Female Ejaculation: Is It Possible?
Let's just clear this up right now: it's not only possible, it's pleasurable too.
Female ejaculation is more than a mere myth. Under other guises, it's better known as squirting: and a quick internet search will tell you (or show you) that this is something that has its cult following. Despite it being labelled as 'stress incontinence' back in the 1920s, squirting is not the same thing as urinating, and it's definitely something you don't need to be ashamed of.
The word 'ejaculation' conjures up images of streams of semen and other bodily fluids launching across the room and while that may be the case for some women, it's definitely not the case for all of them: some women experience FE during sex, some during orgasms, and some of them experience it as a slight trickle or slow release instead of the urgent explosion accompanying a male orgasm.
If you've ever experienced an unusual wetness (are your knickers wetter than normal after a lusty couch cuddle?) or found evidence of extreme sexual activity after a normal round of bedroom banter, you probably have experienced your own version of squirting.
It's perfectly normal.
Squirting is the natural release of clear bodily fluids through the uretha. It's not urine: it's a combination of bodily fluids that naturally lubricate the vagina. It's caused by a pleasurable stimulation of the g-spot which, when done properly, can cause repeated acts of squirting (often in different love-making sessions).
Many women who can squirt on demand (both in their personal lives, and even porn stars who do it in a professional capacity) will report that before squirting occurs you feel the immediate need to pee. You can't pee during an orgasm unless you have a weak pubococcygeus muscle so it's really not something you need to worry about. Most women give in to the need and rush off to the toilet mid-sex. Alternatively, you could relax and ease into it. The urge to pee will pass, and you'll be cresting on a wave of pleasure instead.