Quote Originally Posted by denuseri View Post
It actually has nothing to do with orgasm denial, in fact its quite the opposite, a woman is more likely to achieve ejaculation after 2-3 orgasms than she is through other means; which btw vaginal orgasms (g spot) and female ejaculation is not directly related the way one may think it is.

Grafenberg's reaserch has been added to by many others now, such as Robinson, Pietranton, Perry, Belzar, Whipple and others.

In fact its become quite common knowledge for those that keep up with such things that all women have a "g spot" that if properly stimulated will result in orgasm.

According to Whipple there are two reasons the "spot" was overlooked by so many physicians:

A) it's on the anterior wall of the vagina in a region not normally palpated.

B) It must be palpated in a specific fashion to illicet the appropriate responce, most doctors (and sexual partners) dont do "that" lol. Just rubbing against it often times isnt enough.

In fact according to Whipple and others all the doctors who have looked for it using the correct anatomical directions found it in every woman they examined.
I refer to Leo9's mail here and also beg to differ: A thing repeated often enough gets to be 'common knowledge' - but not therefore always fact.

'All the doctors looking found it every women they examined' - in spite of how difficult it can sometimes be - but the newest technology that can really 'see' the anatomy in there did not!

Maybe what Whipple reports says more about doctors finding what they assume is there, than of the anatomy of women?

The jury is still out in the question of the G spot.

However, with better technology such as described in the article Leo9 is mentioning we start to get solid facts. I am convinced that this riddle will also soon be solved.

I find it important to point this out, as it is all too easy to think that something is wrong with you if you do not seem to fit the latest description of how we are supposed to be.

The link between ejaculation and g spot orgasms seems to be deep uterine contractions brought on by extreme sexual stimulation, which is simply more likely with g spot orgasms as opposed to clitoral ones alone and also twice as likely to occur after several orgasms have allready been achieved.
You lost me there. The uterus contracts with menstrual cramps and during births, not during orgasm. It is the pubococcygeus muscle that contracts during an orgasm.


Most reserches say that women in the study groups reported the first few seconds of impending orgasm stimulation, and in paticular g-spot manipulation, produced a strong feeling that one is about to pee before changing to a sexual responce.

Naturally most of us will pull back when faced with this sensation and hold back thinking we are about to pee when this area recieves the proper stimulation which some reaserchers think is why a quarter of all women have never had an orgasm at all let alone a g-spot one.
"let alone a g-spot one"??

I remember all the silly discussions about whether one 'should' have a "clitoris" orgasm or whether a "vaginal" orgasm is the "right" one and "better" than the other, and if you are "normal" if you get one or not "good enough" if you get the other and which guy is best lover and is he "good enough" if his loved one gets one or the other, and everybody feeling wrong and lots of competition!!

For Goodness sake, lets not turn this into that kind of sillyness! People generally have enough real sexual problems, no little thanks to religious puritanism, and do not need fictional ones.

The point is to have what is experienced as a good sexual life for all involved. It is not like comparing clothes!

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