Female ejaculation or squirt is not only controversial among specialists, in fact, since Whipple and Perry (1981) published an article on the subject, much progress has been made in trying to answer the most common questions related to this topic. Like men? If so, where exactly does the liquid come from, does this happen to all women?
The discussion of female ejaculation arises from the confidences of a large group of women (according to some studies, between 40-54% of the female population), many of them began to realize that they were expelling a liquid at the time of orgasm. similar to male ejaculation.
- As Gilliland (2009) shows.
- This fact can have a great influence on the sex life of the women who experience it.
- For some it is shameful and humiliating.
- And for others it is a source of interest and pride.
- Information is a major obstacle to understanding and assimilating this fact.
- Or even to be able to define it.
A biochemistry laboratory at Van Buren Hospital has launched a very important research on female orgasm, we must remember that the fetal substrate at its origin is female, that is, the woman must have an embryonic prostate structure for the man to develop the corresponding male prostate.
The results of this research suggest that the existence of female prostate tissue may produce non-urinary and sexually induced genital secretions during orgasm (Venegas, Carmona Mena, Alvarez and Arévalo, 2006), this secretion is what we call ‘female ejaculation’.
Most experts agree that this secretion is not urine, as previously thought. They also agree that women’s prostate tissue (or Skene glands) is primarily responsible for this expulsion. The Eskene glands are similar to men’s prostate glands, so they have been called ”. Female prostate glands’. They are glands that secrete prostate-specific antigen and their function is related to urethral lubrication and female ejaculation.
Every woman and her sexuality is a separate world. There is no specific type of ejaculated liquid, in fact, some women claim to expel only a few drops, while others expel an amount equivalent to several cups of coffee, some describe it as thick and whitish, and others, on the contrary, see is transparent and aqueous.
“In some women, G-spot stimulation, orgasm and female ejaculation are linked. In other women, this relationship does not exist. Some women have reported an orgasm with ejaculation due to clitoral stimulation, and others have already had ejaculation without orgasm. “Whipple and Komisaruk?
Masters and Johnson (1966) argued that the only primary erogenous organ in women is the clitoris. Experts now say that the vagina and clitoris are primary erogenous zones (Zwang, 1987).
Anatomically, G-spot is not part of the vagina, but is part of the urethra (female prostate). It can be stimulated with penis movements or manually, which increases the volume of an area of a few centimeters in the anterior wall of the vagina, producing intense female orgasms (Arango de Montis, 2008).
These findings mean that proper stimulation of either of these two female organs can lead to orgasm.
“Point G is not a specific point, but a functional structure. Is it an erectile, diffuse and erogenous area that constitutes Halban’s fascia?. ?Tordjman?
In one study, 72. 7% of women were found to achieve orgasm by stimulating different areas of the vaginal walls and 90. 9% of women show pathogenicity through manual stimulation of these areas. Researchers examined the duration of orgasms generated by manual stimulation of the clitoris and vagina.
Crossing with the results, they found that the clitoris has approximately twice as much erogenous sensitivity as the vagina (Useche, 2001). In fact, one study has shown that most women only need clitoral stimulation to ejaculate (Alvarez, nf. ).
Many sexologists and feminists agree that it is absurd to reduce female sexuality to point A. In 1950, Ernest Grafenberg himself (who lends his name to the famous G-spot) stated that no part of a woman’s body responds sexually. , sexuality occurs in many places, starting with our own thoughts (Garcia, 2005).
There is no doubt that orgasm is accompanied by rhythmic contractions in the internal, female and male sex organs, unlike men, female ejaculation does not always accompany orgasm and, in most cases, occurs in the early stages of sexual response, especially in the first. phase, during arousal.
Another difference found by Amy Gilliland (2009) is that the volume of female ejaculation increases the number of orgasms a woman experiences during sex, this may be influenced by the phase of the menstrual cycle in which the woman is located and depends on the stimulation she has. you need to get there.
Just as the fetus at the beginning of its formation is female, female ejaculation also contains the same substances as semen: fructose, PSA and acid phosphatase (Alvarez, s. F. )
In ancient times, it was believed that without ejaculation there could be no fertilization. This applied to men and women in an attempt to standardize sexual response. On the other hand, some psychoanalysts of the time regarded vaginal orgasm in women as a “mature orgasm”. (Garcia, 2005). But, without a doubt, the biggest mistake is the claim that the more ejaculation a woman has, the greater her sexual satisfaction and the better (Elvarez, s. F. ).
The visualization of feminine pleasure through ejaculation reverses gender conventionality (García, 2005). There is still no scientific consensus on the subject. The data we have is collected through surveys and interviews with women. In short, advances in scientific knowledge are overturning. broader myths and minds, freeing women from old sex models.