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The Simplest G-Spot Move I Have Ever Had Used on Me
I want to tell you about a man whose g-spot technique required, as far as I could tell at the time and still can tell now, almost no skill.
He took two pillows off the bed. He put them under my lower back. He asked me — with the kind of quiet confidence that made the request feel like part of the seduction — to lift my hips slightly.
I did.
That was the entire preparation.
What followed — three fingers, palm up, pressed against my front wall, slow steady pressure, no complicated curl technique, no wrist gymnastics — produced the fastest g-spot orgasm I have ever had.
It wasn’t the finger work. The finger work was, honestly, standard.
It was that the two pillows had done ninety percent of what a skilled hand normally has to do. They had tilted my hips at exactly the angle where my g-spot lifted forward to meet whatever was about to press against it. His fingers didn’t have to hunt. They didn’t have to curl at a hard angle. They didn’t have to sustain a fatiguing pressure. The geometry did all of it.
I have thought about this many times, because it is, I think, the single most under-taught piece of g-spot advice in the entire genre.
I’m calling the move the tilt.
Why the G-Spot Is Usually Harder Than It Needs to Be
Almost every g-spot article treats the challenge as one of skill.
Find the exact spot. Curl your fingers at the right angle. Press with the right amount of pressure. Sustain the rhythm. Read her body. Adjust in real time.
It is a lot of technique for a spot that is, anatomically, one to two inches inside the entrance of the vagina on the front wall.
The reason the technique feels this involved is that almost every g-spot attempt starts from the wrong position — her lying flat on her back, hips neutral, the g-spot tucked away at an angle that requires the man’s fingers to reach and curl and hold in a fatiguing configuration to make contact.
The simplest possible fix for this is not to develop better fingers.
It is to move her hips.
Elevated hips tilt her pelvis forward. That tilt lifts the g-spot into a position where it is essentially presented to whatever is about to touch it. His fingers don’t have to reach. His wrist doesn’t have to bend. His pressure doesn’t have to fight gravity.
The g-spot, in the tilted position, becomes an easy target.
The technique that once required patience, curl, and skill now requires only steady pressure — because the geometry has done the hard part.
The Physics of the Tilt
Here is the anatomical part, briefly.
The g-spot sits on the front wall of the vagina, roughly one to two inches in. When she is lying flat, the front wall runs approximately parallel to the mattress — meaning his fingers, coming in from her feet, have to angle upward against the front wall to make contact.
This upward angle is why most men’s wrists fatigue during g-spot work, and why their fingers slip off the spot repeatedly.
When you elevate her hips — with two pillows, a wedge, a rolled blanket, whatever is handy — you tilt her pelvis backward relative to gravity. The front wall of her vagina is now sloping downward, from her feet toward her head, at a gentle angle.
His fingers, entering horizontally, are now pressing against the front wall at a natural, gravity-assisted angle. No curl required. No wrist strain. The g-spot is effectively meeting his fingers.
The steady upward pressure that is the actual mechanism of a g-spot orgasm is now trivial to sustain — because you are pressing into a surface that gravity is holding in place for you.
I show you the exact hip angle and pillow placement inside G-Spot Made Easy.
How to Do the Tilt
1. Two pillows. Sometimes three.
Standard bed pillows work. A wedge pillow works better. The specific object doesn’t matter; the angle does. Aim for about a 20 to 30 degree upward tilt of her hips.
2. Place them under her lower back, not her ass.
This is the small detail almost everyone gets wrong. Pillows under her ass raise her ass but keep her lower back flat, which doesn’t tilt the pelvis correctly. Pillows under her lower back arch her spine slightly and rotate the pelvis into the geometry you actually want.
3. Ask her to lift her hips as you slide the pillows in.
The setup takes about ten seconds. It is not clinical. It is confident.
4. Once she is settled, approach with two or three fingers, palm up.
The natural angle of the tilt means your fingers will contact the g-spot area without you having to search or curl hard.
5. Steady, firm pressure. No motion.
You are pressing upward against a spot that is now presented directly to your fingers. Same principle as every g-spot orgasm — pressure, not friction. But now dramatically easier to sustain.
6. Hold the pressure for the sixty to ninety seconds the orgasm needs.
The tilt lets you do this without wrist fatigue, without repositioning, without her hips shifting away from you.
7. When the orgasm arrives, don’t pull out.
Same as always. Stay through the aftershock.
Every step is demonstrated inside G-Spot Made Easy.
Why This Becomes the Only G-Spot Advice You Need
There are entire courses on g-spot technique. There are books. There are Youtube videos with elaborate curl-your-fingers-like-you’re-beckoning-someone instructions that require weeks of practice.
For most men, the tilt makes all of it unnecessary.
Two pillows. Under her lower back. Steady pressure. That is the whole formula.
It is the most under-taught, most effective, most embarrassingly simple g-spot move that exists — and once you have used it, you will notice that almost every attempt you have ever made without it was harder than it needed to be.
Click here to start G-Spot Made Easy and learn the tilt.
Hot kisses,
Gabrielle Moore
Sex Expert & Author of Naked U

