During Orgasm

During Orgasm




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Your nervous system (and your brain is a central part of that) is an essential part of your body. You couldn’t live without it, literally. And it also plays a huge role when it comes to sex. So then what exactly goes on in your brain during an orgasm? Why is there a difference in the intensity of the pleasure between men and women?
There are a lot of brain regions and structures that activate during the physical and sexual stimulation stages, and during climax. When they get bombarded with nerve sensations from the genital area they stimulate the brain’s reward circuits. And they’re also the reason you experience orgasms, along with everything that comes with it.
According to the Masters and Johnson models, we can divide people’s sexual responses into four very different stages.
Even though we just mentioned all those other physical reactions, the organ that has total control over whether or not you have an orgasm is your brain. Your brain also has a faithful companion: the rest of the nervous system. Without nervous impulses being sent to your spinal cord and brain you wouldn’t have orgasms. So now we’ll look at what happens in your brain when you have one.
There’s a huge amount of nerves in the genital regions. These nerves send information to your brain about what you’re experiencing. Each of these nerve endings causes different effects inside us. Even the clitoris by itself has more than 8,000 nerve endings! So just imagine the heaps of different sensations women can have, and the amount of processes going on in your brain during an orgasm!
These genital nerves communicate with other, bigger ones. And then those send that information to your dorsal spine. From there they go to your spinal cord and continue on to your brain. The nerves the play the biggest part when it comes to transmitting an orgasm are the:
When the excitement stage begins, your brain starts to send blood to your sexual organs. That’s a reflection of sexual, physical, and psychological stimulation, which the parasympathetic part of your nervous system controls. That’s why you have to be relaxed.
Heart rate and respiratory rate will go up bit by bit in both men and women. In this case (now during the plateau phase), there’s a lot of sympathetic activity that produces significant physiological changes which are similar for both sexes. 
And at the same time, like you’ve seen, the nerve endings in your genital regions and other parts of your body start sending signs to your brain pleasure circuit. This is also known as your brain’s reward system. It’s the mechanism that deals with labeling a behavior as pleasurable or motivating. If the stimulation continues, many different structures in this brain circuit will activate.
Here are some of those structures: the amygdala (emotional regulation), the nucleus accumbens (dopamine release), the cerebellum (muscle control), and the pituitary gland (endorphin and oxytocin release).
It’s not just your brain’s reward system, though. Using a scanner, scientists have been able to see how specific parts of your brain act during an orgasm. Thanks to this research, which has lasted over 30 years, they’ve discovered that brain activity is very similar for both sexes, and there aren’t major differences in their sexual response. 
In both cases there’s an inhibition of the lateral orbitofrontal cortex, which is the part of the brain that deals with reason and control. So what the brain does during an orgasm is completely turn that region off.
But women have a lot more brain regions that pause than men do. That might explain the difference in how long the intense feeling of pleasure lasts for both sexes. In women there’s also an activation of the central gray matter, which is what sparks our flight or flight response. It also stimulates the cortex, which has to do with sensations of pain. That might mean there’s a connection between a feeling of pain and a feeling of pleasure.
And there was also a study where they figured out the exact part of the brain that controls our orgasms. It’s the dorsolateral pontine tegmentum, which is in the brain stem. The research concluded that it’s the region responsible for ejaculation and orgasm, without any difference between the sexes. Interesting, right?
Sex is one of the most important parts of life for a lot of people. But do you anything about your body's sexual response cycle? Read more »
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We Asked 8 Women What an Orgasm Feels Like to Them—Here’s What They Told Us
"It's a pulsing from between my legs up through the rest of my body...."
If someone asked you to explain how a woman knows she's had an orgasm, you might struggle for the right words before summing it up with an all purpose, “You just know.”
But since every woman experiences orgasm in her own unique way, the fact is, not all of us will "just know." And because there's more than one type of orgasm (clitoral orgasms can feel different than a G-spot orgasm or multiple orgasms, for example), the variation in what hitting that high note feels like is huge.
So in the interest of sex-positive research and to give women who aren't 100% sure that what they feel during sex qualifies as an orgasm, we posed the question: What exactly do you experience as you're heading toward O-town, and what kind of moves and strokes get you there? Here's what eight very descriptive women told us.
“I have only orgasmed with my close sexual partners, and even then, it's not something that is guaranteed in any way. I only have one orgasm typically per sexual activity, while some girls I know get multiple orgasms. I would describe it as something that washes over my entire body. Almost like chills throughout, but my body is heating up instead.” —Vanessa*, 25
“It feels to me like some fantastical energy being pent up and unable to be realized, and all of a sudden, you let go, and that energy is suddenly very real. The other analogy and more how I feel emotionally, so deeply connected, as if a river of consciousness connects me to him in the present moment. And then, in the exact split second of orgasm, there is no separation. It’s beautiful.” —Sara, 32
“Penetrative sex doesn’t do it for me; clitoral stimulation is the only way I orgasm. It’s like an adrenaline rush to the head, like a pulsing from between my legs up through the rest of my body, and concludes in some sort of physical relief, like squeezing or yelling. The more yelling allowed, the better! Then, after it’s done, all my body wants to do is snuggle.” —Taylor, 25
“I would explain it like a ticklish, hot wave . . . starting from the center of my vagina and moving out toward my fingertips and toes, a building energy. At the same time, when my clit is stimulated just right, the sensitivity there causes me to get a lightheaded rush that feels kind of like I’m on the tallest drop of a rollercoaster.” —Lana, 26
“When I achieve orgasm, it’s the best feeling in the world; there really is nothing like it. Mine only lasts a few seconds, and it is very hard for me to achieve another orgasm after the first, but when I feel the walls of my vagina contract, oh my, the pleasure is so intense.” —Cassandra, 20
“For me, an orgasm feels like overwhelming warmth to start. I can suddenly feel every nerve ending, and everything below the belt is emphasized. Then, when the orgasm finally happens, it’s just these waves of pleasure throughout my body, and a physical release.” —Carly, 30
“The sexual energy ebbs and flows slowly, and then builds until it is in control of every energy center in my body. It’s as if the energy creates a whirlpool with all the sacred waters in my being. It starts off as a gentle current, but builds to such a powerful force that I’m consumed completely. And then spit out on the other end, in an parallel universe of which I’m not even sure of how I got to, but where the waters are perfectly still, comforting, and protective.” —Mila, 28
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“With a G-spot orgasm, through traditional intercourse, this glorious sensation is like electricity surging through my whole body. I know instantly when my husband has hit that G-spot. I tighten myself around him and ride this wave, shivers of euphoria. The perfect tickle, the perfect kiss, the perfect massage all rolled into one glorious moment where I lose all control of my senses.” —Sam, 44
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We Asked 8 Women What an Orgasm Feels Like to Them—Here’s What They Told Us
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