Does anyone know where exactly female discharge is created? also, I would like to know what it is made out of. For lubrication purposes: more fluid is made during sexual stimulation correct? I basically want to know anything about it. please don’t be gross. I really want to learn. thank you!
I’m not so much interested in the meaning of different colors and textures, I just want to basically know its purpose during sex and what it is made out of.
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- Is female sexual dysfunction/anorgasmia part of the Edenic curse in Genesis that impacted female reproduction?
- Serious question about the structure of the female?












































November 27th, 2009 at 7:52 am
(EDIT: " Krysta"…..
" It normally is odorless itself"
Really? Did you learn this all from books and never give it a thought when confronted with your *own* anatomy and its workings?
Try actually *being* a scientist in the real world, for once:
Put a couple of fingers into your vagina and move those fingers around a bit to get them wet all over… hold them right up to your nose and take a good deep few sniffs after youve done that "down there".
If you smell nothing (odorless)… either your nose doesn’t work at *all* or your vagina is *very* unhealthy. A vagina that doesn’t smell like "woman" is *not* normal.)
No matter whether it’s "just discharge" or whether it’s "oh, god, am I ever horny" lubrication, it’s all just fluids and proteins made from the blood that flows through your vaginal tissues.
There’s lots of info you can find about it at wikipedia and places like that, but your *best* source is your local library.
November 27th, 2009 at 7:52 am
Its produced nearly in the same manner as saliva produced
November 27th, 2009 at 7:52 am
The vagina is a self-cleaning organ and the everyday normal discharge you see in your underwear is the Clorox of the vagina. It is made primarily of "good bacteria" and dead cells. There are small glands in your vagina that have small amounts of liquid that flow out to discard any of the dead cells and bacteria. Normal discharge can range from clear to milky white with a little bit of yellow. It normally is odorless itself but can smell acidic and sour, which is also normal. The viscosity of the discharge, how thick it is, can change with your menstrual cycle, any birth control like the pill, pregnancy, diet, stress, etc.
Discharge is not lubrication that is used in sex. A seperate gland called the Skene’s gland produces lubrication for sexual intercourse. So women can get confused with their very thin discharge, like when they’re ovulating, and the lubrication used for sex. It is very similar, but not the same. Discharge is also called cervical mucus, and it can and will thin out when you ovulate, usually around the 14-15th day of your cycle when you are most fertile. This thinning out allows the sperm to reach the egg more easily. When you’re on the pill, have an IUD, NuvaRing, etc. it affects that discharge. It will thicken it up making it harder for the sperm to swim through. They also thin the lining of the uterus so a fertilized egg cannot implant.
So, there is a difference between this thin cervical mucus and "being wet," for lack of a better term. But, they can add to each other, as most women are very aroused during this fertile period. Their bodies are prompting them to mate to reassure the most viable and strong offspring. This is the animal equivalent of "being in heat." Any deviation from the normal discharge’s appearance, color, or smell may indicate an infection, STD, etc.