“The vagina is so confusing, but if you turn on a vibrator it is instant pleasure for almost every woman.”— Thea Halpin, birdeemag.com
“Women masturbate in a lot of different ways, but a lot of my clients have found it useful to get a sense of what the process tends to entail. In general, most women masturbate by stimulating their clitorises. Research has found that women are most likely to reach orgasm by stroking diagonally across…”— Vanessa Marin, Vanessa Marin, bustle.com
“Circle Perk: If you love clitoral stimulation but find prolonged pressure a little too intense, try the Circle Perk to reap the benefits of all those nerve endings in your c-spot. To do this move, find a seated position that is comfortable and allows you access between your legs, and use your finger…”— Anna Borges, womenshealthmag.com
“Does this mean all the times you didn't squirt were bad? Or were they good, and this was just way better? Or is squirting just different the way pizza and steak are both good but also very different?”— Anonymous Guy, cosmopolitan.com
“As great at this is, a heads up would've been nice, because this is getting messy. Next time, I'll basically line my room with those plastic furniture covers my grandma had all over her house. Wait ... did my grandma have those because ... oh no ... Oh, fuck no.”— Anonymous Guy, cosmopolitan.com
“I was with a partner I felt very comfortable discussing my sexuality with. I'd expressed a desire to see if I was capable, curious about how it would feel. He was really into the idea, and we tried various positions and techniques until it happened.”— Anonymous Woman, cosmopolitan.com
“So how many women are able to squirt versus female ejaculate? No one knows for sure, but experts estimate anywhere from 10 to 54 percent of women are capable of doing either. Which means you shouldn't feel bad about not having clear liquid shooting out of your vagina every time you have sex, and you…”— Lane Moore, cosmopolitan.com
“My best friend regularly obsesses about her boyfriend's ex-girlfriend, who was a "squirter," and therefore the real-life incarnate of many men's fantasy partner. Porn has encouraged men to believe that when they've truly rocked a woman's body, it starts doing an impression of the Bellagio Fountain i…”— Anna Breslaw, cosmopolitan.com
“For a debate that can essentially, and crudely, be boiled down to "cum or piss?" it's surprisingly fraught with important implications. Some feminists say that reducing the physical manifestations of their orgasms to urine diminishes the importance of female pleasure during sex. Other feminists say…”— Allie Conti, vice.com
“If you want to learn how to squirt, you’ll need to enlist the help of your G-spot. The G-spot is hotly debated in its own right, but researchers agree that stroking the anterior wall of the vagina (the front side) will create a unique sensation that can lead to an orgasm. Most people are fixated on…”— Vanessa Marin, afterhours.lifehacker.com
“There's a lot of conflicting information out there about female ejaculation, or more colloquially, squirting. It is perhaps the greatest mystery of our time. At this point, it's practically mythology (previously compared to urban legends of Loch Ness proportions). Squirting is a myth, they say. Or n…”— Hannah Smothers, cosmopolitan.com
“Female ejaculation looks a lot like male ejaculation without the sperm. True female ejaculation is a small amount of thick fluid secreted around the time of orgasm for most women. It originates in the glands found within the erectile tissue surrounding the urethra that are analogous to the prostate…”— Madeleine Castellanos MD, thesexmd.com
“As late as the 1980s, most doctors who were aware of the phenomenon of women ejaculating assumed the fluid must be urine. As a treatment, they would recommend exercises to strengthen the pelvic muscles, such as Kegels. The truth is, many women do leak a little urine during sex and during other activ…”— Laura Berman, PhD, everydayhealth.com
“It’s also not unusual to experience different types of orgasms throughout your sexual history. It may reassure you to know that, in one study, the ages at which some women experienced their first ejaculation varied quite a bit — one woman reported her first ejaculation at age 68!”— Alice, goaskalice.columbia.edu