The Vagina Adventures

The G-Spot Doesn’t EXIST????

Date January 4, 2010

I read this story on the New York Post website this morning…apparently they are claiming that the “G-Spot” is made up in people’s heads.

Please read for yourself, i will comment more on this later…still “processing”

http://www.nypost.com/p/news/international/sexy_spot_myth_8T9jQ5V3T05pJ80XQohIYO

le sigh

One Response to “The G-Spot Doesn’t EXIST????”

  1. Lady Monster said:

    They don’t state the actual study or how to find it so one can read it and have any real conclusions.
    Rebecca Chalker, author of The Clitoral Truth also states that the G-Spot IS just an idea and NOT an anatomical feature. The urethral sponge (incapsulating many nerves and cavities of tissue where moisture accumulates) is in the vicinity of the “G-Spot”. When pressure is placed on or near the urethral sponge a woman will either feel pleasure, or the sensation will be painful (as in too sensitive for direct stimulation) or no sensation.

    Each woman’s body is different in how they are wired for pleasure, but the anatomical features are there. The clitoris is more than just the glans and is hardwired with the urethral sponge and other vaginal features.
    Beverly Whipple (quoted in the article), one of the creators of the Federation of Feminist Women’s Health Centers, has worked closely with Rebecca Chalker there.

    And, at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clitoris:
    “More recently, Australian urologist Dr Helen O’Connell, using MRI technology, noted a direct relationship between the legs or roots of the clitoris and the erectile tissue of the clitoral bulbs and corpora, and the distal urethra and vagina.[6] She asserts that this interconnected relationship is the physiological explanation for the conjectured G-spot and experience of vaginal orgasm taking into account the stimulation of the internal parts of the clitoris during vaginal penetration.[7] Some individuals who experience orgasm from both direct clitoral stimulation of the glans and vaginal access to the internal bodies may distinguish between them in terms of both the physical and general sensations associated with each.”

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