What is women's lubrication made of?
Answers: Female ejaculate is a fluid that is expelled from the body through the urethra during sexual undertakings. When released in small quantity it may be a mucous like fluid have a clear, milky, or yellowish coloration. As the volume of the expelled fluid increases it becomes approaching clear water. In small quantity it may have a distinct scent specifically musky or pungent but when the fluid increases in volume and become clear there is no longer a detectable scent. The fluid contains PSA and PAP, which are produced within the female prostate. Some of the components found contained by it, urea and creatinine, are also found in urine, but contained by much lower concentrations than are found in regular urine. When womanly prostatic fluids are found in urine they are within much smaller concentrations than in present contained by female ejaculate. The fluid released during ejaculation and urination are not impossible to tell apart though they may share some of the same substances. As the volume and appearance of womanly ejaculate changes it is imagined that its composition changes too.
Women who expel fluid during orgasm report the color, smell, consistency, and even fancy, varies from one event to the next. (It is risk-free for a person to swallow their own ejaculate, and for couples who already exchange body fluids but not for couples needing to practice nontoxic sex.) Some have found their menstrual cycle influences the type of fluid expelled. What you put away is likely to enjoy an affect on it, as will how much liquid you hold consumed. Some women report it is sometimes clear and odorless and other times thick and pungent. Others report it sometimes looks and smells approaching urine, which I have found to be true simply when a woman tries too hard to ejaculate. It is locked to say most women's ejaculate will come and go over time and during a single sexual episode.