18th August - The Science of Squirting
So much debate has surrounded this topic in recent years, with many sexperts questioning the authenticity of a phenomenon which has been accelerated into the spotlight by the adult industry, and several extreme videos in which female actresses have served as human hose pipes. There has also been further debate over whether or not this magical, mystical liquid - most commonly referred to as ‘female ejaculation’ - is, actually, just urine. Much like how the male semen is secreted from the prostate gland, a small study conducted in 2015 found that ‘squirting is essentially the involuntary emission of urine during sexual activity’.
Since then, the topic has become the ‘loch ness monster’ of sex, with PornHub searches for ‘Squirting’ doubling between 2011 and 2017, with women 44% more likely to search for this term than men. The journal of sexual medicine estimates that only 54% of women ejaculate any sort of fluid during sex, with as little as 14% capable of that big ‘gush’ motion of a ‘squirt’. (10% of which claimed that achieve this during EVERY orgasm). However, many experts have since concluded that this gushing fluid, which appears at the point of female orgasm, may be created in the same area of the body as urine, but is a completely different liquid. ‘Squirt’ is certainly not as yellow in colour, and smells much less like Sugar Puffs. It is also thinner in texture. More like a warm cloudy lemonade which has had the fizz shaken out of it. There is no key ‘secret’ in enabling this hidden feature in women, as some are capable of unlocking this level, but any others aren’t.
However, stimulating the G-spot in a ‘come hither’ motion using the fingers is usually the most common way of achieving this bonus, according to many. The ultimate aim is to achieve this using a penis, though this is notably rare in ‘real life’, as pornography scenes depicting this act are often staged using various techniques. It is, however, possible, if the woman in question hydrates sufficiently in the days leading up to the proposed achievement. And that…



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