Squirting Pee

Squirting Pee




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Squirting Pee
Medically Reviewed by Hansa D. Bhargava, MD on November 24, 2020
Squirting refers to fluid expelled from the vagina during orgasm. Not all people with vaginas squirt during orgasm, and those who do may only squirt some of the time. This type of orgasm includes a rapid ejection of urine from the bladder.
Squirting sometimes also involves secretions from the skene's gland. The skene's glands are sometimes called the female prostate because they function similarly to the male prostate.
A squirting orgasm is sometimes called female ejaculation. But this term excludes non-binary and trans people who are not female but have vaginas. 
A recent study has shown that there is a difference between squirting, female ejaculation, and incontinence during sex. However, the term squirting is used to describe all three in everyday language.
All three of these phenomena involve fluid coming from the bladder during sex. Squirting is the expulsion of urine during an orgasm. Female ejaculation is a release of both urine and a substance from the skene's glands. Sexual incontinence — also called coital incontinence — is when someone loses control of their bladder during sex.
Ejaculation in people with vaginas may include a small release of a milky white liquid that does not gush out. Squirting, on the other hand, is usually a higher volume. It is possible to squirt and ejaculate at the same time. 
Squirting is real. In fact, scientists have documented the phenomenon. However, more research is needed to determine the exact causes of squirting and female ejaculation. 
Part of the ambiguity about squirting is that the skene's glands vary from person to person. Some people with vaginas don't have any, while others have very small ones.
Myth: Everyone Can Squirt If They Try the Same Method
Each person's experience with squirting is different. While some methods can make people squirt more than others, there is no one proven method that makes every person with a vagina squirt. This is because each vagina is different. As mentioned, some vaginas lack the skene's glands which are thought to create the fluid released during ejaculation in people who have vulvas. 
Myth: Squirting Orgasms are Always High Volume
Squirting isn't always a high volume event that soaks the sheets. Sometimes it is a small trickle or a stream of fluid. 
The depiction of squirting in porn movies often shows large gushes of squirting liquid. Porn producers fake some of these depictions for dramatic effect. All volumes and forms of squirting are valid. Squirting at different volumes is a normal occurrence during sex for many people.
Myth: Squirting or Ejaculation Only Happens During Orgasm
Some people can squirt or ejaculate before or after an orgasm. Squirting can also occur at the same time as an orgasm. Some people also have multiple spurts of squirting spread over a few minutes.
Explore squirting by yourself or with a partner to find out what works for you.
Some sex experts recommend stimulating the g-spot to achieve a squirting orgasm. Either by yourself or with a partner, take some time to find the g-spot with your fingers and/or sex toys. Pressure on the g-spot may make you feel the need to urinate.
Experiment with different methods of bringing yourself or your partner to a squirting orgasm with g-spot stimulation. Some ideas include:
For some people, putting too much pressure on the g-spot can feel uncomfortable. Listen to your body and do what feels good. If you are too tense it may be harder to orgasm or squirt. 
BBC: "Every question you ever had about female ejaculation, answered."
Cosmopolitan: "Is Squirting Normal?"
Cosmopolitan: "Sex Talk Realness: Is Squirting Fake?"
Lifehacker: "How to Have a Super-Intense Squirting Orgasm."
Marie Claire: "My Epic Journey to Find the "Skene's Gland," the Mystical Source of Female Ejaculation."
National Council for Biotechnology Information: "Nature and origin of "squirting" in female sexuality."
Refinery29: "Is Female Ejaculation Even Real? 5 Myths Debunked."
Shape: "Is Squirting Real? What to Know About Female Ejaculation."
© 2005 - 2022 WebMD LLC. All rights reserved.
WebMD does not provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment.


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You’re at brunch with your BFF (the one who overshares and you love her for it) when she mentions how her latest hookup made her orgasm so many GD times, she had to strip her sheets at 3 a.m. because they were soaking wet.
“Uh, you mean you peed your bed?” you ask.
“No,” she explains, “ squirting , as in gushing fluid during orgasm, is totally different from pee.”
And then you’re both whipping out your phones to prove each other wrong. But after scrolling through hundreds of articles, neither of you can find a definitive answer for whether squirting is urine or something else entirely.
Despite millennia of evidence that squirting is a very real thing that happens to some women and people with vaginas during sex (see the receipts below), so much about it still remains a big fat question mark. Experts have yet to come to a consensus on how, when, or why squirting happens—and, most importantly, whether or not it’s actual pee that comes out.
For starters, let’s take a 2013 study published in the Journal of Sexual Medicine that estimates between 10 and 54 percent of women ejaculate fluid during sex . Okay, so either half of all people with vaginas do it…or almost none. Yeah, not helpful. There are a handful of other small, conflicting studies about the phenomenon, but doctors say way more specific research is needed, which makes it tricky to scream, “It’s pee!” or “STFU, it’s not pee!” at brunch with any kind of conviction.
The thing is, though, the world really, really wants to understand it. ­Perhaps thanks to porn—in which vagina-havers are often seen shooting out streams of fluid ­during foreplay and intercourse—curiosity over this sexual feat has reached an all-time high. ( Searches for “squirting” on ­Pornhub more than doubled between 2011 and 2017, and women are 44 percent more likely to look for this stuff than men.) Basically, it’s the Loch Ness monster of our sexuality: The less evidence there is about it, the more we want to know.
Oz Harmanli, MD , chief of ­urogynecology and reconstructive pelvic surgery at Yale Medicine, has reviewed much of the research on squirting. His personal conclusion? The liquid is urine that can be mixed with some sort of female ejaculate. But (eek) mostly urine.
Let him explain: Squirts often contain something called prostate-specific antigen , a protein found in semen, which suggests that women do have the ability to cum sort of like guys do. Some experts say that protein comes from the Skene’s glands , aka the female prostate, located on either side of the urethra. But, he adds, “there is no gland or reservoir in the female body, other than the bladder, that can produce the amount of fluid that is released with squirting.”
It’s the Loch Ness monster of our sexuality: The less evidence there is about it, the more we want to know.
So in the argument with your bestie, yeah, you probably have the edge. (Thank you, Dr. Harmanli.) Squirt is most likely urine and secretions from the Skene’s glands . But contrary to popular belief, squirting doesn’t only ­signal a great time (and it doesn’t define good sex—you can still have a killer orgasm without squirting). It may also point to urinary incontinence or, more specifically, coital ­incontinence , aka the inability to control your bladder during ­penetration or orgasm.
While standard pee leaks are typically a thing older women might deal with, coital incontinence may affect 20 to 30 percent of women of all ages, says ob-gyn Heather Bartos, MD . And it can be tied to the status of your ­pelvic-floor muscles, adds ob-gyn Morgan West, DO . When those muscles are strong, you have max control—your bladder and urethra are on full lockdown mode, so nothing is coming out if and when you don’t want it to. But when they’re weak or, you know, relaxed at the tail end of an intense tantric ­sexathon, the muscles may not be able to withstand the power of your orgasm, setting up the perfect (rain)storm of squirt.
Nope. Unless you or your ­partner are totally squeamish, squirting—and what exactly this love juice contains—is really NBD. Yes, you may need to clean up afterward, but don’t let that kill your vibe. Most people find even just the idea of squirting incredibly hot. And honestly, if someone is making you nut so hard that you’re legit losing all control over your own body and its functions…who cares about a little mess? You’ve now got one hell of a brunch story.
Elaine Ayers, PhD, an assistant professor of museum studies at NYU, on the historical confusion around women’s orgasmic secretions.
5th century BCE: The ancient Greek Hippocratic treatise On Generation inaccurately claims that women’s “semen” is necessary for conception.
4th century CE: A Taoist text mentions a female genital fluid that comes out during orgasm, totally separate from natural vaginal lubrication.
1672: Dutch physician Reinier de Graaf is the first to describe the “female prostate.” He says its function is to “generate a pituito-serous juice that makes women more libidinous.” Right….
1905: Sigmund Freud links an “abnormal secretion of the mucous membrane of the vagina” to “hysteria”—an old term for female mental illness. It’s bullshit!

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Squirt Versus Pee: What’s the Difference?
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Squirting. Gushing. Splooshing. Ejaculating. Coming.
Whichever way you describe squirting, it’s an exhilarating sexual experience that more women are coming to learn about and know. However, there are still myths and misconceptions floating around that leave some women feeling less than enthusiastic about it all.
Perhaps the greatest misconception on the topic is that squirting = urination. The good news is, that’s not true!
In this post, we’ll introduce squirting and explain why it’s not urination and how it differs from both urination and female ejaculation. We’ll also discuss how to overcome the fear of urination to achieve squirting, as well as how it feels when you do finally squirt.
So if you’re ready to set preconceived notions aside, read on!
Squirting is the expulsion, often forceful, of colorless, odorless fluid from the urethra during arousal or orgasm.
It’s an activity dramatically portrayed in pornography as gushing or even forcefully bursting from the woman as she climaxes, but real women’s experiences differ widely from a gush to a trickle and anywhere in between.
The term ‘squirting’ is often used interchangeably with female ejaculation, but this is incorrect. We’ll cover the difference between the two later on.
The answer to this age-old question is simple: Squirting is not the same as urination.
Now that we’ve cleared up the fact that squirting isn’t the same as peeing, you may be asking, what’s the actual difference?
For that, we’ll also consider how squirting differs from female ejaculation which is another urethra-involved activity.
As mentioned above, squirting is the flow of colorless, odorless fluid from the urethra. This occurs during climax from direct or indirect g-spot stimulation. Female ejaculation is a small amount of thick, milky-colored fluid that leaves the urethra during arousal or climax. Pee , or sexual incontinence , is urinating during sexual activity.
If squirting isn’t the same as sexual incontinence, why are the two often confused?
From the time that squirting was first introduced to the scientific community, there have been varying opinions on its “realness.” That is, was it truly a female sexual experience or simply sexual incontinence? Until more recently, there was little research on the matter.
Recent findings , however, indicate that squirting is indeed a phenomenon completely separate from sexual urinary incontinence. While components of urine are present in squirting fluids, it is in small enough amounts to not make themselves noticeable either through sight or smell. Further, the fluids contain components similar to those found in the male prostate , including “prostate specific antigen, prostatic acidic phosphatase, prostate specific acid phosphatase, and glucose.”
So if squirting isn’t pee, where does it come from? That would be the Skene’s glands! These are two glands found internally on either side of the urethra on the female anatomy . These are the same glands that also produce female ejaculatory fluids.
We know the difference between squirting and pee, but what about squirting and ejaculatory fluids?
Aside from the obvious physical characteristics is the difference in their journeys to the urethra. With squirting, the fluids will travel from the Skene’s glands through the bladder and out of the urethra. With female ejaculation, the fluids will go directly from the Skene’s glands and out of the urethra.
The other difference is that squirting fluid is abundant while ejaculatory fluid is scant. In fact, you may not even notice female ejaculatory fluids as it may drip down towards the vagina and mix with all other manners of fluids.
A common complaint from women who are learning how to squirt is that the urge to pee is too intense to overcome. This causes many women to stop prematurely for fear of wetting the bed.
It’s true that the urge to pee can be pretty intense as you get closer to climax. You need to allow yourself to go past that point, though, to experience squirting and its pleasures.
One, empty your bladder prior to starting. While the urge will still be there (it’s just part of g-spot stimulation), you’ll know that any amounts of urine are small.
Two, if you do pee a bit, so what? Cover your bed with towels or old sheets and let it go. Or if you think the fear of peeing in bed is keeping you from letting go, then you can even do it in the bathtub .
While it’s true that the urge to urinate is present as you climb towards climax , what does the act of squirting actually feel like ?
After a certain point, the urge to pee will disappear. As you squirt, you’ll feel a burst of liquid release from the urethra in a way that’s difficult to explain without feeling it. Because again, this burst of liquid will not be linked to the urinary relief that you’re used to while urinating.
The act of squirting itself may not feel “good,” but it can be relieving, relaxing, and even empowering. For women who squirt during orgasm, it can also (but not always) intensify the feelings of the orgasm.
Do misconceptions and myths about squirting keep you from giving it a go? Now that we’ve debunked the most common misconception, that squirting is just urinary incontinence, you can feel free to give it a solid try.
Just remember that like other things related to sexual pleasure , you should treat squirting as a journey to be enjoyed and not a destination. Take it as an opportunity to learn more about yourself or to get closer to your significant other. You may squirt the first time , or it may take you until the fiftieth attempt. Whatever the case may be, enjoy the time with yourself or your partner.
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