
British scientists at King's College London who carried out the study claim there is no evidence for the existence of the G-spot, sometimes referred to as the 'Goddess Spot' or the 'Sacred Spot'.
Beverly Whipple, emeritus professor at Rutgers University, New Jersey, helped to popularise the G-spot, named after Ernst Gräfenberg, a German scientist who claimed to have discovered the elusive erogenous zone in 1950, The Times online said today.
Most conventional doctors have always doubted the existence of the G-spots. Based on a survey of more than 1,800 British women, the study claimed that there is no evidence for the existence the supposedly cluster of internal nerve endings outside the imagination of women influenced by magazines and sex therapists.
"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," said Tim Spector, professor of genetic epidemiology, who co-authored the research to be published in The Journal of Sexual Medicine.
"This is by far the biggest study ever carried out and it shows fairly conclusively that the idea of a G-spot is subjective," he was quoted as saying by British daily .
Andrea Burri, who led the study, said she was anxious to remove feelings of "inadequacy or underachievement" that might affect females who feared they lacked the pleasure zone.
"It is rather irresponsible to claim the existence of an entity that has never really been proven and pressurise women -- and men, too," she underlined.
Article Source...
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/life/relationships/man-woman/G-spot-is-a-myth/articleshow/5409490.cms


Finally something I don’t have to remember to take exactly 5 or 4 hours before having sex. I started taking Virection everyday with the rest of my vitamins, and now everything is ready to go all the time and anytime.
ReplyDeleteThe G-spot is not a spot. It is an area of spongy tissue located near the front, on the top of the vaginal wall.
ReplyDeleteThe myth is not that it exists or not. The real myth is that by manipulating it, women will suddenly have cataclysmic, toe-curling orgasms. This is not always the case.
I think men in search of the G-Spot are disappointed by the fact that not all women get the expected pleasure out of it. So they basically say it doesn't exist...