MULTI ORGASMIC MEN

You may already have experienced multiple orgasms. Surprising as this may sound, many men are multi-orgasmic before they enter adolescence and begin to ejaculate. Kinsey’s research suggested that more than half of all preadolescent boys were able to reach a second orgasm within a short period of time and nearly a third were able to achieve five or more Orgasms one after the other.

This led Kinsey to argue that "climax is clearly possible without ejaculation."

But multiple orgasms are not just limited to prepubescent boys. Kinsey continues: "There are older males, even in their thirties  and  older,  who  are  able  to  equal  this  performance."  In  Fundamentals  o f Human  Sexuality,  Dr.  Herant

Katchadourian  adds:  "Some  men  are  able  to  inhibit  the  emission  of  semen  while  they  experience  the  orgasmic contractions: in other words they have nonejaculatory orgasms.

 

Such orgasms do not seem to be followed by a refractory period [loss of erection], thereby allowing these men to have consecutive or multiple orgasms like women.

Why do most men lose their ability to be multi-orgasmic. It is possible that for many men the experience of ejaculating,when it happens, is so overwhelming that it eclipses the experience of orgasm and causes men to lose the ability to distinguish between the two. One multi-orgasmic man described the first time he ejaculated: "I still remember it clearly.

There I was orgasming as usual, but this time a white liquid came spurting out. I thought I was dying. I swore to God that I would never masturbate again - which of course lasted about a day." Since orgasm and ejaculation generally occur within  seconds  of  one  another,  it  is  easy  to  confuse  them.'

To  become  multi-orgasmic,  you  must  learn  (or  possibly relearn)  the  ability  to  separate  the  different  sensations  of  arousal  and  to  revel  in  orgasm  without  cresting  over  into ejaculation. Understanding how orgasm and ejaculation are different will help you distinguish the two in your own body.

Brain Waves and Reflexes Orgasm is one of the most intense and satisfying human experiences, and if you have ever had an orgasm - and almost all men have  - you will not need to have it defined. All orgasms, however, are not created equal. Orgasm is slightly different for each person and even different for the same person at different times. Nonetheless, men’s orgasms share certain  characteristics,  including  rhythmic  body  movements,  increased  heart  rate,  muscle  tension,  and  then  a  sudden release of tension, including pelvic Contractions. They feel good, too. After noting that "orgasm is the least understood of the  sexual  processes,"  the  thirteenth  edition  of  Smith's  General  Urology  explains  that  orgasm  includes  "involuntary rhythmic  contractions  of  the  anal  sphincter,  hyperventilation  [increased  breathing  rate],  tachycardia  [increased  heart rate], and elevation of blood pressure."

These definitions include changes that occur throughout your entire body. However, for a long time orgasm was seen - and for many men is still seen  - as strictly a genital affair.

KINKY

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