Vaginal flatulence is one of women’s worst nightmares. It’s embarrassing and can make a whole sex experience kind of awkward. The good news is that it’s not a disease but a gassy sound and also air escaping from the vagina. It’s quite common. It’s like a fart but without the expulsion of odorous gases. Queefing as it’s mostly called normally occurs during intercourse. During sex, the in-and-out action of your guy’s penis forces air into you, which fills the space in the inner part of your vagina that has expanded during arousal? An especially deep thrust or shift in your body position can cause the air to be released in a noisy emission. Or it might occur after orgasm, when the air is expelled as the vagina returns to its normal state.
You can attempt to prevent the air from getting inside you by having your guy make small, shallow thrust. Or, you can try to stick to positions that don’t lift your pelvis too much, since pelvis-elevating positions, such as doggie-style and “the congress of the cow,” when the man enters the woman’s vagina from behind. The downward angle of the woman’s body coupled with the upward insertion of the penis may cause a more rapid release of trapped air and thus, a queef.