Sexual Health
What are the manifestations of male orgasm? Do men really have dry and wet orgasms during sexual intercourse
What is it about men having multiple orgasms? It turns out that men's orgasmic experience is not just what we know as ejaculatory orgasm. However, not every man in life can experience both "dry" and "wet" tides at the same time. According to Haide's investigation, men who can have a 'dry tide' must have two conditions:
One is to have a close relationship with your sexual partner and love them deeply. If the marital relationship is tense or the relationship is not deep, the man will not actively control himself, but will directly "wet" appear. Dry orgasm "is relative to" wet orgasm "(full ejaculation orgasm), and the vast majority of men still believe that true orgasm should be accompanied by ejaculation, which is the ultimate manifestation of sexual intercourse. The "dry tide" comes first and may even appear multiple times, while the "wet tide" comes later. After reaching the "wet tide", men will definitely enter the refractory period.
Secondly, men need to have strong PC muscles (pelvic muscles related to sexual function, also known as the pubococcygeal muscles). These muscles are closely related to the emergence of sexual desire and the maintenance of normal sexual function, and the contraction of these muscles is involved during orgasm. As a track and field teacher, Zhang Ting unintentionally developed strong PC muscles in his regular training and teaching, allowing him to freely control ejaculation.
Sexual studies have shown that during orgasm, both men and women engage in essentially the same amount of muscle activity throughout their bodies, with few differences. The basic neural distribution and muscular system of males are completely consistent with those of females. From this perspective, it is possible for men to have multiple orgasms, but scholars' research in this area is still far from sufficient.
The "Men's Chapter of the Sea Characteristics Report" describes various orgasmic sensations in men: many men report that they sometimes ejaculate without orgasm, while others report that they do not ejaculate. Some men also report that they can have multiple so-called "dry tides", which stop stimulation before ejaculation to delay ejaculation. At this time, a series of pleasant muscle spasms or contractions appear around the pelvis, but there is no ejaculation, At most a few drops of semen overflow, accompanied by multiple "dry" contractions, the penis experiences rhythmic contractions, producing equally intense pleasure. In this incomplete ejaculation, a new period of arousal occurs, during which the penis remains erect. Repeat the twitching friction until a climax of ejaculation ("wet tide") occurs. This can greatly delay a man's ejaculation, prolong sexual intercourse time, and synchronize the woman's orgasm with the man's orgasm.