History and discovery of the G-spot
Everyone talks about it, but no one really knows the origin of the G-spot. Historically, it refers to Ernst Gräfenberg, a renowned German gynecologist and researcher, whose research on female orgasm led him to precisely locate an erogenous zone in the female vagina: the famous G-spot.
Located inside the vagina, about 3-4 centimeters from its entrance at the level of its anterior wall, the G-spot contains a mixture of erectile tissues that are stimulated during the arousal phase. These tissues activate nerve endings for a most enjoyable experience: vaginal orgasms are in fact often described as dizzying and sometimes cause female ejaculations... the famous fountain woman!
Gräfenberg was the first to establish the correlation between stimulation of this internal vaginal point and orgasm.
According to a relatively popular hypothesis, the G-spot would be more sensitive to stimulation due to its location in direct contact with the internal part of the clitoris. Dissociating clitoral orgasm from vaginal orgasm is therefore partially false, the two often going hand in hand! However, if the pleasure resulting from clitoral stimulation is faster to reach than that of vaginal stimulation, it is also shorter and less intense