The G-Spot & Female Ejaculation
The Excitement of Giving Pleasure
By Dave, Liberated Christians
With A Tribute To Sam Preston
Impediments To Intimacy
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Talk with the girls online, on video chat. Ask her about ejaculations. See they ejaculating in front of camera! |
Ancient cultures accepted what we've only recently "found". As early as the 4th
century B.C., writings have been found that speak of the distinction between a
woman's "red and white fluid". Even American Indian folklore mentions the
"mixing of male and female fluids" from a female during sex.
In the 20th century, however, Western culture moved toward the belief that women
were incapable of such intense orgasm, except by clitoral manipulation. This was
reinforced by Masters & Johnson whose research claimed that a woman's clitoris
was the only source of female pleasure, even though many women have found that
to be far from the truth.
This misguided notion of a woman's sexual potential persisted until 1950 when an
article by a Berlin gynecologist Ernst Grafenberg discussed the G-spot area. In
his original work he reported that some women had a spot on the inside of the
front wall of the vagina which, when firmly stimulated produced intense orgasms
and in some women ejaculation of something thicker and slicker than urine during
the strongest contractions of their orgasms.
No further serious research was done until Perry and Whipple's 1978
documentation and extensive study which confirmed the article of Dr. Grafenberg.
Most sexologist now believe every woman has a G-spot but it may simply be
unresponsive from lack of stimulation. It can be made to learn to be responsive,
however, by proper stimulation.
Beverly Whipple, coauthor of The G-Spot , says there are two reasons the "spot"
was overlooked by so many physicians: "First, because it's on the anterior
(front) wall of the vagina, which is an area that's not palpated, and second,
when it is palpated you get a sexual response and doctors are trained not to
stimulate their patients sexually. But the gynecologists who palpated it with
our direction all found it and said 'My goodness! It's there! You're right!' "
Every physician who examined the area not only found it, Whipple claims, but
reported back to the researchers that they subsequently found it in every woman
they examined!
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Two Types Of Orgasm
It is now known women can experience two kinds of orgasm. But they are not
clitoral vs. vaginal as some have reported.
1.The most common (some times called clitoral) also involves the vagina since
the clitoral stimulation also produces contractions of the pubococcygeal (PC)
muscle supporting the pelvic floor which is where "vaginal" contractions are
felt.
2. G-spot and Uterine. G-spot stimulation results in orgasmic contractions
around the uterus, which is several inches above the pelvic floor.
Later research has shown that women who can orgasm both ways have even deeper,
more powerful blended orgasm, resulting from contractions in both areas at once.
One women described the difference this way: " I have two DISTINCTLY different
types of orgasm. The G-Spot orgasm tends to result in my vaginal walls
contracting and fluid being expelled. The clitoral orgasm can either have fluid
expelled or be "dry" but both result in my uterus contracting, not my vaginal
walls. And both types can either be whole body or localized. I state all this
because it seems as if some posters are implying there is only one kind of
orgasm and that it always involves uterine contractions and I'm here to tell you
that that is not always true. So good luck in experiencing ALL the kinds of
orgasms there are for women!"
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Location Of G-spot
The G-spot lies directly behind the pubic bone within the front wall of the
vagina. It is usually located about half way between the back of the pubic bone
and the front of the cervix, along the course of the urethra and near the neck
of the bladder, where it connects with the urethra. The size and exact location
vary. Imagine a small clock inside the vagina with 12 o'clock pointed towards
the navel. The majority of women will have the G-spot located between 11 and 1
o'clock a few inches inside the vagina.
Unlike the clitoris, which protrudes from the surrounding tissue, it lies deep
within the vaginal wall, and a firm pressure is often needed to contact the G
spot in its unstimulated state. Usually it is a lima- bean sized, spongy area
which responds to stimulation by hardening and swelling as blood rushes to it.
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Dave's Experience With Women
First of all let me define a G-spot orgasm the best I can from women that have
discussed it with me as well as my readings and research. G-spot simulation
usually results in an initial feeling of needing to urinate, which may last a
few seconds to 30 sec. This is because the spot is so close to the bladder.
Many women stop the stimulation fearing the urination feeling. BUT, I assure you
the feeling will change to a highly sexual pleasurable feeling. The resulting
orgasm is much deeper within the body than a clitoral orgasm.
From women who have shared their expereinces with me, there are two common
descriptions: either a very, very powerful explosion that keeps on going and
going (one woman who is very highly orgasmic told me it was the best she ever
had) or less intense but an experience of deep, rolling orgasms.
In one case, after about an hour of my massaging her G-spot, as my hand was
getting tired, I moved away to her clit and she wanted me back on her G-spot,
saying that while clitoral stimulation would result in a one time big bang, the
ongoing smaller, almost continuous G-spot orgasms were more enjoyable.
Tools To Find Your G-Spot
A man who knows where to go with his fingers. A G-spot vibrator with a curve to
best reach the G-spot. The Sybian machine can provide the maximum stimulation
often required to awaken the G-Spot. Or your own fingers can reach it.
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Techniques For Stimulating G-Spot
Lie back with your knees pressed up to your chest. In this position, your
vaginal depth will shorten and even small fingers should be able to reach the
G-spot. With a partner, lie on your side with one leg drawn up to your chest as
your partner enters you from the rear. He should be able to hit the spot.
The G-spot responds to pressure rather than to touch. Gently stroking is not
likely to get any results. It's more like massaging a pea under a mattress - one
has to compress the flesh to find it.
Insert fingers and bend them gently up, around and behind the pubic bone. Beyond
the rather rough-surfaced tissue immediately behind her pubic bone, your
fingertips will encounter a very soft, smooth area. Go very slowly and let her
tell you what she feels as you explore the smooth area, which will feel to you
like the inside of a very slippery mitten. When you straighten your fingers and
reach further inside, you'll encounter a hard, rubbery structure that feels like
an erect nipple pointing south. This is her cervix. The G-spot is somewhere just
his side of the cervix, about an inch beyond the mitten, in the flesh
immediately in front of the vagina.
Imagine you're holding a tennis ball on those two of three inserted fingers. An
area about the size of a grape in the center of the tennis ball is what you're
trying to reach. It can be anywhere along that two-or-three inch long area
between the pubic bone and the cervix. Explore slowly, allowing for feedback
front he woman - let her guide your fingers with her words if she can feel the
stimulation. The G-spot responds to pressure rather than to touch. Gentle
stroking is not likely to find it. It's more like massaging a pea under a
mattress - one has to compress the flesh to find it.
When you reach in from the front with the woman on her back, the heel of your
hand is over her clitoris while your fingers hook around her pubic bone. Pull
upwards, as if you're trying to lift her off the bed. Do this with the same sort
of rhythm you'd use fucking, and keep your fingers hooked, so they press deep
into the tissue. Once you know where it is you can try using your penis on it,
but for good G-spot orgasm, she may prefer your hand. In face-to-face
intercourse, the penis may not stimulate the spot enough to do any good,
although some positions, such as the one where the women draws her knees close
to her chest, may increase the changes for a G-spot orgasm.
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Female Ejaculation
While all women have a G-spot, it has been estimated between 10% and 40% of
women are capable of ejaculation. The G-spot need not be stimulated for
ejaculation to occur, but most women say that their first ejaculation experience
came from massaging their G-spot. The response varies from a light sprinkle to a
huge gush. I have experienced women who gushed huge amounts of fluid 10 feet
out.
Researches have found that although many women feel a slight need to urinate
right before ejaculation, the fluid is definitely not urine. Nor does it come
from the Bartholin gland which produces a milky, odorless secretion that helps
lubricate the vagina when sexually aroused.
Today we now know that the difference between women who squirt and those that
don't is in the number and size of their pariurethral glands. They are analogous
to the hundreds of tiny glands that constitute the male's prostate gland and are
responsible for 15% to 50% of the fluid a man ejaculates.
The myths that female ejaculation is the result of poor bladder control, or
excess secretion which sweats from the vaginal walls and pools in the back of
the vagina to squirt out during the strong muscle contractions of orgasm, have
been proven wrong. For decades many women felt it dreadfully abnormal and tried
to hide or avoid it. Physicians in their ignorance tried to cure it. By
questioning many women, researchers have established that about one woman in
five ejaculates (through her urethra rather than her vagina), some of the time
but not always. The stimulation of the G-spot produces both her ejaculation and
her deep uterine contractions.
Besides the famous study of Whipple and Perry of Dr. Ernest Grafenberg's 1950
article about the spot, in Nova Scotia researcher Ed Belzer explored the
chemical composition of female ejaculate. In Florida Helen Robinson and Sharon
Pietranton worked with groups of ejaculating women. At first American
gynecologists, routinely trained not to sexually stimulate their patients, were
astonished that Dr. Grafenberg was on such sensual terms with his. Generations
of gynecologists have tied to cope with "hypersecretors" blaming it on poor
bladder control.
"Women's response to direct stimulation of the G-spot is identical to the
response of males when their prostate is stimulated," Perry and Whipple
observed. The first few seconds of stimulation produces a strong feeling that
they have to urinate. This feeling lasts for two to ten seconds, maybe longer,
before changing to a distinctly sexual enjoyment. Whipple felt that most women
when faced with this sensation hold back their sexual response to keep from
wetting on their partners. Perry theorized that this may explain why up to 25%
of American females never have orgasms - they've learned early that to avoid the
embarrassment of urinating during sex, they have to hold back.
Women with well-toned PC muscles are more likely to ejaculate and generally have
better orgasms. Many women ejaculate easier after they’ve “primed the pump” with
a few orgasms, others come on their first one. The common theme seems to be
extreme arousal and direct G-spot and clitoral stimulation for an extended time.
It is common for writers of porn films and erotic books to make it appear that
male ejaculations "shoot" or "spurt". But Kinsey's observations of hundreds of
male ejaculators showed that in about 75% of men the semen merely exudes from
the meatus or is propelled with so little force that the liquid is not carried
more than a very small distance beyond the tip of the penis. In short, most
males ooze rather than shoot. Their semen doesn't spurt, it dribbles out.
Similarly, if a woman expels fluid other than urine from her urethra, she
shouldn't have to make it squirt for it to qualify as ejaculation. The fact that
many women don't notice it since its not a powerful squirt contributes to the
underreporting of female ejaculation. Other women, including one of my (Dave's)
partners, very strongly squirt large amounts of fluid while having powerful
G-spot orgasms.
Helen Robinson reported that one of her research subjects was highly orgasmic
and continued to ejaculate copiously with each orgasm and would ejaculate a
quart of fluid in one session. A teaspoon of fluid is the more common amount,
but a cupful is not uncommon.
At Dalhousie University professor Ed Belzer found varying concentrations of acid
phosphatase in the women's ejaculate. This chemical had previously been thought
to be produced only by males, and in some courtrooms was accepted as evidence to
support a rape charge. Belzer's discovery proved that it wasn't urine and also
pointed out the existence of a genuine female prostate-like gland.
Not only are the fluids they produce chemically similar, the female prostate
acts like the male prostate: when rhythmically prodded, it swells up and then
discharges fluid through the urethra. To reach a male's prostate gland, you have
to reach in through his anus. In the female, you reach in - at virtually the
same angle - through her vagina.
There has been debate whether the ejaculation originate from the bladder or from
the urethral glands and ducts. Both may be the case in that a small amount of
fluid may be released from the urethral glands and ducts in some instances and
mixed in the urethra with a clear fluid that originates in the bladder.
Tests have been done where the bladder is drained of urine before the sexual
stimualation and resulting ejaculation. Even though their bladders had been
drained, they still expelled from 50 ml to 900 ml of fluid through the tube and
into the catheter bag. The only reasonable conclusion would be that the fluid
came from a combination of residual moisture in the walls of the bladder and
from post draining kidney output.
Regardless, a number of tests have chemical analysis have been done on the
fluid. Exactly what it is, isn't known but there is a consistency of results
that show a greatly reduced concentration of the two primary components of
urine, urea and creatinine, in the expelled fluid.
As Unv of So Calf tests showed the results were clearly "out of the range" to be
defined as urine.
But women's sexuality still remains a mystery (as women do in other ways ... as
the exact source and exactly what the fluid is remains natures secret.
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Male and Female Sex Organs Have Common Origin
An anatomy lesson may help understand why ejaculation is not as far fetched as
it may seem. There really is not that much difference between male and female
sex organs. In-vitro we all start out as female. If we get certain chemicals our
development changes to male and our female organs dry up and we develop male.
Have you ever wondered what that line was on the back side of a penis? Or, have
you ever looked? It is the remnants of a man's vagina when he was a female early
in gestation. Likewise the very sensitive spot on the back of a mans penis,
where the foreskin attaches is the remnants of the female clitoris.
Sexual development in the womb it is not always perfect. The most extreme
problem is those whose gender does not match their sex organs (transsexuals).
Since male and female are so similar, surgery can reassign one's sex to match
gender. Yes, it is done all the time, both male to female and less frequently
female to male.
The same but much less dramatic natural event seems to occur in some women in
which they develop small prostate like glands that are capable or producing
ejaculation. Lab tests show the female ejac is very similar in composition to
the prostate fluid within the male ejac (semen which comes from prostate mixed
with sperm etc), but without the sperm in a female.