G-Spotting

The G-spot has gone missing. Researchers at King’s College in London involved eighteen-hundred women in their study for the Journal of Sexual Medicine but couldn’t find any evidence of the elusive female erogenous zone. After an extensive search, Professor Tim Spector said “it is virtually impossible to find real traits”. In 1950, German scientist Ernst Grafenberg discovered the sensitive area along the front wall of the vagina, and it was nicknamed and popularised in the 1970s by academics Beverly Whipple and John Perry. Yet now, despite the multitude of books and magazine articles dedicated to the G-spot over the years, the existence of this magic button that can prompt explosive orgasm and female ejaculation is in serious doubt. Still, that’s no excuse to stop rummaging around for it.

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