Because that farting sound can really kill the mood in the bedroom. So why does why your vagina betray you in this way, and how come it strikes at the most unfortunate times? We have answers. The sound your vagina is making is better known as a queef. The noise is similar to a fart, but it's not the same thing at all. A queef has no smell, and it has nothing to do with whether you ate beans for dinner or not.
Generally, queefing is nothing to be worried about. While rare, if queefing is accompanied by pain or a bad smell, you should make an appointment with a doctor to rule out any more serious issues. But for the most part, queefing is a normal, if slightly awkward, fact of life. Keep checking back for more expert-based articles and personal stories.
News U. Politics Joe Biden Congress Extremism. Special Projects Highline. HuffPost Personal Video Horoscopes. Follow Us. Or as you settle into downward dog and your ass is pointing skyward, an extremely rude-seeming sound slips out.
Don't feel embarrassed. Bodies are cool and weird, and sometimes they make noises at inopportune times. Your vagina does not care what you're up to, she's going to do whatever she wants. It's admirable, really, even though it can be annoying in the moment. A queef is the sound air makes when it gets displaced or otherwise forced out of the vagina.
It's really as simple as that, which means it's not a sign that you need to stop what you're doing, start digging, and take up residence at the center of the earth. But how exactly does this little disturbance happen? As a result of your natural lubrication, there's a bit of a natural suctioning activity that can pull air into the vagina," Jamil Abdur-Rahman , M. Specifically, queefing can happen during sex because while the vaginal walls are usually somewhat clasped together, all of a sudden there's something in there forcing any air out.
That air can also rush out if you're waiting for your partner to enter you after changing positions and you engage your abdominal muscles in some way, like cracking up because your partner falls off the bed.
And here's a fun sex-queefing fact: If you notice that your queefs sound louder when you use condoms , that could be due to what Abdur-Rahman calls "reverberation of the latex. Although science hasn't devoted a ton of resources to investigating queefs, there's some relevant data. Research in a issue of ISRN Obstetrics and Gynecology examined Iranian women ages 18 to 80 in the hopes of learning more about "vaginal flatus," which is a scientific name for queefing. The study notes that other names for the phenomenon include "vaginal wind, vaginal noise, or noisy vagina," which is really just delightful.
Overall, 20 percent of the women studied experienced queefing. It happened to 54 percent of those women during sex, which makes perfect sense. But "vaginal flatus is embarrassing to Iranian women, because it leads to their isolation from public and it is in contrast to their religious customs," the study authors write. That's unfortunate, because queefing is normal.
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