The Ejaculate
A woman’s ejaculate is expelled from the urethra, the same place where urine comes from. Although studies have found that the clear liquid is not urine at all (the juice is released from the Skene’s glands, or urethral sponge), if your girl doesn’t have complete control over her PC (pubococcygeus) muscle, there is a chance that she may actually urinate all over you.
Chemical analysis of female ejaculate reveals the presence of high levels of prostatic acid phosphatase, a chemical secreted by the prostate gland and found in semen. This would seem to indicate that a woman’s ejaculation is similar in composition to semen (only without the sperm, of course).
The fluid of female ejaculate is a mixture of glucose, fructose, some hormones and acids known as PSA and PAP, with here and there traces of urine. The ejaculate itself is surprisingly similar to male ejaculatory fluid.
There are also two other substances contained in the fluid, commonly found in urine (urea and creatinine), which are found in trace amounts. The fluid is water like, and non- lubricating.
