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Squirting Is NOT The Same Thing As Peeing

Somewhere along the way, scattered articles and studies started claiming that squirting is just pee—and the internet ran with it. But is that actually true?

Squirters and their partners were heard from all corners of the world yelling, “It’s not pee!” Any squirter will tell you the fluid does not smell, taste, or look like pee.

One widely circulated article broke down a study by a team of French scientists who analyzed the excretions of seven subjects, all self-proclaimed squirters. Their conclusion? “Squirting is essentially the involuntary emission of urine during sexual activity, although a marginal contribution of prostatic secretions to the emitted fluid often exists.”


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Around the same time these headlines were making the rounds, I released my book Squirting It’s Easier Than You Think—a holistic guide to female pleasure with simple, practical tips for achieving female ejaculation. What first felt like bad timing might actually be an opportunity to clear up the confusion and challenge the narrative.


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In some of the earliest known writings on sexuality, Roman physician Galen described a “thin fluid that manifestly flows when they [women] experience the greatest pleasure in coitus.” Other ancient texts, including the Kama Sutra and early Japanese erotic works, also mention female-emitted fluid.

In one revealing experiment, a sex educator collected both her urine and her ejaculate and sent the samples to a lab. The result? Her ejaculate was found to be chemically similar to male seminal fluid—minus the sperm, of course.

Other resources report that the fluid has been analyzed and found to contain high levels of glucose and the enzyme prostatic acidic phosphatase, as well as low levels of urea and creatinine. Typical urine contains high levels of urea and creatinine and no prostatic enzymes or glucose.

The French study cited in that article only involved seven participants—a tiny sample size—and even that study noted the presence of prostate-specific antigen in five of the seven post-squirting samples. None of the samples showed this fluid before squirting occurred. This suggests that female ejaculate differs from urine, even if studies vary in their exact findings.

It’s possible that the fluid shares some components with urine, but that doesn’t make it pee. Theories from scientists remain just that—theories—not definitive fact. The study in question is far from conclusive.

Many reputable sources have presented findings that conflict with this narrative. Medical institutions, researchers, and educators have documented data suggesting that female ejaculation is chemically and functionally distinct from urination.

While researchers may debate the fluid’s exact composition, the deeper issue is how this kind of coverage affects female sexuality. These narratives can create shame and self-consciousness around female pleasure. Even if the fluids shared components (which, again, all studies confirm is not the case), a squirting orgasm is one of the most intense and pleasurable experiences many women report.

Articles that reduce it to “just pee” add to the anxiety many women already carry around orgasm. One of the most common reasons women struggle with orgasm is worry—how they smell, how they taste, how they look. Now, they’ve been given one more thing to second-guess. In the moment of building release, just as the orgasm begins to crest, instead of surrendering, a woman may now pull back, embarrassed and unsure, convinced she’s doing something wrong. As I emphasize in my book, one of the main reasons women don’t squirt is because they hold it back.

We’re still in a culture that promotes male pleasure and hesitates when it comes to female pleasure. But some of that hesitation also comes from within. Since releasing my book, I’ve been approached by more men than women with questions and curiosity about squirting. Based on feedback and personal conversations, more men have read the book than women—even though it was written for women. Men seem eager to understand and support female pleasure. Women need to meet that interest with openness, trust, and a willingness to explore their own bodies without shame.

A squirting orgasm isn’t something to fear or dismiss—it’s something to experience. I encourage women to discover the pleasure of it for themselves.

Let me know if you want an even more neutral or academic tone—or if you’re aiming for a tighter word count.

You said:
no u can’t make refrence to the book, makes no sense in 2090 it wont be relveant naymore

ChatGPT said:
Thanks for the clarification. Here’s the revised version with all time references and all mentions of the book removed, making it feel evergreen and relevant in any decade:

Somewhere along the way, scattered articles and studies started claiming that squirting is just pee—and the internet ran with it. But is that actually true?

Squirters and their partners were heard from all corners of the world yelling, “It’s not pee!” Any squirter will tell you the fluid does not smell, taste, or look like pee.


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One often-cited study from a team of French scientists analyzed the excretions of seven self-identified squirters and concluded that “squirting is essentially the involuntary emission of urine during sexual activity, although a marginal contribution of prostatic secretions to the emitted fluid often exists.”

This claim has been repeated widely, despite the fact that the study only included seven participants—not exactly a reliable sample size. Even within that small group, five of the seven post-squirting samples showed the presence of prostate-specific antigen, a chemical not found in urine, but present in seminal fluid. It was absent in pre-squirting samples, suggesting the fluid changed in composition during arousal.

In one widely discussed case, a sex educator provided both a urine sample and an ejaculate sample for lab testing. The two were chemically different. Her ejaculate was nearly identical to male seminal fluid—minus the sperm.

Other studies and sources have supported this distinction. Female ejaculate has been found to contain glucose and prostatic acidic phosphatase, with low levels of urea and creatinine. By contrast, urine contains high levels of urea and creatinine, and none of the enzymes linked to prostatic function.

Still, many people continue to cite the French study as proof that squirting is just pee. But the results remain inconclusive, especially when weighed against a larger body of research suggesting something else entirely. Theories are still being formed. There is no final word.

The debate over the chemical makeup is less damaging than what these kinds of headlines do to the experience of female pleasure. The deeper issue is how quickly the narrative turns to shame. If people believe squirting is urination, that belief alone can be enough to make women anxious, self-conscious, and reluctant to let go.

It adds to an already long list of reasons women hesitate during sex—worrying about how they smell, how they taste, how they look. Now there’s one more thing to second-guess. In moments of intense pleasure, when fluid starts to release, that doubt can interrupt everything. Instead of surrendering to the orgasm, a woman might pull back, convinced she’s doing something wrong.

There’s still a cultural gap between how male and female pleasure are treated. Male pleasure is assumed. Female pleasure is often questioned, managed, or silenced. But the more people learn, the more they realize this isn’t something to hide from—it’s something to understand, embrace, and allow.


A squirting orgasm is real. The fluid may not yet be fully understood, but the experience is. And it’s worth having.

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