In midlife, experience teaches a useful truth. Extremes rarely deliver what they promise. A recent online conversation made that point with striking honesty.
Thousands of women shared intimate memories of partners at both ends of the size spectrum. Many expected physical gifts to guarantee pleasure. Instead, they often found discomfort, disappointment, or both. Several women described pain so intense it overshadowed any excitement. Others noted a different problem. Some well-endowed partners relied on anatomy alone and skipped effort. As a result, connection suffered.
Then the tone shifted. Women recalled partners with smaller bodies but greater skill. These men listened. They paid attention. They learned what worked. Pleasure followed. Confidence grew. Satisfaction stayed.

Men also joined the discussion. Those with same-sex experiences echoed the theme. Very large size looked impressive at first glance. In practice, it limited intimacy and options. Attraction faded when comfort disappeared.
Research adds context. Average bodies fall squarely in the middle. Preferences vary with age, intention, and trust. Long-term relationships often favor balance over novelty. Short-term curiosity sometimes leans bigger. Still, mismatched expectations end many romances.
One lesson stood out. Honesty matters more than measurement. Overselling creates pressure and disappointment. Understated confidence invites discovery.
In the end, most voices agreed. Great intimacy grows from attentiveness, communication, and care. Size may catch the eye. Skill keeps the heart.