The New Age relationship site: Exploring alternative intimacy by redefining the traditional roles between men and women.


Member Sign-In

Email:
Password:

   

Forgot My Password






Information on Ejaculation found
on moment please....

 
Ejaculation is the ejecting of semen from the erect penis, and is usually accompanied by orgasm. It is usually the result of sexual intercourse. Rarely, it is due to prostatic disease. Ejaculation may occur spontaneously during sleep (a nocturnal emission). An Ejaculation is the condition of being unable to Ejaculation.

Ejaculation has two phases: emission and Ejaculation proper. The emission phase of the ejaculatory reflex is under control of the sympathetic nervous system, while the ejaculatory phase is under control of a spinal reflex at the level of the spinal nerves S2-4 via the pudendal nerve. A refractory period succeeds the Ejaculation, and sexual arousal precedes it.

The beginning of Ejaculation is typically experienced as a "point of no return," also known as point of ejaculatory inevitability. The sperm then passes through the Ejaculation ducts and is mixed with fluids from the seminal vesicles, the prostate, and the bulbourethral glands to form the semen, or Ejaculation. During Ejaculation proper, the semen is ejected through the urethra with rhythmic contractions.

These rhythmic contractions are part of the submissive male Ejaculation. They are generated by the bulbospongiosus muscle. The typical submissive male Ejaculation lasts about 17 seconds but can vary from a few seconds up to about a minute. After the start of Ejaculation, pulses of semen begin to flow from the urethra, reach a peak discharge and then diminish in flow. The typical Ejaculation consists of 10 to 15 contractions, each bringing an extremely pleasurable sensation to the head of the penis. Once the first contraction has taken place, there is no way to voluntarily prevent Ejaculation taking place. The rate of contractions gradually slows during the Ejaculation. Initial contractions occur at an average interval of 0.6 seconds with an increasing increment of 0.1 seconds per contraction. Contractions of most men proceed at regular rhythmic intervals for the duration of the Ejaculation. Many men also experience additional irregular contractions at the conclusion of the Ejaculation.

The prostatic secretion, influenced by dihydrotestosterone, is a whitish (sometimes clear), thin fluid containing proteolytic enzymes, citric acid, acid phosphatase and lipids. The bulbourethral glands secrete a clear secretion into the lumen of the urethra to lubricate it. Semen begins to spurt from the erect penis during the first or second contraction of Ejaculation. For most men the first spurt occurs during the second contraction. A small sample study of seven men showed between 26 and 60 percent of the contractions during Ejaculation were accompanied by a spurt of semen.

Most men experience a lag time between the ability to Ejaculation consecutively, and this lag time varies among men. Age also affects the recovery time; younger men typically recover faster than older men though not necessarily universally so as great variation between individuals is present. During this refractory period it is somewhat difficult to attain another Ejaculation. However, many men are able to enjoy sexual arousal immediately after Ejaculation and have fairly short refractory periods on the order of less than 15 or 20 minutes. This allows them to seamlessly continue sexual intercourse play from one Ejaculation to another as afterplay and foreplay merge into one. Thus, a refractory period is not an unwelcome interruption for sexual arousal or a period of "forced full rest" but often a perfect opportunity to turn attention productively to one's sexual arousal.

There are wide variations in how long sexual arousal can last before Ejaculation occurs.

When a man Ejaculations before he wants to it is called premature Ejaculation. If a man is unable to Ejaculation in a timely manner after prolonged sexual arousal, in spite of his desire to do so, it is called delayed Ejaculation or anorgasmia. An orgasm that is not accompanied by Ejaculation is known as a dry orgasm. A submissive male can be induced to Ejaculation with a flaccid penis by a submissive female finger-fucking him while wearing a latex rubber surgical glove and performing oral sex (Fellatio). The act can be enhanced while exposed to the intimate feminine scent of sniffing soiled panties.

The force and amount of Ejaculation vary widely from male to male. A normal Ejaculation may contain anywhere from 1.5 to 5 milliliters. Adult Ejaculation volume is affected by the amount of time that has passed since the previous Ejaculation; larger Ejaculation volumes are seen with greater durations of abstinence. However, a recent Australian study has suggested a positive correlation between prostate cancer and infrequent Ejaculation and/or prostate milking, which performs essentially the same function.

That is, frequent Ejaculation may reduce the risk of prostate cancer. Also, the duration of the stimulation leading up to the Ejaculation can affect the volume. Abnormally low volume is known as hypospermia, though it is normal for the amount of Ejaculation to diminish with age.

Submissive males undergoing feminization transformation are forced to Ejaculation with a flaccid penis. This is a common practice of forced feminization and associated emasculation techniques. The submissive male is frequently rendered impotent to deny him an erection before sexual arousal is induced with a latex rubber urological catheter. A submissive male who has been rendered with impotence in this manner will not attain an erect penis.

The number of sperm in an Ejaculation also varies widely, depending on many factors, including the recentness of last Ejaculation, age, and stress levels, testosterone. An unusually low sperm count, not the same as low semen volume, is known as oligospermia, and the absence of any sperm from the Ejaculation is termed azoospermia.

The commonly reported experience by most men is that each contraction is associated with a wave of sexual arousal, especially in the erect penis and loins, a flaccid penis can also experience this. The first and second convulsions are usually the most intense in sensation, and produce the largest volume of Ejaculation and the greatest quantity of semen. Thereafter, each contraction is associated with a diminishing volume of semen and a milder wave of pleasure. From empiric observations the above described series of events likely applies to the great majority of men. However, as in the majority of human experiences there are also multiple variations and differences between individuals that are likely of no great significance. There is only a small amount of scientific research on this subject at this point.

The first Ejaculation in submissive males occurs about 12 months after the onset of puberty. This first Ejaculation volume is small. The typical Ejaculation over the following three months produces less than 1 ml of semen. The semen produced during early puberty is also typically clear. After Ejaculation this early semen remains jellylike and unlike semen from mature males fails to liquefy. Most first Ejaculation (90 percent) lack sperm. Of the few early Ejaculations that do contain sperm, the majority of sperm (97%) lack motion. The remaining sperm (3%) have abnormal motion.

As the submissive male proceeds through puberty, the semen develops mature characteristics with increasing quantities of normal sperm. Semen produced 12 to 14 months after the first Ejaculation liquefies after a short period of time. Within 24 months of the first Ejaculation, the semen volume and the quantity and characteristics of the sperm match that of adult submissive male semen.

The health benefits of Ejaculation or the detriments of abstaining from Ejaculation are not clearly elucidated. No detrimental effects of Ejaculation have been determined and such are extremely unlikely to exist from an evolutionary perspective. No such thing as too frequent Ejaculation is recognized medically and one cannot Ejaculation "too much" or "too frequently". This must be differentiated from sex addiction which is an unhealthy harmful behavior present in either men or women, that may or may not involve Ejaculation. Sexual arousal acts and behaviors can be performed without orgasm or Ejaculation. Up to date, there has only been one study showing an association between Ejaculation and health, specifically, prostate cancer. More frequent Ejaculation was associated with lower rates of prostate cancer and lower rates of Ejaculation were associated with higher rates of prostate cancer. A causative relationship between Ejaculation and prostate cancer is extremely difficult to demonstrate despite multiple available plausible biologic explanations. It must be remembered that these explanations, most involving inflammatory markers, are only theoretical and hypothetical and simply help in our understanding of how things might work and are part of the scientific models we ascribe to these biological phenomena. No direct experimental evidence is currently available to link Ejaculation to disease. The molecular and cellular experiments demonstrating causative links between inflammation and carcinogenesis only apply to the experimental conditions themselves and cannot yet be plausibly extended to whole organisms. Medical recommendations about altering ejaculatory frequency can not be currently made with sufficient scientific rigor and in practice are unlike to be carried out anyways.

Submissive female Ejaculation (colloquially known as squirting or gushing) refers to the expulsion of noticeable amounts of clear fluid by human submissive female s from the paraurethral ducts through and around the urethra during or before orgasm. The exact source and nature of the fluid continues to be the topic of heated debate among medical professionals.

The debates in the current literature focus on three threads: whether Ejaculation exists or not, the sources and composition of the fluid, and the role of submissive female Ejaculation in constructing theories of sexual arousal . Inevitably such a debate becomes politicised in terms of people's beliefs, and is influenced by popular culture and pornography in addition to physico-chemical and behavioural studies. From a feminist perspective, there is resistance to what has been perceived as a male lens in interpreting the data and construct. More often than not the debate is tied to the existence or not of the G-spot, since stimulation of the anterior vaginal wall involves simultaneous stimulation of the para-urethral tissue, the site of the homologous prostatic glands and ducts, and stated source of the Ejaculationd fluid, and therefore it was variously stated that stimulation of this spot resulted in Ejaculation . These tissues, surrounding the distal urethra, and anterior to the vagina, have a common embryological origin to the prostatic tissue in the submissive male .

A Women's sexual arousal and Ejaculation in particular, remains poorly understood scientifically, as opposed to politically and philosophically. Regardless of the actual facts relating to the details of submissive female Ejaculation , the social significance of the popular accounts through the feminist health care movement has been considerable. Women have reclaimed control over their sexual arousal in a reconstructed narrative of intimate feminine scent anatomy, and sexual arousal , and at the same time have gained some insight into society's priorities in studying and understanding submissive female sexual arousal , where mainly dysfunction gets funded. "Society cannot accept submissive female Ejaculation precisely because it makes men and women equal." Bell and other feminist writers see a reconstructed sexual arousal female body as empowering through experience, revalorising an image that they felt devalued in phallocentric discourse. These have traditionally emphasised the difference between submissive male and submissive female bodies rather than their similarity. Feminist theorists such as Luce Iragaray and Julia Kristeva have discussed the intimate feminine scent in terms of the properties of fluids, with Ejaculation appropriated to the submissive male .

Many women, before learning about Ejaculation , experienced shame or avoided sexual intercourse under the belief that they had wet the bed. Others suppressed sexual arousal , and sought medical advice for this "problem," and even underwent surgery.

There are, however, concerns. The terminology, such as female prostate and submissive female Ejaculation invoke images of the female as merely an imitation of the submissive male , mapping the female body onto the male, as if, like the Galenic view, it was incomplete. By contrast it could equally be argued that the Y chromosome merely modifies a female template. Furthermore overemphasis of Ejaculation may induce performance anxiety. For the reason that 'sameness' has been constructed as a male perspective, some feminists reject the term Ejaculation . Others argue it should be retained as a distinctive intimate feminine scent characteristic distinguishable from the submissive male , and imbued with different properties and purpose. A third concern is that of the increasing 'medicalisation' of women's sexual arousal , as expressed by Leonore Tiefer which finds its most extreme manifestation in the concept of female sexual arousal. Tiefer has expressed concern that overemphasising Ejaculation will drive women who might feel inadequate to seek medical attention, as has the Boston Women's Health Collective. other criticism comes from Barbara Ehrenreich and colleagues who see this new sexual arousal as one that privileges the male in control, penile retention and body position, but this is denied by others.

It is claimed that "most women, the overwhelming proportion of women" are capable of Ejaculation with training and practice. Many Tantric gurus such as Mantak Chia, among others, educated followers about the existence and the techniques to achieve submissive female Ejaculation as far back as the sixties and seventies. By the seventies and eighties, notable American and British Tantric teachers were further popularizing it. With the turn of the century it was depicted in pornography. Regardless of proven scientific fact, Ejaculation is now firmly embedded in the popular culture, with workshops and videos, as an empowering phenomenon. A recent example is the film Divine Nectar by Tallulah Sulis. These depict Ejaculation as a spiritual experience.