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Sex Therapy G Spot


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Sex Therapy G Spot



The G-spot is a mystery to many people. What is it? What does it do? How can you improve its function and sensation? In this blog post, we will answer all of these questions and more! We will discuss the anatomy and physiology of the G-spot, as well as how to improve its function and sensation. Additionally, we will explore how hormone treatments can help enhance this sensitive area for women.


And once you understand a few simple truths about the G-spotyou will no longer be left wondering if it is just a myth or simply some esotericmystery spot whose secrets are reserved only for the sexually elite.


Furthermore, in the sacredsexuality and Tantric traditions, it is understood that for a woman to beable to relax into the pleasure available in her G-spot requires a much deeperlevel of relaxation, trust, and surrender than it does for her to have aclitoral orgasm. And for this reason many women never experience a G-spot orgasm.


It is the G-spot in women that is responsible for the eventcalled female ejaculation, where a woman releases a fluid from her vagina thatis not the same as vaginal fluids and is definitely also not urine.


Female ejaculation occurs after intensestimulation of the G-spot and may occur as a strong squirt or gentle release ofwarm fluid. The fluid is produced by andreleased from the paraurethral glands (Also knows as the Skene's Glands) whichare located in the urethral sponge.


James Goldberg, director of research at the clinic since 1983, described Crenshaw as an early explorer in the fields of sexual aversion and the use of drugs to overcome sexual problems. He described her forte as integrating medicine and therapy.


The G-Shot procedure injects hyaluronic acid into the Grafenberg spot or G-spot. The G-Spot is a sensitive area of the anterior vaginal wall that may be stimulated during sexual activity. Women who have difficulty achieving orgasm may seek out this particular treatment because the hyaluronic acid injection increases sensitivity to the area. However, it is not a treatment for sexual dysfunction or a low sex drive. It is designed simply to enhance stimulation so that orgasm is achieved easier.


A lack of sensitivity can be a product of many factors. But in most cases, the culprit is hormonal imbalances. Lower estrogen levels during menopause or post-partum recovery can interfere with sexual function. Many women report that the prevalence of the G spot decreases with age. Dryness and thinning of the vaginal walls can make it difficult for women to experience sensations. Genetics can also be a factor. The injection will not solve hormonal issues. But, it can provide a temporary sensitivity boost that lasts four to six months. While not life-threatening, G spot sensitivity issues can help women reclaim their sexual health and confidence.


Her work also inspired a generation of sex educators, therapists, artists and academics who use her research to answer some fundamental and persistent questions about sex. The clitoral v vaginal orgasm debate, the orgasm gap between heterosexual women and their male partners, small penises and "loose" vaginas, the so-called G-spot: all these things, sex therapists and researchers say, could be better understood if men and women knew more about the clitoris, and therefore female arousal. British writer Jessica Berens once said that without a proper map of the female bits, it's as if everyone's been driving around for ages and still not found where they want to go: a bit like Canberra. It's been 20 years since we've had a proper map, but are we, I wondered, there yet?


It's almost a month since I first interviewed O'Connell and despite several requests, about which I am starting to feel self-conscious, I still haven't received the G-spot paper. Apparently it was sent, but never arrived in my inbox. And then, finally, I get it.


But the G-spot has confounded many who go looking for it and there's a long-running debate about its existence. American bioethicist Jeffrey Spike has said it belonged "in the same category as angels and unicorns". A few years ago, when a journalist asked her whether there really was a G-spot, O'Connell decided she would approach it, as always, scientifically. She and her team dissected the urethra and vaginal wall of 13 cadavers. They reported in a paper published last year that the G-spot "does not exist as an anatomic construct".


O'Connell's work echoed that of French gynaecologists Odile Buisson and Pierre Foldès (the latter is famous for reconstructing clitorises for victims of female genital mutilation). Using ultrasound, they did various studies looking at the stimulated clitoris and also the clitoris and vaginal penetration. They even did an ultrasound of a couple having sex. "The G-spot," they noted in a 2009 paper, "could be explained by the richly innervated clitoris."


Tanya Koens first came across O'Connell's research 14 years ago, when she was studying to become a sexologist. "I was like, 'Wow. Whoa. Whoa! How come this wasn't taught in school?' " Since then, Koens, who regularly appears on radio station Triple J talking about sex, has immersed herself in genital anatomy. It's her basic starting point with the men and women who see her for sex therapy in her practice in Sydney's Surry Hills. She's even got an anatomically correct, 10-centimetre-long 3D model of the clitoris. "Helen's work has been really amazing," she says. "And I take that theory and wrap it around clinical experience where I see things happening over and over again."


In November, Koens was on a sex therapy study intensive, learning and teaching about sexual anatomy. Late at night, after she returned from leading a "vulva class", she emailed me the advice she gives clients about making the most of the whole, anatomically correct clitoris. She says while it can take some women very little time to orgasm, the senior sexologists she studied under have timed the full engorgement of the whole clitoris at between 45 and 60 minutes.


Fair enough. But then she tells me about a guy who does research into erectile therapy who injected his penis just before stepping up to the lectern. That's where you would draw the line, I say. "Yeah," O'Connell says. "That's not me."


Her work also inspired a generation of sex educators, therapists, artists and academics who use her research to answer some fundamental and persistent questions about sex. The clitoral v vaginal orgasm debate, the orgasm gap between heterosexual women and their male partners, small penises and \\\"loose\\\" vaginas, the so-called G-spot: all these things, sex therapists and researchers say, could be better understood if men and women knew more about the clitoris, and therefore female arousal. British writer Jessica Berens once said that without a proper map of the female bits, it's as if everyone's been driving around for ages and still not found where they want to go: a bit like Canberra. It's been 20 years since we've had a proper map, but are we, I wondered, there yet?


Australia's first female urologist, O'Connell is a surgeon who treats patients with lower urinary tract problems such as incontinence and obstruction. A gifted endoscopic surgeon, she fixes or removes things within the tiny spaces of the urinary tract using a small telescope. She's also Director of Surgery and Head of Urology at Western Health, a sprawling health network servicing 900,000 people in Melbourne's west. In her rather limited spare time \\u2013 and for no payment \\u2013 she chips away on her female anatomy research, publishing a paper only last year on her search for the elusive but famous G-spot. More on that later.


A sexologist called Beverley Whipple popularised the G-spot, named after Ernst Gr\\u00E4fenberg, a German gynaecologist who first floated the idea in 1950. It's supposed to be a sensitive part on the stomach side of the vaginal wall and, as recently as 2012, , calling it a \\\"well-delineated sac\\\" \\u2013 his scientific journal article was ranked as one of the most popular of that year.


But the G-spot has confounded many who go looking for it and there's a long-running debate about its existence. American bioethicist Jeffrey Spike has said it belonged \\\"in the same category as angels and unicorns\\\". A few years ago, when a journalist asked her whether there really was a G-spot, O'Connell decided she would approach it, as always, scientifically. She and her team dissected the urethra and vaginal wall of 13 cadavers. They reported in a paper published last year that the G-spot \\\"does not exist as an anatomic construct\\\".


O'Connell's work echoed that of French gynaecologists Odile Buisson and Pierre Fold\\u00E8s (the latter is famous for reconstructing clitorises for victims of female genital mutilation). Using ultrasound, they did various studies looking at the stimulated clitoris and also the clitoris and vaginal penetration. They even did an ultrasound of a couple having sex. \\\"The G-spot,\\\" they noted in a 2009 paper, \\\"could be explained by the richly innervated clitoris.\\\"


Tanya Koens first came across O'Connell's research 14 years ago, when she was studying to become a sexologist. \\\"I was like, 'Wow. Whoa. Whoa! How come this wasn't taught in school?' \\\" Since then, Koens, who regularly appears on radio station Triple J talking about sex, has immersed herself in genital anatomy. It's her basic starting point with the men and women who see her for sex therapy in her practice in Sydney's Surry Hills. She's even got an anatomically correct, 10-centimetre-long 3D model of the clitoris. \\\"Helen's work has been really amazing,\\\" she says. \\\"And I take that theory and wrap it around clinical experience where I see things happening over and over again.\\\"


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