hurryhard said:
When you find and work this woman's G-spot there is an orgasm and a gush. So by your definition she is unlike most women.
While it is true most female ejaculators "gush" was a result of G spot stimulation most do not but do often have intense orgasms. But the G spot area has to be sensitized often and women often stop stimulation since at first it feels like they are having to pee, but that feeling will pass.
Best estimate maybe 20-30% of women are capable of ejaculation depending on organ development. Must women are capable of having G spot (area) orgasms if properly sensitized.
No female ejac is not urine. It has been lab tested and all values are out of the range for urine. It is not the same but similar to prostate fluid - men and women have the same organs just develeped differently.
An anatomy lesson may help understand why ejaculation is not as far fetched as it may seem. There really is not that much difference between male and female sex organs. In-vitro we all start out as female. If we get certain chemicals our development changes to male and our female organs dry up and we develop male.
Have you ever wondered what that line was on the back side of a penis? Or, have you ever looked? It is the remnants of a man's vagina when he was a female early in gestation. Likewise the very sensitive spot on the back of a mans penis, where the foreskin attaches is the remnants of the female clitoris.
I have taught G spot massage for couples and have lots of extensive info at "The G Spot & Female Ejaculation" at
http://www.libchrist.com/sexed/Gspot.html