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Jacopo Fo English Blog

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ZEN AND THE ART OF MAKING LOVE
EVEN WOMEN DO IT:
FEMALE EJACULATION

 

In the talk of men, you hear all sorts of stories. Woman is a collection of push buttons. All you have to do is find the right one to drive her wild. Perhaps she has behind the ear, perhaps behind the knee. You touch her there and she falls in your arms gasping. That's how a friend of mine described the clitoris to me when I was fifteen years old.
Then there are the strangest preferences: the woman who wanted to be slapped on the face, the woman who wanted to be sweared at, the woman who goes wild if you talk to her in Russian like in the film, "A Fish called Wanda".
Then there are the nymphomaniacs who are addicted to sex... they can't do without it... From all these outlandish stories, sometimes a story comes out of sexually-frenzied women that howl and slobber, and what's more interesting, they start to pee themselves. Something that, among other things, men find embarrassing.
These women are a little scary because they resemble men a lot. They don't stay put, only lightly gasping; they get go wild and display an immense pleasure from orgasm. And the fact that they pee themselves, wetting you with their gush seems just a way to dominate you... a sign of contempt or excess, like going too far whoever pees himself from laughter.
Only when I began to methodically study sex, I discovered that those spurts didn't come from the bladder but from somewhere else. Who would ever have said that women could also ejaculate!

If a history of denied sexuality were to be written, one of the most incredulous pages would be regarding female ejaculation. Even today, it isn't talked about in sex education manuals, and in other texts, this physiological reaction is mentioned with a background of doubt.
Despite this, Aristotle already in the 1st century B.C. wrote about it, noting that during orgasm woman emits a gush. It's said that Galen (2nd century A.D. anatomist and doctor) knew about it. Female ejaculation was then written about in many pornographic texts, for example in "The Pearl", an English anthology that collects stories of the Victorian era (the 19th century), full of wet female orgasms.
But these stories were dismissed as mad male hallucinations. The Nordic Theodor H. van De Velde published in 1926 a manual for married couples in which he recounts that some women discharge a liquid during orgasm. Only a few took him seriously.

Orgasm with ejaculation has always been common knowledge among lesbians, but it was inconceivable that doctors would take the declarations of these "depraved women" seriously. Luckily many savages manage better and have fewer problems not having distinguished gynecologists to listen to.
The Batoro of Uganda consider a woman an adult and ready for marriage only when she is able through masturbation to ejaculate, wetting a wall. The older women teach the younger women how to do "kachapati", which in the Batoro language precisely means "wetting the wall".
The inhabitants of some islands of the South Pacific Ocean, the Trobriand, not only know the importance of the pelvic muscles and the existence of the G-spot, but also judge that the woman has felt pleasure only if she ejaculates. They have a very refined sexual language, but call female ejaculation and male ejaculation with the same word: "momona".
The curious thing is that this sexual behaviour has been recorded by Western anthropologists, who though slaves of their own ignorance and incapable of learning something from the savages, haven't understood a thing. Thus, you find even today mentioned in anthropological texts the strange custom of the Trobriand in which the women pee on their men as a sign of gratification. Here is for example how E. Gregersen in 1982 described the sexual customs of the Trobriand on the basis of a certain Salesio's testimony (1960):
"She experiences one orgasm after another and involuntarily urinates a bit at a time after each orgasm." This anthropologists' error leads to another. Seen in fact that male and female ejaculation in the in the language of the Trobriand are called equally "momona", they reach the conclusion that the males are so perverse that they pee during sex, which moreover is something physiologically very difficult (for both man and woman). The liquid emitted during female ejaculation has nothing to do neither with urine nor with vulva-vaginal secretions that wet the female genitalia when the woman is excited and that have the function to moisten it, making penetration easier and more pleasant.
Only in 1981, the Dalhouisie University of Nova Scotia analyzed this liquid. The research group that included Edwin Belzer Jr. and Perry and Whipple published in the "Journal of Sex Research" the results of the tests of the liquids taken from a few volunteers. The response was that it dealt with an entirely different liquid than urine and very similar to male seminal fluid (fortunately, it doesn't contain sperm, or else we males would go on unemployment insurance forever).
It appears that this liquid is produced from what in the woman is the residue of the male prostrate gland. Professor Jannini's team at the University of Ancona came to this conclusion in 1994. In fact, it is only at the sixth week from conception that sexual differentiation starts. The gonads appear initially, then the internal genitals, and finally the external genitals. Human embryos before this date are all the same, therefore ovaries and testicles have a common structure. Every gland or organ in the male has its counterpart in the female and vice-versa.

It's commonly said that an organ is "residual" or "atrophied" when it doesn't have in the adult male or female an apparent function and seems exactly the residue of the corresponding gland or organ in the other sex. Even the prostate gland has always been considered in the woman a residual gland. Kinsey described it thus circa 1950.
"Since the prostate gland and the seminal vesicles in woman are only residual structures, in reality she doesn't ejaculate. The muscular contractions of the vagina that follow orgasm can emit some vaginal secretions, and in some cases, they expel them with a certain force.
Especially in erotic literature, this phenomenon is defined as female ejaculation, but the term cannot be used in that sense."

Even Masters and Johnson in 1966 denied the existence of female ejaculation, saying that it dealt with a "an erroneous but popular concept". And finally in 1970 Germaine Greer in her book "The Female Eunuch" wrote: "The most false and disparate ideas about women still circulate, even though they have been refuted years ago. Many men still refuse to relinquish the concept of female ejaculation, which even though it has a long and glorious history, is pure fruit of the imagination".

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