G-Spot Vibrators
The Grafenberg spot (G-spot) is a
sensitive area just behind the front wall of the vagina, between the
back of the pubic bone and the cervix. Beverly Whipple, a certified sex
educator and counselor, and John D. Perry, an ordained minister,
psychologist, and sexologist, named the G-spot after Ernst Grafenberg.
Dr. Grafenberg was the first modern physician to describe the area and
argue for its importance in female sexual pleasure. The claim is that
when this spot is stimulated during sex through vaginal penetration of
some kind (fingers during masturbation, penis or other object partly
thrusting into the vagina), many women have an orgasm. This orgasm may
include a gush of fluid from the urethra, which is not urine.
It's been reported by many women that
stimulation of the G-Spot with a vibrator creates orgasms more intense
that any orgasm they've had with digital stimulation alone.
Q: I am a female and I have had these
strange orgasms lately that I never had before with my partner of six
years. Instead of your basic orgasm, I have very powerful ones that last
forever and include a lot of liquid coming out of my vagina. I have
never heard of a woman 'ejaculating' but that's what it seems like. Is
this normal or is something wrong with me?
A: This sounds like a G-spot phenomenon
accompanied by female ejaculation. With a woman who is lying on her back
and has her legs spread apart, the G-spot can be located by putting your
fingers inside of her between 10 and 2 o'clock, as if her vulva were the
face of a clock, with 12 at the top. Move your fingers deeper inside and
curl them back so that they are touching and pressing against the top of
her vagina or the "back door" of the clitoris. The G-spot
swells from the size of a dime to the size of a quarter and fills with
fluid that is NOT urine or vaginal fluid, which spurts out when a woman
orgasms. This does not happen in every woman; however, as you can tell,
it does happen in some. Aren't you lucky!
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