The “Gräfenberg Spot” (better known as the “G-Spot”), was named in honour of the German gynaecologist Ernst Gräfenberg who described it over 50 years ago. It supposedly sits in the front wall of the vagina some 2 to 5cm up. And some researchers have stated that they had found an area of thicker tissue among the women reporting orgasms and that they could locate the “G-Spot” using ultra-sound scans.
Or at least that’s what we women were brought up to believe.
Until recent studies showed that the much-hyped erogenous “G-Spot” in women may not actually exist. As reported by BBC News UK, a study conducted in the Journal of Sexual Medicine involving 1,800 women proves that the “G-Spot” may be just a figment of our imagination, triggered by the media and sex therapists.
It was said that the study entailed women, who were all pairs of identical and non-identical twins. If one twin had it, the other should also have it since they share the same genes but as it turned out, not all twins shared the “G-Spot”. Hence, making it entirely subjective and quite possibly false.
Co-author of the study Professor Tim Spector said, “Women may argue that having a G-Spot is due to diet or exercise, but in fact it is virtually impossible to find real traits. This is by far the biggest study ever carried out and shows fairly conclusively that the idea of a G-spot is subjective.”
Gee. Have we been lied to all our lives then? No men better be complaining now that their woman is hard to please!