How To Squirt During Sex: Tips, Definition, And How It Feels
With that, you can go rely on the next techniques on this list. Wait a sec, squirting and orgasm are two different things. Making your woman reach climax doesn’t mean she squirted. With that, the clitoris isn’t going to take center stage when it comes to squirting.
Your face is going to be between her legs and on her face and breasts. Please do your woman a solid and make sure you tend to your basic hygiene to make this experience as non-distracting as possible. If she can feel your fingernails, she’s not going to be able to enjoy herself. What many couples don’t realize is that the vast majority of healthy women CAN achieve a massive fluid emission at time of orgasm.
Now it’s time to combine forces to double her pleasure. With one hand, you will be using some of the techniques I described above for rubbing her clit while using your other hand to penetrate her and massage her G Spot. You’ll be stimulating her clitoris from the inside and outside. While stimulating the G-spot area may help her to squirt, there are no guarantees.
Stimulating this spot might help trigger female ejaculation or squirting for some women. At this point, if she can squirt, you should hear the ‘splashing’ sound of liquid and clear fluid coming out of her vagina. Many women if they have not squirted before feel like they need to pee at this point.
The answer, as always when it comes to sex, is “it depends”. First and foremost are the mechanisms of how female ejaculation works. As with many things sex-related how to squirt, the answers are complex and deeply individual. Some squirt with ease, some can learn how to squirt, and some may never get there – and that’s fine. In exploring our bodies’ potential, it’s always important to deemphasize goal-seeking, especially at the beginning of the process.
There’s a good chance the answer to this question is yes, though not necessarily. If he feels like he’s about to ejaculate, that’s normal. If he does squirt, it might be a small amount of clear fluid, not necessarily a dramatic gush.
It’s this very spot that is the ‘key’ to your ability to squirt. It is likely to induce squirting if continually stimulated. The G-spot was named in his honour by Dr Frank Addiego and colleagues, who wrote about female ejaculation in the 1980s. Another tip from Dr Maragouthakis is to focus on the foreplay and allow your partner to build your arousal gradually.
Whether or not squirting is a part of how you experience pleasure, enjoy the experience of getting to know your body, and honoring what feels right for you. During sex or arousal, some people get the feeling that they are going to pee, so they stop. That pressure felt in your urethra might actually be your body getting ready to ejaculate. Enjoy exploring your body, whether you squirt or not. Practice might not make perfect, but you’ll at least have fun trying. That said, urine leaking during sex is a fairly common problem, and is called sexual incontinence.