The question of the sexual phenomenon known as female ejaculation
and whether there exists a female erogenous zone popularly known
as the "G-Spot" have been major areas of continued controversy and
debate among sex researchers, gynecologists and sex educators. Perhaps
no two sexual issues, including the question of clitoral vs. vaginal
orgasms, have created
so much public interest.
These subjects are continuing
to attract the attention of the public, particularly of women, as
well as the so-called experts in human sexuality, because they are
biological issues that have significant social ramifications. What
would be the potential impact on our collective sexual belief systems
(and actual behaviors/activities) if female ejaculation and the
existence of the G-Spot achieved widespread legitimacy?
Since the 1920's the
conventional medical establishment has dismissed "female ejaculation"
as actually being a condition known as urinary stress incontinence.
This condition is considered to be an undesirable bodily dysfunction
in which urine is involuntarily expelled from the urethras of
women due to physical straining such as might also occur with
coughing or sneezing as well as sexual arousal or orgasm.
Women have generally considered such expulsions to be a source
of personal shame or embarrassment that also frequently elicited
disapproval from their sexual partners. Physicians usually attempt
to correct the condition, either by the use of Kegel exercises
or by surgery.
Furthermore, noted
experts in the field of human sexuality
such as Alfred Kinsey and Masters and Johnson dismissed female
ejaculation as being an "erroneous but widespread concept."1
Masters and Johnson also argued against the existence of the erogenous
zone known as the "G-spot" and stood steadfastly for the premise
that the clitoris alone was responsible for triggering female
orgasm.
However, if it
should turn out that these experts had underestimated the sexual
capabilities of women's bodies by portraying pleasurable sexual
activities like female ejaculation as abnormal and/or imagined,
it could have a significant effect on women's views of their sexuality.
If the new evidence about these expulsions demonstrated that they
are natural sexual bodily functions then many women could be free
of guilt and shame about expelling fluid during sex.
Other
benefits of a public recognition of female ejaculation as a natural
event (and the so-called G-Spot as an erogenous zone, capable
of producing orgasm in
a woman) could be the creation of additional sexual activities
that might not just be a prelude to intercourse but an end unto
themselves. It could lead to a broadening of peoples' sensual
experiences and their sexual repertoire. New pleasurable behaviors,
with no goal other than pleasure from those activities, could
be learned with the added benefits that they have very low risk
in terms of AIDS, STDs and unwanted pregnancy.
All of these social
issues become a backdrop for new evidence I discovered during
my doctoral research project that, as a result of advanced and
heightened states of sensual/sexual arousal, some women do expel
fluid. In the past, the assumption has been that the expulsions
originated either in the bladder or from the urethral glands
and ducts. My study indicated that both may be the case
in that a small amount of fluid may be released from the urethral
glands and ducts in some instances and mixed in the urethra
with a clear fluid that originates in the bladder.
Glamour Television presents a docu-film which provokes and dazzles the imagination. The film deconstructs the traditional rubric within which female sexuality is mostly conceived; forging a new framework for understanding the female orgasm. The film lays to rest the "myth" of female ejaculation and the g-spot - an exquisite preserve of mystery and wonder.
With unbridled audacity, the women of Liquid Love celebrate the symphony of desire, abandon and rapture as they gush forth their "primal liquid gold." Complete with expert analysis, this film weaves a rich tapestry of eroticism, intellect, and explosive orgasms; yielding an evocative, rare motion picture.
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The G Spot : And Other Discoveries About
Human Sexuality
by Beverly Whipple (Author), John D. Perry (Author), Alice Kahn Ladas
(Author) The G Spot finally laid to rest the old argument about whether
the vagina or the clitoris is more important.
Doctor G, Sexologist and Sexual Educator, expert on Female Ejaculation, Female Orgasm, Female G Spot, Female Prostate
Address
P.O. Box 150146
San Rafael, CA
94915 Phone (415) 459-2801 E-mail click to email doctorg