Cosmopolitan US May2020

(Elle) #1

“I don’t think we have any evidence


that the G-spot is a spot or a struc-


ture,” says Nicole Prause, PhD, a neu-


roscientist who studies orgasms and


sexual arousal. “I’ve never under-


stood why it was interpreted as some


new sexual organ. You can’t stan-


dardize a vagina—there is no consis-


tency across women as to where


exactly we experience pleasure.”


Sure, she says, some women might


have an area inside their vaginas


that contains a bunch of smaller,


super-sensitive areas. But some


women say that when they follow


Cosmo’s old two-finger come-hither


advice, they feel discomfort or like


they have to pee. Others feel nothing


at all. Because for them, there’s


nothing there.


NOW FOR THE TRICKIEST PART OF


this story—and, TBH, the reason this


is even a story at all. Despite the lack


of scientific evidence, there are still


lots of G-spot believers, many of them


super-smart, well-meaning sex edu-


cators. They’re a pretty heated group


(one hung up on us when we called


for an interview) and not...entirely...


wrong. Their point is: If a woman


believes she’s found her G-spot, that


should outweigh any lack of science.


And specifically, if someone claims to


have experienced G-spot pleasure, it


seems “bizarre” to shut her down,


says Kristen Mark, PhD, a sex educa-


tor at the University of Kentucky.


“That feels like going backward.”


Fair. It’s just that, as Prause points


out, “women deserve accurate


information about their bodies.” Can’t we have our pleasure—


and the truth too?


As Prause said (and this bears repeating), for some women,


there is sexual sensitivity where the G-spot is supposed to be.


But for others, there’s none. Or it’s to the left. Or it’s in a few


places. And that’s kind of the whole point. It’s all okay. It can


all feel good.


What everyone can agree on is that we need more research.


Women’s sexual health is vastly understudied, and the scientific


hurdles are borderline absurd. In 2015, Prause tried to get a trial


going at UCLA that would study orgasms in women who were,


you know, actually alive. The board heard her out but wanted a


promise that her test subjects “wouldn’t climax” because they


didn’t like the optics of women orgasming in their labs. (As


you’ve already guessed, the study wasn’t approved.)


So yeah, a new kind of thinking about female pleasure is going


to take a minute for certain people to get on board with. Like


those brunch friends who go on and on about G-spot rapture.


And like men, who might love the idea of the G-spot best of all.


A G-spot orgasm requires penetration, which just so happens to


be the way most guys prefer to get off. “If you’ve got a penis, it


would be super convenient if the way the person with a vagina


has pleasure is for you to put your penis in their vagina,” says


Emily Nagoski, PhD, author of Come as You Are, a book that


explores the science of female sexuality. Related: 80 percent of


the men in Cosmo’s survey said they believe every woman has a


G-spot; nearly 60 percent called it the “best way” for a female


partner to achieve pleasure. (“Once you rally enough experience


like myself, you can find it on every girl,” one supremely


confident guy told us.)


Just like it did for women, the G-spot gave men a universal


performance metric and the “cultural message that pleasure for


women happens by pounding on their vaginas with your penis,”


says Nagoski.


Things were thisclose to going in a much better direction.


“In the early ’80s, there was research that was really putting the


clitoris front and center,” explains Nagoski. “Then along came


the G-spot research, creating this pressure for women to be


orgasmic from vaginal stimulation even though most women’s


bodies just aren’t wired that way. And if you really think about


it would be super


IF YOU’VE


GOT A PENIS,


T
H
E

(^) G



  • S
    P
    O
    T


(^) I
S
(^) A
L L E G E D L
Y
...
(^)
(^)
(^)
(^)
(^)
(^)
(^)
(^) “
R
e
a
ll
y
(^) d
e
e
p
(^) i
n
(^) t
h
e
re
,
n
o
t
cl
o
se
(^) t
o
(^) t
h
e
(^) o
p
e
n
in
g
(^) o
f
m
y
va
g
in
a
(^) a
t
a
ll
.”
“I
D
K
.”

B
e
h
in
d
(^) t
h
e
(^) c
li
to
ri
s.


In
(^) d
if
fe
re
n
t
p
la
c
e
s.

“R
ig
h
t
in
si
d
e
(^) m
y
(^) v
a
g
in
a
(^) a
n
d
(^) t
o
(^) t
h
e
(^) l
e
ft
.”

M
y
(^) c
li
to
ri
s.

98 Cosmopolitan May 2020

B
y
(^) m
y
(^) b
u
tt
.”

Free download pdf