Step-by-Step Guide on How to Give Multiple Orgasms Because Once Isnt Enough
To squirt, you need to know what you like during sex and what brings you pleasure. Different types of stimulation, whether internal or external, the amount of pressure you prefer, and all your other preferences can contribute to making yourself squirt during orgasm. If you’re wondering how to squirt, how to make someone else squirt, or what the term squirting actually means, this article is for you. Queer sex educators and pleasure activists spoke with Them to help you learn more about this elusive (and pleasurable) sexual experience. Read on to learn everything you need to know about squirting. For those who are unfamiliar, squirting refers to the clear liquid that people with vulvas sometimes release when they orgasm.
Squirting isn’t always a high-volume event that soaks the sheets. Sometimes it is a small trickle or a stream of fluid. You can explain that attempting to squirt could take a while, so your partner will know not to get ahead of themselves. In this position, the penetrative partner sits beneath the other partner.
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 refers to fluid expelled from the vagina during orgasm.
With each thrust, your partner can press the head of their penis directly into your G Spot, focusing solely on it. As I keep repeating, you need to experiment with what feels best for you. If you don’t have two dildos or a butt plug, you can also try fingering yourself anally. Another option is using one dildo vaginally while simultaneously using another anally.
These accelerators and brakes to your sex drive are known as the Dual Control Model. This causes your back to arch and allows your partner to thrust directly against your G Spot, perfect for hitting your Skene’s gland area and making you squirt. Optionally how to make her squirt, you can place a pillow underneath your hips/butt to change the angle of penetration.
Anecdotally, there are two groups of people when it comes to this debate – those who are adamant it isn’t pee, and those who are adamant it is. Scientists admit that the ‘pathophysiology of squirting is rarely documented’ making it difficult to understand what is happening altogether. However, it has not been extensively researched (I’m sure you can only imagine the problems trying to study a topic like squirting accurately!). So the scientific data is sparse with a lot of unclear conclusions.