Posted By Rob

“A recent study by British scientists has found that the mysterious G-spot, the sexual pleasure zone said to be possessed by some women but denied to others, may not exist at all. In the research, 1804 British women aged 23 to 83 answered questionnaires.” 

This study raised a few questions in my mind:
How would a woman know if she had a G-spot anyway?
For many, it’s like asking: “Do you have an appendix?”
Many participants will say: “I think so, although I’ve never seen it, or felt it”
It’s the same with the G-spot.
Many will answer “Yes” simply because they don’t want to be labelled as abnormal or uncool. Some won’t even know what the question is about and put a “Yes”, “No” or a “Not sure” answer, at random.
I think the scientists in this case have not taken the right approach.
Trying to get meaningful results using a questionnaire for such a complex issue
will end in false conclusions being made.
These scientists have assumed the G-Spot may not exist in some women.

I believe this to be a false assumption.

Let me put it this way:
Do we question whether a person has an appendix?
No, because more than 99% of the population are born with one, men and women included.  So why would nature exclude 50% of women from having a G-spot as they apparently concluded in this study.
I say the G-spot does exist in all females.
Just the stage of development of the G-spot varies from one woman to another. 
I can’t prove it, but the circumstantial evidence is irrefutable.

Another approach
As part of studies in human embryology, we learn about the development of the sexual organs in the male and female from conception through to birth and beyond.

Human embryology of the sex organs 101
Both sexes start out with the same primary organs and these begin to differentiate as the foetus develops in the womb. 

The penis develops in the male while in the female the same primary tissue forms the clitoris.  The testes develop in the male which later descend into the scrotal sac, while in the female, these primary organs travel upward into the abdomen to become the ovaries.  The male scrotum surrounds the testes. In the female the primary folds that do not coalesce, form the labia on each side of the vaginal opening.
The similarity between external labia and scrotal skin is obvious.

The tissue surrounding the urethra becomes the prostate gland in the male and it becomes the G-spot gland in the female. Even if it shrinks to an almost invisible layer of cells, it must still be there!    By the way, many men have discovered that stimulation of the prostate gland can also produce pleasurable sensations and even copious quantities of ejaculatory fluid!  This must be called the P-spot.

 

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Rob
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