“G-spot”
The G-spot has been known as a sensitive area right behind the front wall of the vagina, between the back of the pubic bone and the cervix. (A man’s “G-spot” is his prostate.) When this spot is stimulated during touching or sex, some women’s orgasms are accompanied by “ejaculate” from the urethra. Ernst Grafenberg, who first wrote about female ejaculatory fluid in 1950, stated that fluid expelled by women during orgasm was not urine, as was the widespread idea, but, in its place, secretions which are analogous to a man’s ejaculate minus sperm.
There is a continuing question over whether such an anatomical feature in point of fact exists. Erogenous zones differ from woman to woman. The term G-spot is habitually used generically by both women and men as a label for a woman’s most sensitive spot within the genital area. For some women, there doesn’t seem to be any specific spot in their vaginas that is sensitive to stimulation. For others, the G-spot is quite real, with evidence to prove it.











Discussion Area - Leave a Comment