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If Someone Takes “Forever” to Climax

Happy young couple in underwear having fun in bed.

In both genders, orgasm difficulties are fairly common—and almost always curable

In partner sex, some people—both men and women—take quite a while to work their way up to orgasm. Sometimes, it’s situational. If you’re drunk, fatigued, in pain, taking antidepressant medication, or pre-occupied by emotional stress, it may take longer than usual. But some people usually or always take quite a while, which may engender self-doubt and relationship conflicts.

If you’re the one who takes “forever:”

If it’s your lover who takes “forever:”

Finally, read a good resource. For men, I suggest my low-cost e-article, Can’t Get There? Self-Help for Orgasm/Ejaculation Difficulties. For women, I recommend the classic self-help book, Becoming Orgasmic. The e-article may also help women. The book may help men.

If these suggestions don’t provide sufficient resolution, sex therapy has an excellent track record of teaching people how to climax and helping those with a limited orgasmic range expand their abilities to a wider array of erotic play.

References

Frederick, D.A.et al. “Differences In Orgasm Frequency Among Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Heterosexual Men and Women in a U.S. National Sample,” Archives of Sexual Behavior (2017) epub ahead of print.

Lloyd, E. The Case of the Female Orgasm: Bias in the Science of Evolution. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, 2005.

Richters, J. et al. “Sexual Practices at Last Heterosexual Encounter and Occurrence of Orgasm in a National Survey,” Journal of Sex Research (2006) 43:217.

 

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