SirAlfred006
JF-Expert Member
- Sep 21, 2020
- 550
- 1,298
DEAR MEN, THE WOMAN DOESN'T PEE THROUGH THE VAGINA
SQUIRTING IS DILUTE URINE. LOOKS LIKE IT'S COMING FROM THE VAGINA.
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Someone in the comment asked: "If the hymen can be imperforate, how does a woman pee?"
Three Openings and a Thousand Assumptions: A Love Letter to Female Anatomy
As a gynae doctor, let me speak to men with softness, and with science, and with a little romance for accuracy, because the female body has been misunderstood for so long that even its simplest map is treated like a mystery novel. And when a body becomes a mystery, it also becomes a rumor. And when it becomes a rumor, it becomes a battleground of opinions, most of them loud, and most of them wrong.
I was reading the comments under a discussion about the hymen, and I saw a question rise like a small, honest child in a noisy crowd: If the hymen can be imperforate, how does a woman pee?
And in that question lives a very old confusion, the belief that urine and sex share the same road. They do not. They have never shared the same road. The vagina is not a toilet. The vagina is not a pipe for urine. The vagina is a canal for pleasure, and for blood each month, and for babies when life insists on arriving. Urine has its own door.
Women pee from the urethra, and the urethra sits politely just above the vagina and just below the clitoris, like a middle child between two celebrities. It is a short tube, and it runs straight from the bladder to the outside world. So even if a woman has an imperforate hymen, which is rare and medical and dramatic in its own quiet way, she will still urinate normally, because urine does not pass through the vagina. The body is organized. The body is not careless with its plumbing. It does not improvise when it has already written a clear blueprint.
And this is also why, during intense pleasure, when liquid seems to come from the vagina, what you are often seeing is urine released from the urethra. It is not witchcraft. It is not mystery. It is anatomy responding to pressure and rhythm and excitement. Call it “squirting” if you must, but understand what you are witnessing. The bladder sits close to the front wall of the vagina, and when arousal swells the tissues and stimulation becomes deep and repetitive, the bladder can empty itself. The body does not lie. It simply reacts.
So, my dear men, let us be honest without being cruel: when a woman releases fluid like this, it is most often diluted urine. Not shameful. Not dirty. Just physiology meeting pleasure, and shaking hands. And women, let us be gentle with ourselves too, it is not wickedness, and it is not proof of supernatural talent. It is simply a bladder saying, I was here the whole time.
That said, and here is where science becomes shy and intriguing, some women do release small amounts of milky fluid from glands around the urethra during intense arousal or orgasm. This is sometimes called female ejaculation. It is not dramatic. It is not cinematic. It is modest and quiet, like a whisper compared to thunder. Bodies, after all, speak different dialects of pleasure.
So let us learn without mockery, and desire without ignorance. Let us stop arguing with anatomy and start listening to it. The clitoris is not decoration. The urethra is not the vagina. The vagina is not the bladder. And pleasure, when it comes, does not need lies to be beautiful.
And yes… you should probably pay me for this lesson.
But for now, take it as a gift: free education, wrapped in tenderness, and delivered with love.
SQUIRTING IS DILUTE URINE. LOOKS LIKE IT'S COMING FROM THE VAGINA.
READ. SHARE. REPOST
Someone in the comment asked: "If the hymen can be imperforate, how does a woman pee?"
Three Openings and a Thousand Assumptions: A Love Letter to Female Anatomy
As a gynae doctor, let me speak to men with softness, and with science, and with a little romance for accuracy, because the female body has been misunderstood for so long that even its simplest map is treated like a mystery novel. And when a body becomes a mystery, it also becomes a rumor. And when it becomes a rumor, it becomes a battleground of opinions, most of them loud, and most of them wrong.
I was reading the comments under a discussion about the hymen, and I saw a question rise like a small, honest child in a noisy crowd: If the hymen can be imperforate, how does a woman pee?
And in that question lives a very old confusion, the belief that urine and sex share the same road. They do not. They have never shared the same road. The vagina is not a toilet. The vagina is not a pipe for urine. The vagina is a canal for pleasure, and for blood each month, and for babies when life insists on arriving. Urine has its own door.
Women pee from the urethra, and the urethra sits politely just above the vagina and just below the clitoris, like a middle child between two celebrities. It is a short tube, and it runs straight from the bladder to the outside world. So even if a woman has an imperforate hymen, which is rare and medical and dramatic in its own quiet way, she will still urinate normally, because urine does not pass through the vagina. The body is organized. The body is not careless with its plumbing. It does not improvise when it has already written a clear blueprint.
And this is also why, during intense pleasure, when liquid seems to come from the vagina, what you are often seeing is urine released from the urethra. It is not witchcraft. It is not mystery. It is anatomy responding to pressure and rhythm and excitement. Call it “squirting” if you must, but understand what you are witnessing. The bladder sits close to the front wall of the vagina, and when arousal swells the tissues and stimulation becomes deep and repetitive, the bladder can empty itself. The body does not lie. It simply reacts.
So, my dear men, let us be honest without being cruel: when a woman releases fluid like this, it is most often diluted urine. Not shameful. Not dirty. Just physiology meeting pleasure, and shaking hands. And women, let us be gentle with ourselves too, it is not wickedness, and it is not proof of supernatural talent. It is simply a bladder saying, I was here the whole time.
That said, and here is where science becomes shy and intriguing, some women do release small amounts of milky fluid from glands around the urethra during intense arousal or orgasm. This is sometimes called female ejaculation. It is not dramatic. It is not cinematic. It is modest and quiet, like a whisper compared to thunder. Bodies, after all, speak different dialects of pleasure.
So let us learn without mockery, and desire without ignorance. Let us stop arguing with anatomy and start listening to it. The clitoris is not decoration. The urethra is not the vagina. The vagina is not the bladder. And pleasure, when it comes, does not need lies to be beautiful.
And yes… you should probably pay me for this lesson.
But for now, take it as a gift: free education, wrapped in tenderness, and delivered with love.