What it is and how to do it.
| History If you were to refer to literature over the last 50 years you would be lead to believe that females have only been able to ejaculate since about 1980. Of course this is absurd, and just shows how "the experts" can be wrong for decades on just about anything. Many knew the experts were wrong, but had little success in convincing anyone. Needless to say this lead to many problems, needless surgery (to fix the poor women who would ejaculate), expensive counseling (got to find out what happened when they were children to cause this "problem"), and in some cases divorce. "The G Spot" by Alice Kahn Ladas, Beverly Whipple, and John D. Perry, has dozens of letters from women who went though various personal tragedies because they would ejaculate during lovemaking. Doctors, gynocologists, and psychiatrists invariably told them they were peeing and needed either surgery or psychotherapy. |
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| Newsweek published an article
entitled "Just How the Sexes Differ" in May of 1981. One of the major difference
was listed was that men ejaculate, but women do not. However, Aristotle wrote about female
ejaculation, and Galen knew about it in the second century. The female prostate, which
generates the fluid which is ejaculated, was described in some detail by De Graaf in his
"New Treatise Concerning the Generative Organs of Women". (1) "... during
the sexual act it discharges to lubricate the tract so copiously that it even flows
outside the pudenda. This is the matter which may have been taken to be actual female
semen." He describes the fluid as "rushing out" with "impetus"
and "in one gush." (2) |
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| The medical community was finally
awakened in 1980 when Perry and Whipple showed a film of a female ejaculating to the SSSS
(Society for the Scientific Study of Sex). Martin Weisberg, M.D., a gynecologist at Thomas
Jefferson University Hospital in Philadelphia responded, "Bull ... I spend half my
waking hours examining, cutting apart, putting together, removing, or rearranging female
reproductive organs. There is no female prostrate, and women don't ejaculate." (3) |
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| Yet after seeing the film and witnessing the event in person he changed his tune: "The vulva and vagina were normal with no abnormal masses or spots. The urethra was normal. Everything was normal. She then had her partner stimulate her by inserting two fingers into the vagina and stroking along the urethra lengthwise. To our amazement, the area began to swell. It eventually became a firm one by two cm oval area distinctly different from the rest of the vagina. In a few moments the subject seemed to perform a Valsalva maneuver (bearing down as if starting to defecate) and seconds later several cc's of milky fluid shot out the urethra. The material analysis described in the paper (Perry & Whipple's) is correct, its composition was closest to prostatic fluid". (4) |
