exceptionallyexceptional: How can u tell the difference between squirting and regular orgasm?
How can u tell the difference between squirting and regular orgasm? I am pregnant and when my husband and I make love sometimes I feel like i have to pee and holding it prevents me from having a orgasm. I thought the feeling was from the baby pressing on my bladder. I posted a question about and was told that it was not me having to pee but it could be what is called squirting. How would I know the difference between squirting and having to pee?
Answers and Views:
Answer by Mommy of 1.5(baby 2 aug 2008)
When you have to pee you can feel it in the bladder area, when you can squirt it is like you know you have to orgasim and its caught up inside you, you have to release your muscels to let it happen.
It feels great, happens a lot more often when pregnant because the hormones are so high.
Answer by AmandaUgh no. The female reproductive system doesn’t have a special storage unit for fluids to be emited except for the usual lubrication from the cervix (which doesn’t all come out at once). Any fluid would be urine. You can actually make yourself pee if you rub something the right way down there. (completely unsexually). So that is what is probably happening when you are having sex. Try different positions.Answer by Elizabeth
Other poster is dumb. Learn about your own body – women do too ejaculate!
Quoted from sextutor.com:
“Females ejaculate? Yes, they do. We’re talking about a gusher of fluid spurting out of her pussy as she comes. Actually, to be more accurate, the fluid comes squirting out of her urethra. Don’t let this gross you out, though; it’s not pee! Female come is a clear, odorless liquid produced by a small organ called the “female prostate,” or urethral sponge, which is located between the urethra and vagina. The fluid it produces just happens to come out of the pee hole, but…so does guys’ semen, right?
While some women may experience ejaculation naturally in the course of intercourse or other sex play, most require some concentrated stimulation of the G-spot. Massaging the G-spot causes the urethral sponge to become engorged with fluid, which is then expelled during orgasm. And, as with an orgasm, ejaculation also requires the woman to “let go.” Before ejaculating, the woman will feel as though she is going to pee. However, it is nearly impossible for her to urinate while coming, because the muscular contractions of orgasm close off the bladder and prevent the passage of urine.
As she gets closer to coming, she will start to feel as though she has to urinate. That’s the come beginning to flow into her urethra. In order for her ejaculate, she has to relax, let go, and push down and out with the same muscles she would use as if she were peeing. It may be hard to overcome the impulse to hold back, but you can reassure her, again, that if she is coming, she will not pee.
Instead, as she comes and pushes the fluid out, she should feel extra intense orgasmic pleasure, and you should be rewarded with a spurt of nectar that may range from gentle gush to a drenching spray.
Attaining female ejaculation may take some practice and experimentation. You may find it easier to stimulate her G-spot if she gets on her hands and knees and you enter her from behind, pressing down on the G-spot instead of up. For more information and demonstrations, you can also check out Fanny Fatale’s video “How to Female Ejaculate,” which features women masturbating to ejaculation. As a woman gets more familiar with ejaculation and the sensations associated with it, it should be easier for her to achieve.”
Leave a Reply