6 The Myth of Squirting (Female Ejaculation) Which Turns Out to Be Big Wrong

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Medical Video: Fracking explained: opportunity or danger

Apparently, women can also experience ejaculation like men. Female ejaculation, aka squirting is the discharge of clear vaginal discharge from the urethra (bladder) in the vagina after receiving sexual stimulation. Many people believe squirting is tangible evidence of a man's success bringing a woman to orgasm. So, what is this assumption? Check out various squirting myths in this article.

Various squirting myths that turned out to be untrue

1. Squirting is just a myth

According to experts on sexual health and romance, Dr. Laura Berman, Ph.D., female ejaculation is not a myth. The reason is, a number of studies have found that some women will indeed discharge fluid during orgasm. Unfortunately, this is rarely exposed because this phenomenon is rarely discussed by women. Even so, scientifically squirting aka female ejaculation is real.

2. All women can squirting

Although squirting is a real thing, it doesn't mean that all women can do it. In fact, a study involving 300 participants reported that only seven women had ejaculated during orgasm.

Most people may see squirting as limited to pornographic films that spread the concept that everyone will definitely experience ejaculation during orgasm. Unfortunately, not everyone can experience squirting. So, if your partner can't squirting, don't hurt your partner. Like the vagina, every woman's sexual experience certainly has its own uniqueness so it will certainly be different from one another.

3. Squirting liquid is the same as urine

Squirting is a female ejaculatory fluid produced in the Skene gland, which is a gland inside the vagina that functions similar to the male prostate. The gland flows through the urethral tract (bladder), not from the vaginal opening. This fluid is neither urine (urine) nor the natural lubricating fluid of the vaginal wall because it contains a characteristic characteristic of prostate plasma originating from the Skene gland, which more or less functions as a female prostate gland.

However, squirting fluid also allows mixing with urine. Because, sometimes a woman's vaginal muscles clench after orgasm, which causes your ejaculatory fluid from the Skene gland to turn into the bladder and mix with urine, so it has a more fluid and runny texture. Even so, experts think liquids squirting does not have (or is very minimal) the common content of urea, creatinine or uric acid found in urine.

4. Women always squirting during orgasm

Another squirting myth that many people still believe is that every woman will always ejaculate when they reach orgasm. In fact, not all women ejaculate during orgasm.

Some women only experience it once in a lifetime. Whereas some other women show a routine experience of ejaculation. Even so, until now there is no definite presentation regarding how many women are able to experience ejaculation like men.

5. The vagina will give off a lot of fluid when squirting

Some people argue that when a woman is able to reach orgasm, her body can emit a lot of fluids. However, this seems unlikely. Because the body of a woman cannot store large amounts of the liquid.

Reporting from the Net Doctor page, Beverley Whipple, a sex expert and author of The Original G-spot, states that the amount of fluid a woman releases when she experiences squirting may be about half a cup of coffee.

6. Squirting requires G-spot stimulation

Reported from the Everyday Health page, ejaculation can only be achieved by stimulating the G-spot, because the area is in front of the vagina and connected to the urethra. When the area is under pressure in the form of stimulation, it will produce a desire to urinate.

However, some experts say that squrting does not only occur by stimulating the G-spot. Because, there are some women who are able to squirting from clitoral stimulation.

Basically, vaginal stimulation of any kind, whether it's the G-spot or clitoris, can bring women to intense sexual pleasure. In fact, if this does not always lead to ejaculation.

6 The Myth of Squirting (Female Ejaculation) Which Turns Out to Be Big Wrong
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