What is the difference between male and female orgasm?

It’s hard to explain with words, but orgasm is a kind of peak pleasure that a person can feel during sex or during masturbation. In a sexual relationship, men reach orgasm when they manipulate their penis or when they penetrate the woman. As for them, it is much easier to get there through stimulation of the clitoris – a small pink organ at the top of the vulva – than just penetration. The clitoris works as a kind of trigger for female pleasure. Orgasm only with penetration is a little more complicated for women. In general, it requires greater practice, tranquility and intimacy with the partner.

Other differences exist in relation to duration and the time needed to reach the maximum point of pleasure. For women, orgasm usually takes a little longer to happen. However, when it does arrive, it tends to be more prolonged than the male. After orgasm, both sexes go through the so-called refractory period, a recovery phase before a new sexual activity can be engaged. For them, this period is much shorter than for men: in a few seconds, most women would already be able to experience more pleasure. Among them, this recovery period tends to be longer, and many exhaust their daily sexual activities after a single orgasm.

Finally: they can have multiple orgasms, that is, several in a row, almost without intervals, which can provide a peak of pleasure for a much longer time. It’s almost like one bus arriving after another, non-stop! Among men this phenomenon does not happen. They just have to wait for the next train to come by. And there are days that train takes hours…

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