It is a small area within the vagina that is sensitive to stimulation. Unlike the clitoris, however, the G spot is linked to the pelvic nerve and the hypogastric plexus, while the clitoris reaches the said plexus through the nerves of the clitoris.
The G spot is, in fact, an offshoot of periuretral glands (including Skenes' glands) that develop in the Halban's fascia, which corresponds to the tissue found in the penis. This is the end of the medical class! All you really need to know about the G spot is that it can give you hours and hours of pleasure!
In order to access this pleasure potential, however, you'll first have to know where to look. So where is this famous G spot located?
WHERE IS IT LOCATED?
Here are a few clues...
The G spot is located on the inner wall of the vagina
It can be found half-way between the pubic bone and opening of the uterus
It is situated approximately 4 to 5 centimetres inside the opening of the vagina, right next to the area at which the urethra joins the bladder
It feels like a small ball of flesh and, when stimulated, it increases in size from roughly a centimetre to three centimetres
Remember that the size of the G spot varies greatly from one woman to the next; it can be compared to a marble or even a ping-pong ball! However, the size doesn't influence the sensitivity of this area at all. The volume can simply be explained by the quantity of androgenous hormones in circulation.
It is difficult to talk about the G spot without mentioning female ejaculation, since the former is the origin of the latter. Indeed, a woman's urethra can produce an abundant emission of a nearly transparent and odorless liquid when she is brought to orgasm through stimulation of the G spot. The characteristics of this liquid are strangely similar to that of male sperm, without the spermatozoids, of course. This female ejaculation can often give a woman the impression that she is urinating, and this misunderstanding of the phenomenon has led some women to feel ashamed of their orgasms and to repress them.
Even today, many people have never heard of female ejaculation. This is probably one of the last remaining sexual frontiers—though it is gradually being opened up. While doctors don't know everything about the liquid that's emitted when a woman ejaculates, they're certain that it's neither urine nor a vaginal secretion. Instead, it seems to come from the same glands that surround the urethra and are close to the bladder. This area is sometimes called the "urethral sponge" and it is composed of tissues similar to those of the prostate gland in men.
Unfortunately, most women regularly experience sex without having the pleasure of an ejaculation. In fact, most of us will probably never know this type of ejaculation—nor will we be brought to climax through the stimulation of the G spot. Some women, on the other hand, ejaculate with every orgasm.