g-spot is a wonderful thingQuote:
Originally Posted by BizzleLuvin
any change on moans during g-spot action? or it is the same like normal masturbate(clit action only)
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g-spot is a wonderful thingQuote:
Originally Posted by BizzleLuvin
any change on moans during g-spot action? or it is the same like normal masturbate(clit action only)
...Wow I love you :DQuote:
Originally Posted by BizzleLuvin
Quote:
Originally Posted by Garden Knowm
LMFAO!!!!
the poon horn is my favourite instrument :pimp:
later
I think hes jus mad cause hes a nerd and never found it lol. But apparently, if the women say there is, and have been stimulated by it, im pretty sure there is one.Quote:
Originally Posted by Breukelen advocaat
Anybody named "Alex" shouldn't accuse other people of being "nerds", lol. :dance:
After you've fooled around with a few girls, then come back and tell me that they said that there is, or isn't, a G spot - until then, don't broadcast your ignorance.
doing some research, it seems that the more the g spot muscles and such are stimulated the stronger the potential climax. the link provided at the bottom has g spot exercises for the ladies. :pimp:
There is a spot inside the vagina that is extremely sensitive to deep pressure. It is felt through the anterior or front wall of the vagina about five centimetres from the entrance.
The spot is called the G spot or Grafenberg spot after the first modern physician to describe it.
When properly stimulated, the G spot swells and leads to orgasm in many women.
It is probable that every woman has a G spot. The researchers found one in every woman they examined. "It is the homologue of the male prostate," they said.
At the moment of orgasm, many women ejaculate a liquid through the urethra that is chemically similar to male ejaculate but contains no sperm.
As a result of stimulation of the G spot, women often have a series of orgasms.
For many women, it is difficult to properly stimulate the G spot in the missionary position. Other positions such as the one with the woman sitting astride on top or the one with male entry into the vagina from the rear ("doggie style") work better.
http://www.tantra.co.nz/tantrahome/gspot/index.htm
Bizzle's discription was indeed very.... Well... The guys here know what im talking about rofl
Breuk, please don't believe that one abstract. That's just one male doc's opinion, and clearly Hines didn't study enough women, only cadaver anatomy which didn't take into account changes that occur with arousal, which are largely the only circumstances that make the spot easily palpable.
There is a very definite "urethral sponge" area just through the front wall of women's vaginas that, in some women, fills with prostatic secretion-like fluid which is expelled with orgasm. I don't think Grafenburg or anyone else ever claimed the spot was a bundle of nerve connections in the same way the clitoris is. It's just a spongy area that is palpable inside the front wall of the vagina and that responds to penetration and other types of pelvic stimulation in some. I know it exists because I can feel the spot in myself and my husband, a board-certified physician, can feel it and has brought on (and witnessed) those orgasms.
Keep this in mind. There are a lot of men out there--and male doctors and researchers top the list--who are intimidated in a big way by women's sexuality, which is still a medical and neuro-anatomical mystery to far too many people. Dr. Freud certainly allowed his penis-centered opinions to cloud reality about women's orgasmic response. I think Drs. Kinsey and Masters did, too, to a lesser degree. Those notable men, never once owning a female reproductive system of their own, published a number of theories about women's sexuality and orgasmic response that have later proven to be, at best, off target and some blatantly wrong. At least Kinsey and Masters were theorists for less of the time than they were researchers, so they learned to take into account women's first-hand experiences over time.
Take it from the ladies who have the anatomy, Breuk, the G spot is not a myth. Maybe read some research abstracts from Dr. Jennifer Berman, a board-certified urologist, who's quite knowledgable on this subject and a respected authority on women's sexuality.
Well, I'm going by some of what I've been told by women, and things that I've read by some VERY sexually experienced women. I'm beginning to see that there's probably something to it, for some women, since a lot have been claiming that it works for them. Some of the above referenced women with experience say that 1) they've never had a G-Spot feeling and 2) none of their female partners or friends have. There is definitely something happening for some, and it's probably "different" from the clitoris' reaction(s). I don't know what to think, but if people are having fun with something, it does not matter what works, or doesn't, for other people. :dance:Quote:
Originally Posted by birdgirl73
That's the spirit!Quote:
Originally Posted by Breukelen advocaat
I had no idea I had one till about 10 years ago myself. I think maybe it's a response that can mature at different times in different people, assuming it's going to show up at all. I have two friends who swear the G spot doesn't exist, but they admit they say that simply because it doesn't appear to exist in them.
The first time a G spot orgasm happened to me, it was almost frightening. It's just a totally different sort of pressure build-up and expulsion of fluid. It doesn't happen every time by any means. Maybe three times a year, I'd say. Clitoral orgasm is still the far more common experience for me and the other women I've talked to who experience this.