Where does it comes from? Is it pee? And how might I make it happen for me? The first time Gilly, 41, squirted, it left her on a high. I took a photo of the wet patch so I could reassure myself that it really had happened. Tash, 26, was a bit more floored — and worried about the carpet. I mopped up the rug, then had a google. In the 17th Century, Dutch anatomist Regnier de Graaf wrote a groundbreaking treatise, Concerning The Generative Organs Of Women, describing the fluid and linking it to an erogenous zone inside the vagina that was much like male prostate.

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Aristotle, an ancient Greek scientist and philosopher, described the emission of female fluids in his medical writings around B. These days, doctors remain interested in squirting and are conducting clinical experiments to learn more about it. Is it the same biological response as male ejaculation? And, um, what exactly… gets squirted — is it pee, or something else entirely? Does it come out of the vagina or the bladder? The intrigue surrounding squirting is definitely not limited to clinicians. We turned to science to answer your — and our — most pressing questions. In this study, researchers performed biochemical analysis on two distinct female fluids expelled during sex.
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There is a debate as to whether this is urine or some form of ejaculate, like seminal fluid. Both sides of the debate are correct. It's not an either or thing.
New research suggests that there's a chance the fluid squirted during female ejaculation could just be pee. Or as Vice, who uncovered the study, eloquently put it: "cum or piss? That's the question on everybody's lips top and bottom, ahem today, folks. A group of French scientists devoted a generous chunk of their time to thinking about female ejaculation; and attempted to get to the bottom of that age old conundrum: what the hell is it? The researchers administered pelvic ultrasound scans to seven women who had previously experienced the seemingly-but-definitely-not-mythical sensation of female ejaculation both just after they urinated, and then twice again during sexual stimulation - and the results were a little shocking: they came back reporting that the liquid was actually pee. Or in normal-person-speak: it's basically an accidental gush of wee but there are also other substances in there. But it's a tricky one. Describing the liquid as both "odourless and colourless," this doesn't really lend itself to being an overwhelming flow of piss mid-sex, does it? So basically, we're none the wiser.