A number of sexologists have in fact described the G spot’s ability to “ejaculate” a clear liquid when highly aroused. This has led some to conclude that the G spot may be analogous to a man’s prostate gland. (As we mentioned earlier, men’s and women's sex organs develop out of the same tissue in the embryo.) Many women who ejaculate worry that they are urinating and, as we mentioned above, may feel an initial need to urinate when their G spot is touched. However, the liquid is definitely not urine, and the urge to urinate usually subsides quickly with increased arousal. You may at some point feel a “spray” against your penis when making love. Occasionally this spray is even visible. A small number of women ejaculate a teaspoon or less of liquid out of their urethra when they orgasm. (Women who ejaculate should also try to draw their sexual energy up, since they will lose some energy through ejaculating – though less than a man does.) According to researcher Lonnie Barbach, “recent chemical analysis of the [female] ejaculatory fluid suggests that it is unlike either urine or vaginal lubrication, but rather is like male ejaculatory fluid in its high levels of glucose and acid phosphatase. It is believed that the source of the fluid is a system of glands and ducts called the paraurethral glands. These surround the female urethra and develop from the same embryological tissue that develops into the prostate in the male." Explainable or not, this female ejaculate can be quite startling if you are unfamiliar with it. One man described getting hit in the face the first time he went down on his girlfriend. This propulsive force is probably a rare occurrence, but don’t be shocked if you find that with some women you need oral-sex goggles.
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