User:Lara bran/sandbox

Headline text
For most animals, sexual intercourse is used only for reproduction. However, humans, bonobos, dolphins and chimpanzees are known to engage in sexual intercourse even when the female is not in estrus (the most fertile period of time in her reproductive cycle). In most cases people have sex for pleasure, and so this behavior in animals is also presumably for pleasure, which in turn strengthens social bonds. See functions beyond reproduction

Many animals which live in the water use external fertilization, whereas internal fertilization may have developed from a need to maintain gametes in a liquid medium in the Late Ordovician epoch. Internal fertilization with many vertebrates (such as reptiles, some fish, and most birds) occur via cloacal copulation (see also hemipenis), while mammals copulate vaginally, and many basal vertebrates reproduce sexually with external fertilization.

However, some terrestrial arthropods do use external fertilization. For primitive insects, the male deposits spermatozoa on the substrate, sometimes stored within a special structure, and courtship involves inducing the female to take up the sperm package into her genital opening; there is no actual copulation. In groups such as dragonflies and many spiders, males extrude sperm into secondary copulatory structures removed from their genital opening, which are then used to inseminate the female (in dragonflies, it is a set of modified sternites on the second abdominal segment; in spiders, it is the male pedipalps). In advanced groups of insects, the male uses its aedeagus, a structure formed from the terminal segments of the abdomen, to deposit sperm directly (though sometimes in a capsule called a "spermatophore") into the female's reproductive tract.

raja yoga
Raja Yoga - The Royal Yoga 


 * Note:
 * This template is limited to Raja Yoga, more descriptive and intuitive.
 * This is focused on a common man, who is new and outsider to yoga concepts.
 * This template is used in eight limbs, for navigation between them.

Content
The Kama Sutra has 36 chapters, organized into seven parts. As translated by Burton the contents are structured like following:


 * Part 1 - Introductory:
 * contents of the book,
 * three aims and priorities of life,
 * the acquisition of knowledge,
 * conduct of the well-bred townsman,
 * reflections on intermediaries who assist the lover in his enterprises. Total of 5 chapters.
 * Part 1 - Introductory:
 * contents of the book,
 * three aims and priorities of life,
 * the acquisition of knowledge,
 * conduct of the well-bred townsman,


 * Part 2 - On Sexual Union: 10 chapters on stimulation of desire, embraces types, caressing and kisses , marking with nails , biting and marking with teeth , on copulation (positions) , slapping by hand and corresponding moaning , virile behavior in women, superior coition and oral sex , preludes and conclusions to the game of love. It describes 64 types of sexual acts. Total of 10 chapters.
 * Part 3 - About the Acquisition of a Wife: Chapters on forms of marriage, relaxing the girl, obtaining the girl, managing alone, union by marriage. Total of 5 chapters.
 * Part 4 - About a Wife: Chapters on conduct of the only wife and conduct of the chief wife and other wives. Total of 2 chapters.
 * Part 5 - About the Wives of Other People: Chapters on behavior of woman and man, encounters to get acquainted, examination of sentiments, the task of go-between, the king's pleasures, behavior in the gynoecium. Total of 6 chapters.
 * Part 6 - About Courtesans: Chapters on advice of the assistants on the choice of lovers, looking for a steady lover, ways of making money, renewing friendship with a former lover, occasional profits, profits and losses. Total of 6 chapters.
 * Part 7 - On The Means of Attracting Others to One's Self: Chapters on improving physical attractions, arousing a weakened sexual power.  Total of 2 chapters.