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Women G Spot
Does it exist?
What is the G Spot
- There's a mass of spongy tissue that surrounds the urethra, called the urethral sponge. And like other parts of the body, the tissue is full of blood vessels and nerve endings.
Where is located
- For many women, the G-spot is about halfway between the vaginal opening and the cervix, Levine says.
Why is it called the G Spot
- It was first noted in the 1940s by German gynecologist Ernst Grafenberg (hence the “G”). The “magic button” became popular in 1982 with the publication of sex researcher Beverly Whipple’s best-selling book The G Spot: And Other Discoveries about Human Sexuality
- Fue notado por primera vez en la década de 1940 por el ginecólogo alemán Ernst Grafenberg (de ahí la "G").
- El “botón mágico” se hizo popular en 1982 con la publicación del libro más vendido de la investigadora sexual Beverly Whipple, El punto G: y otros descubrimientos sobre la sexualidad humana.
Different Vaginas Different Responses
- Every woman’s vulva and vagina is not the same, and bundles of highly sensitive nerve endings may be in different places. Which may explain why some respond well to a certain technique or position and others don’t.
G Zone
- In fact, the G-spot may be less of a spot and more of a zone that’s hard to pinpoint from one woman to the next, explaining why evidence has been hard to come by.
Effects on the G Spot
- Most important: Get fully aroused, Levine says, because “the G-spot swells the more aroused a woman gets.”
- Time to arouse
- Full arousal differs for every woman: It may be five minutes into sexual activity… or 25.
Once arouse
- 1. Insert a finger (yours or your partner’s) in the vagina.
- 2. Run it along the top wall of the vagina. Look out for an area that feels different from the rest of the tissue. Perhaps it’s more pleasurable when touched.
- 3. If you find a spot that feels promising, stimulate the area with a “come-hither” motion.
Other Positions
- Woman on top
- “This allows a woman to experiment with the angle that works best for her,” Levine says. ”Leaning back slightly while she’s on top targets the upper vaginal wall.”
- Rear entry
- “This works especially well if a woman can angle her body down by resting on her elbows,” Levine says.
- Missionary
- G-spot stimulation can be enhanced by squeezing your pelvic floor muscles around your partner’s penis. (It boosts his arousal too.)
Source: Article 1, Article 2