Sexual Anatomy by the Letters: The Difference Between The G- and A-Spots
August 5, 2008 by Liberty Kontranowski
Filed under Happy Living Tip, Relationships, Sex, Womens Health, Your Body
Would you believe that I just received a Sexual Anatomy 101 lesson from a teen magazine? It’s true. In the latest issue of CosmoGirl!, there is a Sex Q & A that gave this 30-something girl a good, solid schooling.
So, we all know about the G-Spot. But did you know about the A-Spot? (Yep, another elusive “spot” that’s probably impossible to find.)
Here is the difference, according to the magazine:
Both:
- May or may not exist in every woman.
- Are hard to locate.
- Are spongy, small areas on the roof of the vaginal wall (your stomach’s side, not your back’s.)
G-Spot:
- Was named for gynecologist Ernst Grafenberg, the first person to describe it in a published study.
- Is close to the entrance of the vagina.
- Can produce an ejaculatory-like fluid when stimulated. (Huh.)
A-Spot:
- Is closer to the cervix (the entrance to the uterus at the top of the vagina.)
- Produces strong contractions when stimulated.
So wow, there you go. Sexual Anatomy 101, courtesy of a teen magazine (it’s amazing what the young people know these days, eh?)

















Just when I found that G spot thing they bang another spot at us. You women are so hard to please you know!
You found it? Good Gawd, man, you’re a hero!
And on behalf of women everywhere, my apologies for having yet another mystery spongy spot that supposedly blows our minds. We’re really something, aren’t we?
Lucky for us men, we have what is called an “Oh” spot. It pretty much consists of our entire organ.