Light at The End of Your Tunnel

Anatomic Existence of the G-Spot Finally Confirmed

Eureka—they’ve found it! The G-Spot. And it was somewhere behind and above the urethra of an 83-year-old cadaver. We certainly hope it doesn’t take us 83 years and a medical exam for someone to find ours…

In hot pursuit of the mysterious G-spot, Adam Ostrzenski, M.D., Ph.D. of the Petersburg, Florida Institute of Gynecology, performed a stratum-by-stratum dissection of a cadaver’s anterior vaginal wall (i.e., toward your bellybutton side). (How mad do you think Dr. Ostrzenski was to have to do this kind of research on a cadaver?)  

What he found was a distinct sac structure on the back of the perineal membrane, 16.5 mm above the opening of the urethra. Once he had extracted the sac, he determined it to have three definable regions, and measured 8.1 mm long x 3.6 mm wide x 0.4 mm high. When stretched, it grew to 33 mm long. 

According to Ostrzenski and The Journal of Sexual Medicine, which published the study, this proves the basic anatomical existence of one of human biology’s most hotly debated, elusive structures. 

Ostrzenski said that this confirmation of the G-spot may “lead to a better understanding and improvement of female sexual function.” Until then, though, we’re willing to start with a better understanding of why skipping foreplay is not acceptable. 


Source: Wiley-Blackwell (2012). Anatomic Existence of the Elusive G-Spot Confirmed, Study Claims. ScienceDaily.  Retrieved from http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/04/120425094741.htm
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Roz Van Meter commented
In my book "Sizzling Sex in 30 Days" I explain how to locate the G-spot and what kind of stroking can wake it up. Many women never discover theirs, and that's OK — the clitoris rules! However, those who do discover and attend to the G-spot really love theirs and find sexual positions that get it stoked and stroked. It appears to be analagous to a man's prostate gland, and the woman's liquid ejaculate, though it comes from the urethra, is not urine. Its properties are much like a man's semen. Think about it: a man's urine and semen come through the same penis, and his body knows how to close off one source (the bladder) when the other source (the prostate) is in action. A woman's body can do the same. Isn't this all fascinating?