Some women are “squirters,” at least occasionally, most likely with G-spot stimulation. Many Western sex experts dismiss the “ejaculate” as merely a gush of fluid composed of urine and copious vaginal secretions. Others believe it is fluid from the Skene’s glands, a string of several masses of tissue, embedded in the urethra, which, when stimulated sexually in some women, release the fluid into the urethral canal.
Men ejaculate sperm from the testicles via tubes that go through the prostate gland, where the sperm mixes with seminal fluid, a very clear process that everyone understands. There is no question that whatever this fluid is, it is not the female equivalent of seminal fluid. Strictly speaking, there is no female ejaculate or ejaculation.
Devotees of Amrita, who believe that female ejaculation is sacred, consider the fluid to be the “nectar of the goddess.” If not ejaculate, then what is it? I lean toward the Skene’s glands theory because it makes the most sense to me.
Female ejaculation isn’t exactly a technique. If you want to try to make it happen, follow these tips:
• Drink a lot of water in preparation, but don’t have sex with a full bladder.
• Use G-spot stimulation.
• Don’t hold back when you feel the urge to urinate. Bear down.
Men either love the squirting, or they don’t. There’s no middle ground.
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