: seoweb2 | Aug 26, 2008 7:46:55 PM
Felix-
I'm not so sure. My girlfriend in High School was a multiple gold medal winner (I will keep the details to the minimum to protect the innocent), obviously a world class athlete (she held 4 world records), and was my first exposure to sexual energy on that level.
I have spent time in monasteries and dorm rooms, but none were even close.
So, from primary experience (unless you had other experiences with Olympic athletes), a closer and more exact analysis of this article may be in order. I might also add that I grew up in LA and Hollywood in the 1960's and 70's, so my sexual boundaries were quite elastic, if not invisible.
"But secondly, where does this furnace of sexual energy come from? Or, to put it another way, why do sportsmen and women have such explosive libidos? I am not implying, for one moment, that every athlete in Beijing is at it. Just that 99 per cent of them are."
Good question.
Posted by: Dave Ranning | Aug 26, 2008 7:52:49 PM
It comes from the genes, as any farmer can tell you; or it comes from the stimulation of hedonistic instincts, as CG Jung would say, or from tne mirror neurones. Or it comes from the imperative by healthy people to mate and reproduce.
That simple Dave! And it's fun! That's why it's so pervasive.
Posted by: Felix E F Larocca MD | Aug 26, 2008 9:26:18 PM
Felix-
I agree with the fitness and genetic imperative, but you are missing the point.
This is a bit over the top.
I lived with a exotic dancer in Hollywood, and have traveled extensively, and while there are more experienced people out there, I have done quite a bit of sampling of healthy humans.
You are missing the point.
Posted by: Dave Ranning | Aug 26, 2008 11:58:26 PM
I'm not going to use sexual exploits and traveling as qualifications to speak. I'm not going to use the role of symmetries in the reproductive cycle from light bugs to human beings. I'm not goint to describe the work of the scientists that back it up. That's not the point.
The point is: what's your point, man?
Posted by: Felix E F Larocca MD | Aug 27, 2008 3:07:34 AM
Felix-you're such a fraud. Be aware, be very aware-things are coming down.
Posted by: Tammi Yeargain | Jul 3, 2009 11:50:33 AM
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